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#11
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In message , Iain Archer
writes could be checked and cleared within minites, rather than us all having to endure a lengthy delay and be late for work. irony smiley So what special equipment did they have for checking it? Endoscope, robot, portable X-ray machine, ..... ? Probably the ever reliable "kick it and see if it goes boom" technique I've seen station staff use on the underground :-) -- Edward Cowling London UK |
#12
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"terzal" wrote in message
oups.com... Personally, I used to turn the siren off if there was no traffic, and no obvious hazards ahead. A (very) few of my colleagues used to turn the siren on leaving the station, and off once they got to the scene. Each to their own. That's my complaint too. It's not the use of sirens, which are obviously essential in busy areas, but what happens here in Balham is that police cars tear along with sirens blaring at 3.00am or 4.00am on an absolutely deserted Balham High Road! In this weather, those of us that live on the main road and have our bedroom windows open can't help but be woken up. I have had a letter published in the local paper on this issue, to no avail. I reckon these sirens are just penis extensions for some kiddie-coppers. Ian |
#13
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Iain Archer wrote:
Steve M wrote on Sat, 16 Jul 2005 There have been police on duty outside both my local stations all this week (Norbiton and New Malden). Yesterday morning, there were 3 officers at Norbiton! However, in a way this can be beneficial as an unattended bag was found in the back coach of my train to work one morning this week, and the fact there were officers on duty meant it could be checked and cleared within minites, rather than us all having to endure a lengthy delay and be late for work. irony smiley So what special equipment did they have for checking it? Endoscope, robot, portable X-ray machine, ..... ? As another poster has suggested, I think he just had a look inside, decided it was safe, and off we went. If the policeman hadn't already been on the station, I presume the train would have remained there until one arrived? Passengers seemed to be in two distinct groups: "Argh, let's get the hell out of here" and "FFS how long will this take?". Cheers, Steve M |
#14
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"Ian F." wrote in message
... "terzal" wrote in message oups.com... Personally, I used to turn the siren off if there was no traffic, and no obvious hazards ahead. A (very) few of my colleagues used to turn the siren on leaving the station, and off once they got to the scene. Each to their own. That's my complaint too. It's not the use of sirens, which are obviously essential in busy areas, but what happens here in Balham is that police cars tear along with sirens blaring at 3.00am or 4.00am on an absolutely deserted Balham High Road! In this weather, those of us that live on the main road and have our bedroom windows open can't help but be woken up. Are there no rules/guidance for use of sirens on emergency vehicles at a time of night when it would be illegal for other motorists to use their horns? I would expect the guidance to be: turn the siren off except when you are approaching a junction where traffic has priority over you or when there's an obvious hazard like a bunch of cars in front of you or people who look as if they're about to cross the road in front of you. I've noticed that ambulances switch between a laid-back slow wail when they are in light traffic and a much more urgent, insistent, faster whooping when they are approaching heavier traffic. I've also seen many ambulances and fire engines with just their blue lights on and no sirens, especially on sparsely-populated motorways. So it looks as if they are considerate. Police cars seem to be the worst offenders for leaving their sirens going full time. The converse is true: not using a siren when it's needed. One evening I was going home from work at dusk and had green lights approaching a set of traffic lights. Suddenly, from my right, a police car shot across from the right about 6 feet in front of me. Luckily I'd slowed down a bit from the 60 at which I'd been approaching because I thought the lights had been at green for a long time and might change soon. The police car was not using his siren: my fleeting impression was of just a single flash of his blue light as he passed my field of vision. I know that police cars are allowed to go though red lights, but they normally sound their siren on the approach and to take extra care if traffic that has priority over them doesn't have clear sight of them approaching and so will have no advance warning. I've always wondered what the law is about ordinary cars going through red lights to let an emergency vehicle behind get through. I was once in this situation: I was at the head of a queue of cars at traffic lights when a fire engine came up on my offside but was blocked from going the wrong way through the junction because some pillock had stopped on a box junction. So I thought: act first, defend my actions afterwards - I edged forwards, flashing my lights and hooting my horn to warn other traffic what I was doing and pulled at right angles to the direction I'd been going in to make room for the fire engine. I noticed one of the passengers in the fire engine stuck his arm out of the window and gave me a "thank you" wave for applying a bit of common sense. However I've also seen cars waiting dutifully at red lights with emergency vehicles stuck behind them for ages, probably because they are afraid of being penalised for going through a red light. |
#15
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On Sat, 16 Jul 2005 17:46:32 +0100, "Martin Underwood"
wrote: Are there no rules/guidance for use of sirens on emergency vehicles at a time of night when it would be illegal for other motorists to use their horns? My flatmate reckons they shouldn't use them after 10pm, or something. -- Nick Cooper [Carefully remove the detonators from my e-mail address to reply!] The London Underground at War: http://www.cwgcuser.org.uk/personal/...ra/lu/tuaw.htm 625-Online - classic British television: http://www.625.org.uk 'Things to Come' - An Incomplete Classic: http://www.thingstocome.org.uk |
#16
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I haven't got my old manual to hand at the moment to look up the
precise wording of the instructions. The main exemptions from the Road Traffic Act that emergency vehicles can claim are to treat red traffic lights as give way signs, and to exceed the speed limit. Its worded something like where to obey them would hinder the vehicle in its duties. I don't think there is any actual mention of the use of lights and sirens as such, apart from a secondary exemption is the ability to use audible warnings at night. Individual services (and even preferences from one instructor to another) will have their own guidelines. The bottom line is, if you are claiming any exemption (eg speeding), then you could end up in court explaining both the reason why ("I was attending an emergency call"), and what means you were using to warn the public ("I had the blue lights and sirens on"). So although having the siren turned off, as you take out a pedestrian who steps out in front of you, wouldn't be in breach of any law as such, it probably would count towards your dangerous driving sentence. Consequently, any time the siren is turned off while attending an emergency call, the driver is to some extent putting other road users and his driving licence at risk. People will always come from nowhere. There will always be pedestrians who step off the kerb without looking and people who suddenly pull out of side turnings without looking. There has to be an element of common sense and as I said I and nearly all of my colleagues tended to turn the siren off if there was no visable hazard. But that was the risk we took. I wouldn't criticise anyone for taking the other option and leaving the siren on from station to scene. You only need a kid to run out from a shop across the road and the first question we'd be asked was whether the siren was turned on. I'm not at all taking issue with your post (you weren't being confrontational at all!) but any potential hazard is a hazard whether obvious or not. People by the side of the road might step out whether they look like they might or not, and unless they are well away from kerb would really need the siren to be sounded. Any junction whatever the priority is also to some extent a hazard. There has to be some common sense, but ultimately as I said any time the siren is turned off there is a risk (probably to the drivers licence and career more than to the public - I'm well aware sirens can also be disorienting to the public at times). I am sure having the siren turned off would always count against you in court. As for the vehicles with the sirens off when they should more obviously be turned on, there is a need for silent approach sometimes, but obviously extra care must be taken. Certainly from a paramedics point of view, with a patient on board we would try to keep the siren use to a minimum (although taking a patient in with blue lights going is relatively rare anyway) because of the stress to a conscious patient. I'm not trying to excuse bad driving on the part of emergency staff, obviously as in any job some people are more competent than others, but I do feel that the majority (not all) of the criticism they get is completely unjustified. As for how you stand going through a red light to make way for a fire engine, I dunno! I like to think that it would be taking into account..... |
#17
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They can use them any time they like..
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#18
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Incidentally, we once had a complaint from some boring f*cker that we
always turned the siren on outside his house as we went past. Which we genuinely didn't.....until we got the complaint and found out his address...... |
#19
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On 16 Jul 2005 10:33:59 -0700, terzal wrote:
They can use them any time they like.. Who? What? -- http://gallery120232.fotopic.net/p10862735.html (a train on the Hythe Pier Railway, Hampshire in 1998) |
#20
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It was a dark and stormy night when Martin Underwood
wrote in article 42d939eb$0$21993$ed2619ec@ptn-nntp- reader02.plus.net... The converse is true: not using a siren when it's needed. One evening I was going home from work at dusk and had green lights approaching a set of traffic lights. Suddenly, from my right, a police car shot across from the right about 6 feet in front of me. Luckily I'd slowed down a bit from the 60 at which I'd been approaching because I thought the lights had been at green for a long time and might change soon. The police car was not using his siren: my fleeting impression was of just a single flash of his blue light as he passed my field of vision. I know that police cars are allowed to go though red lights, but they normally sound their siren on the approach and to take extra care if traffic that has priority over them doesn't have clear sight of them approaching and so will have no advance warning. Same happened to me on my way home to London near Farnham, Hants; police car shot out across a light-controlled crossroads on the A31 at a good 60mph, while I was crossing under a green light at a similar speed, and missed me by a hairsbreadth. It would have been a spectacular smash if I'd been a second or two further on. I must admit my initial response (apart from pulling over to get my composure back) was to wonder whether, since there was no other traffic about at all, the driver (had he survived) would have been honest and admitted he had no siren going. (Or are these things logged like speed on a tachograph?) -- "All vampires suck, but not all who suck are vampires." (--B.J.Kuehl) :::Grebbsy :::::::lemon curry?::: |
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