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#21
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In message , Peter Corser
writes OTOH, it was one of the 1960 stock sets. The stock was 59 stock. -- Clive |
#22
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Cheeky wrote:
On Sun, 31 Jul 2005 10:35:00 GMT, "Richard J." wrote: Boltar wrote: could see, on platforms. Even at the terminus, if you fail to alight, they take you into the reversing siding for a few minutes before starting the return journey. The HSE would be wetting their nappies over that if it happened here. Don't forget on the tube we have to have the farce of a driver walking down the train checking its empty and closing each carriage one by one before he takes it out of service. That's because the car-end doors can be opened by passengers. On Line 14 in Paris, there are full-width gangways between cars, so there's no risk of a passenger getting on to the track. (And on other lines with older stock, it needs the Métro equivalent of a J-door key to open the car-end doors.) Are the new trains for LUL going to have corridor connections and if not, why not? Sub-surface lines: yes. Deep-level tubes: no. -- Richard J. (to e-mail me, swap uk and yon in address) |
#23
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Sorry...do you mean sub-surface are paying for extra cars but tube
aren't? Or articulation is only viable on deep tubes? (if so why?). |
#24
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#25
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#26
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asdf wrote:
On Sun, 31 Jul 2005 10:35:00 GMT, "Richard J." wrote: That's because the car-end doors can be opened by passengers. On Line 14 in Paris, there are full-width gangways between cars, so there's no risk of a passenger getting on to the track. (And on other lines with older stock, it needs the Métro equivalent of a J-door key to open the car-end doors.) So how do the passengers get out in an emergency? Good question, and I don't know the answer (and can't find it in Brian Hardy's Paris Metro Handbook). Maybe there's an emergency release on the sliding doors. I've seen emergency ladders clipped in place at car ends. Métro trains don't have front doors in the cabs like LU, presumably because the tunnels are mainly double-track. -- Richard J. (to e-mail me, swap uk and yon in address) |
#27
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Neil Williams wrote:
On Sun, 31 Jul 2005 12:50:47 +0100, asdf wrote: So how do the passengers get out in an emergency? I think it would be necessary to have side platforms and emergency release on the side doors like the DLR underground sections do, as passengers may well try to leave the train while others are still moving in an emergency, in the absence of any supervision. OOI, does it have this? I believe the control centre can broadcast on a train's PA to tell passengers what to do. I assume there must be an emergency release on some of the side doors. Only Line 14 has an evacuation walkway in the tunnels. -- Richard J. (to e-mail me, swap uk and yon in address) |
#28
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"Mike Bristow" wrote in message
... In article , Clive wrote: Anyone know which of the tube lines are now driven automatically? Central and Victoria. And DLR. Further is the system the same as was used on the Woodford loop and Victoria line? I don't know what was used on the Woodford Loop, but the two systems in use today are different. Woodford to Hainault was used as a prototype for the Victoria Line, and so was presumably identical or similar to the system still in use on the Victoria. I think it was removed years or even decades before the Central Line ATO was introduced. -- John Rowland - Spamtrapped Transport Plans for the London Area, updated 2001 http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Acro...69/tpftla.html A man's vehicle is a symbol of his manhood. That's why my vehicle's the Piccadilly Line - It's the size of a county and it comes every two and a half minutes |
#29
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Until it breaks a kid's neck...
A kid could break their neck in a bus door which can be quite violent. Perhaps you could campaign for them to be made out of marshmallows with cotton wool sides? They already close quite hard enough IMO. Well I can hold a tube door open with 3 fingers so unless you're a 3 stone midget with a muscle wasting disease I hardly think they close hard at all. Besides , I'm sure other countries have had the usual "think of the children/pensioners/some-other-sobsville-group" argument and ignored them. Just like we should. B2003 |
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