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#31
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Roland Perry wrote:
Quite the reverse. The people whose lifestyle appears to dictate that they are unwilling to be held ransom by the vagaries of public transport, are much more likely to make singleton journeys. They don't ant to be held ransom to car-sharing either. Well, victims of the system or just misguided idiots, I guess that's a matter of opinion. What I do know is that they render the London environment worse by their selfishness through making PT (the bus network specifically) less reliable and performant, worsening air pollution, and general anti social aspects of car use etc etc Because many of them have travelled from far enough away that a train is the alternative. And having been stranded, and missed an important meeting, once too often, revert to the car. Sorry Roland, but I really cannot believe how an individual would possibly think driving into central London would be quicker than getting a train in. I guess a few are novices and might not have tried the train. But if that were the case there must be a hell of a lot of novices around (given your figures). Because it's door to door, and runs when they want it to - not on some mythical once-every-15-minutes that tuns out to involve half an hour waits in the rain once too often. Door to door? There's parking space outside every door in London now? Central London? Are we even talking about London? The picture you paint is not one I recognise. Although I do agree about the ridiculous labelling of 15-min frequency trains as such things as "metro" services. Need to double at least before they're that. Is that on the trunk routes that most of the commuters are using? Anywhere that's congested. What's "long"? There are very large numbers who drive more than 50 miles. I think you answered above - I'd consider long to be a journey where rail becomes the best bet. |
#32
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Roland Perry ) gurgled happily, sounding much like
they were saying : 4x4s of the Disco's size do tend to be diseasel, yes - because the petrol versions are so damn thirsty (18mpg official for the Disco vs 27 for the TD and 36 for the diesel S-class Jag) So Parkers is wrong when it says the diesel disco is 25-34 (the previous model being 30-40). This is the smoke of which we spake. The figures I gave are from Parkers website. [Although from what I'm hearing, the new Disco seems to have somewhat crossed the line from "family man's Land Rover" to "poor man's Range Rover", to its detriment.] I think you may have your system clock set wrongly - that started about five years ago. However, I think you'll find that a good proportion of most "normal" cars are diseasels now, too. 32.5% of all cars sold in the UK during 2004, and 40% of Mondeos. That's good news then (apart from asthma suffers, apparently). Indeed. |
#33
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In message , at
14:24:45 on Tue, 15 Feb 2005, Dan Gravell remarked: Roland Perry wrote: Quite the reverse. The people whose lifestyle appears to dictate that they are unwilling to be held ransom by the vagaries of public transport, are much more likely to make singleton journeys. They don't ant to be held ransom to car-sharing either. Well, victims of the system or just misguided idiots, I guess that's a matter of opinion. No, just busy businessmen who have found from painful experience that their means of transport is the best on offer. Sorry Roland, but I really cannot believe how an individual would possibly think driving into central London would be quicker than getting a train in. I guess a few are novices and might not have tried the train. But if that were the case there must be a hell of a lot of novices around (given your figures). It's true. When you look at reliable door-to-door times, the car wins. Not everyone's lifestyle is the same. As an extreme example, what would you think if the PM was half an hour late for his questions in the House of Commons because of problems on the Northern Line? And is paying him about £100 an hour to sit on a tube train better than having him in a car and reading his briefing papers in peace? Somewhere between the PM and "do you want fries with that" is a crossover line. It seems to be 90:10. I suggest you'd have a very difficult time making it 95:5, and would be better employed making sure it didn't degrade to 85:15. Because it's door to door, and runs when they want it to - not on some mythical once-every-15-minutes that tuns out to involve half an hour waits in the rain once too often. Door to door? There's parking space outside every door in London now? Central London? Close enough for most of the purposes we are discussing. And an awful lot of the cars in *central* London have drivers. Are we even talking about London? The picture you paint is not one I recognise. The people in the cars will typically live in the stockbroker belts. What's "long"? There are very large numbers who drive more than 50 miles. I think you answered above - I'd consider long to be a journey where rail becomes the best bet. So highly dependent on how close to a viable station the person lives. Just the difficulty of parking near many of them rules them out as "P&R for London". -- Roland Perry |
#34
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In message , at
14:25:30 on Tue, 15 Feb 2005, Adrian remarked: The figures I gave are from Parkers website. I'm using the printed one, which I find a great deal easier. [Although from what I'm hearing, the new Disco seems to have somewhat crossed the line from "family man's Land Rover" to "poor man's Range Rover", to its detriment.] I think you may have your system clock set wrongly - that started about five years ago. Is that the model my Parkers says is "1998 on" ? -- Roland Perry |
#35
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Roland Perry ) gurgled happily, sounding much like they
were saying : [Although from what I'm hearing, the new Disco seems to have somewhat crossed the line from "family man's Land Rover" to "poor man's Range Rover", to its detriment.] I think you may have your system clock set wrongly - that started about five years ago. Is that the model my Parkers says is "1998 on" ? Disco 2. Yes. Same basic shell as the previous one, but tarted over. |
#36
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Roland Perry wrote:
It's true. When you look at reliable door-to-door times, the car wins. Source? Or is this a Jeremy Clarkson style "a car can beat a jet fighter, if I have a five month headstart and the jet has no wings" claim? Not everyone's lifestyle is the same. As an extreme example, what would you think if the PM was half an hour late for his questions in the House of Commons because of problems on the Northern Line? And is paying him about £100 an hour to sit on a tube train better than having him in a car and reading his briefing papers in peace? Somewhere between the PM and "do you want fries with that" is a crossover line. It seems to be 90:10. I suggest you'd have a very difficult time making it 95:5, and would be better employed making sure it didn't degrade to 85:15. But what about when the actions of the ten effect the PT QoS and QoL for the ninety? Because of the scalability (that word again) the system would work better if we got it to 95:5. The PM is hardly representative or comparable to "business men". I don't know what you mean by "business man" but I'm guessing there's too many of them to cater for aI'm afraid, and frankly they're not important enough to concede to (unlike the PM). Door to door? There's parking space outside every door in London now? Central London? Close enough for most of the purposes we are discussing. And an awful lot of the cars in *central* London have drivers. I really do not believe this. How many people work in the City? How many people park there? I'd be surprised if the figure is as much as 10%. |
#37
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In message , at
15:39:51 on Tue, 15 Feb 2005, Dan Gravell remarked: The PM is hardly representative or comparable to "business men". I don't know what you mean by "business man" but I'm guessing there's too many of them to cater for aI'm afraid, and frankly they're not important enough to concede to (unlike the PM). So where do you draw the line? At people with "Minister" in their job title. "Junior Minister" Managing Director of a PLC Director of any registered Company People called "Sales Manager" of a company with more than 1000 employees .... Door to door? There's parking space outside every door in London now? Central London? Close enough for most of the purposes we are discussing. And an awful lot of the cars in *central* London have drivers. I really do not believe this. How many people work in the City? How many people park there? I'd be surprised if the figure is as much as 10%. A lot of them are driven to work, or drive to work. Otherwise this conversation would not exist. -- Roland Perry |
#38
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On Tue, 15 Feb 2005 13:44:21 +0000, Dave Arquati
wrote: One also has to bear in mind *road space* rather than the space physically occupied by the car. As a typical 4x4 is quite a bit taller than a "normal" car, it reduces visibility for the car behind it, so the car behind must keep more distance in order to retain visibility. I'm not so sure that's an issue unless you tend to look at the road ahead "through" other cars. Then again, I've always preferred tall cars because of the extra space they tend to give (I'm 6'4" and fairly heavily built so I need it!) so I'm more used to looking over than through. I would say that in central London, in non-equipment cases, a Travelcard is superior to a car for flexibility, price and convenience. Absolutely. Neil -- Neil Williams in Milton Keynes, UK When replying please use neil at the above domain 'wensleydale' is a spam trap and is not read. |
#39
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Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 13:44:21 on Tue, 15 Feb 2005, Dave Arquati remarked: Neil Williams wrote: On Mon, 14 Feb 2005 08:28:38 +0000, Roland Perry wrote: eg: LR Disco 14'10" x 5'11" Ford Mondeo 15' 5" x 5'11" Merc E series 15' 9" x 6' 5" A foot longer and 6" wider!!! The latter being very much the "City executive's car of choice") Quite, and things like Suzuki Jimnys and, indeed, that tiny Fiat (I think) 4x4 car are not anything like as big, nor for that matter is my 88" Land Rover, which is about the length of your typical small hatch (hardly a Chelsea tractor, mind, more a normal tractor!) One also has to bear in mind *road space* rather than the space physically occupied by the car. As a typical 4x4 is quite a bit taller than a "normal" car, it reduces visibility for the car behind it, so the car behind must keep more distance in order to retain visibility. And you've seen this happening in practice? From personal experience outside London. I can't see why it would be any different in London, and I know that one major claim used against 4x4s is that they make life more difficult for other motorists. -- Dave Arquati Imperial College, SW7 www.alwaystouchout.com - Transport projects in London |
#40
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In article ,
Dan Gravell wrote: Sorry Roland, but I really cannot believe how an individual would possibly think driving into central London would be quicker than getting a train in. I've driven from Leytonstone to Paddington on a number of occasions. Certainly more convienent when meeting She-Who-Must-Not-Be-Named and her luggage. It was probably quicker than the Tube (the PT alterantive), but it's hard to be sure. Certainly not much slower. I guess a few are novices and might not have tried the train. But if that were the case there must be a hell of a lot of novices around (given your figures). We did that too; frankly the biggest turn-off is carting the bags rather than the time. Are we even talking about London? The picture you paint is not one I recognise. Although I do agree about the ridiculous labelling of 15-min frequency trains as such things as "metro" services. Need to double at least before they're that. Lets say that for something to be a metro service, it needs to be frequent enough that a timetable is pointless. Comparing the number of people arriving at the station per minute over the course of the day would be an interesting way to find out if the passengers bother with learning the timetable. My guess is that there will be little variation at Camden Road - about as many passengers will arrive at the platform looking to catch a train the minute before the train is due as the minute after - indicating that 15 mintute wait between trains is "metro", while at Upper Holloway, there will be a vast difference - indicating that 30 minute waits are not "metro". But I'm guessing; hard figures would be interesting. What's "long"? There are very large numbers who drive more than 50 miles. I think you answered above - I'd consider long to be a journey where rail becomes the best bet. That can be remarkably short, sometimes. -- Mike Bristow - really a very good driver |
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