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#11
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John Rowland wrote:
If you know how many there are, finding most or all of them shouldn't be that hard. I've found a few, and I wasn't particularly looking for them. I think the only one which you would never find unless you knew it was there would be the one inside the Greathead statue on a traffic island in the middle of Cornhill. I can think of a fair few which one wouldn't be able to find unless you knew *exactly* where to look. A few examples off the top of my head:- 1) Southampton Street 2) one in the middle of a plant depot in Bow 3) one in the middle of a council estate between Stratford and Leyton 4) Elephant & Castle Sidings (in the bowels of the shopping centre) 5) Cambridge Park 6) Bressenden Place 7) Grass Area 14 Et cetera... And are we sure that the Greathead statue is actually atop a vent shaft? BRB Class 465. |
#12
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Upon the miasma of midnight, a darkling spirit identified as Adrian
gently breathed: Would that it were that simple. The implication is that one can dial 222 1234 within a notional STD code of "0207" AND expect to be connected. I have heard that there are a handful of exchanges within London were that does work. However the standard is now eight digit local numbers within London. Dialing eight digits within STD code "020" will always work. Why do people want to only dial part of the number? Why not just dial the whole thing and be sure it will work from anywhere in the UK, including mobiles? Back in the days of electro-mechanical exchange switching and physical connections number-shortening may have made sense, but surely by now it's an anachronism? Or is there a good reason for still doing it - I suppose it makes it easier for a person with limited hand mobility to dial, though it won't help them use a mobile or if they're in a different area. -- - DJ Pyromancer, Black Sheep, Leeds. http://www.sheepish.net Hard Rock, Leeds http://www.hard-rock.org.uk Broadband, Dialup, Domains = http://www.wytches.net = The UK's Pagan ISP! http://www.inkubus-sukkubus.co.uk http://www.revival.stormshadow.com |
#13
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Pyromancer wrote:
Upon the miasma of midnight, a darkling spirit identified as Adrian gently breathed: Would that it were that simple. The implication is that one can dial 222 1234 within a notional STD code of "0207" AND expect to be connected. I have heard that there are a handful of exchanges within London were that does work. However the standard is now eight digit local numbers within London. Dialing eight digits within STD code "020" will always work. Why do people want to only dial part of the number? Why not just dial the whole thing and be sure it will work from anywhere in the UK, including mobiles? If I'm in London using a landline phone, why would I want to dial 11 digits when 8 would do? -- Richard J. (to e-mail me, swap uk and yon in address) |
#14
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Steve Fitzgerald wrote:
London never ever had 0207 or 0208 dialling codes. It's some myth put about by the media every time they have a slow news day and they attempt to provoke some outrage that Londoners will be confused by these 'new 0203 codes' or somesuch rubbish. London dialling codes went from 01 to 071/081 to 0171/0181 to 020. Nothing more, nothing less. To be a bit fair the phone code change was not very well advertised in this form. Rather in 1995 the big message was "it's 1 to remember" aka "phone codes get an extra 1 added" and in about 2000 the message was more "numbers beginning 0171 become 0207, 0181 become 0208" than "0171 & 0181 merge back into a single district of 020 with numbers that used to have the 0171 prefix now having a 7 added to the start and those with 0181 having an 8 added". Now I realise the latter is not the easiest message to convey, and splitting the reorganisation in two would have taken much longer and given everyone another huge bill to rearrange their hoardings, letterheads etc... but was any attempt made in the advertising to actually drive home the point that all of London was becoming a single area? Everything I can recall was a much simpler "this number becomes that number" or even "the area code changes again". |
#15
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In message , Tim Roll-Pickering
writes London never ever had 0207 or 0208 dialling codes. It's some myth put about by the media every time they have a slow news day and they attempt to provoke some outrage that Londoners will be confused by these 'new 0203 codes' or somesuch rubbish. London dialling codes went from 01 to 071/081 to 0171/0181 to 020. Nothing more, nothing less. To be a bit fair the phone code change was not very well advertised in this form. Rather in 1995 the big message was "it's 1 to remember" aka "phone codes get an extra 1 added" and in about 2000 the message was more "numbers beginning 0171 become 0207, 0181 become 0208" than "0171 & 0181 merge back into a single district of 020 with numbers that used to have the 0171 prefix now having a 7 added to the start and those with 0181 having an 8 added". Now I realise the latter is not the easiest message to convey, and splitting the reorganisation in two would have taken much longer and given everyone another huge bill to rearrange their hoardings, letterheads etc... but was any attempt made in the advertising to actually drive home the point that all of London was becoming a single area? Everything I can recall was a much simpler "this number becomes that number" or even "the area code changes again". I can't speak for the rest of the world, but I understood it perfectly at the time and subsequently. I don't ever remember an official message saying or implying that numbers went from 0171/0181 to 0207/0208. The only thing that may potentially have confused things was that during the changeover, there was a period towards the end of the 0171/0181 era when you could use the new 020 dialling code, but because the numbers hadn't been converted, the local portion was still 7 digits and you had to dial the full number. This happened for a few months but was never officially communicated. I only knew this at the time as I worked for a company where my job involved dealing with telephone connections and I had a lot of dealings with BT in those days. -- Steve Fitzgerald has now left the building. You will find him in London's Docklands, E16, UK (please use the reply to address for email) |
#16
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On Nov 14, 1:09 pm, Mizter T wrote:
Let me be a pedant back at you - there is such a number, the spacing between the individual digits doesn't change the fact that if one dialled it it would work - hence it is a valid telephone number. Yes yes it isn't written in the 'approved' format, but thousands (millions?) of Londoners do the same and manage just fine. And many of them get very confused when I tell them my WC1 address and 020 3xxx xxxx number, because to them it's 'not a London number'... |
#17
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On Nov 14, 6:33 pm, contrex wrote:
On 14 Nov, 13:42, Rob wrote: Hi Does anyone know where I can find a comprehensive list of London Underground ventilation shafts, used and disused? I went to a lecture recently and they said there were 190 of them in total. Thanks in advance Rob Smith If I were TFL I'd keep quiet about them. You might be a nutter or terrorist for all we know. I take your point, though I was just planning to walk some underground routes overground, using the ventilation shafts as waymarks. Its sad you cant pay an interest in transport matters these days without arousing suspicion your a terrorist. If I was a terrorist I wouldnt do my recce by ringing up TfL or posting on the internet using my real name either. Rob Smith |
#18
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On Nov 14, 8:12 pm, "John Rowland"
wrote: Rob wrote: Hi Does anyone know where I can find a comprehensive list of London Underground ventilation shafts, used and disused? I went to a lecture recently and they said there were 190 of them in total. If you know how many there are, finding most or all of them shouldn't be that hard. I've found a few, and I wasn't particularly looking for them. I think the only one which you would never find unless you knew it was there would be the one inside the Greathead statue on a traffic island in the middle of Cornhill. Thanks John So much has been written about London Underground infrastructure, Im surprised no ones written a book or website that covers the subject. Looks like Ill have to research it myself. The Greathead statue one is interesting. Others Ive heard of - Pavillion in Park Crescent One in a building in Cloudsley Sq Islington Opposite Warren St station Half way down City Road Ill keep looking Thanks for your help Rob |
#19
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Steve Fitzgerald wrote:
I can't speak for the rest of the world, but I understood it perfectly at the time and subsequently. Erm but your job "involved dealing with telephone connections" - maybe you had reason to understand the logistics behind it. I don't ever remember an official message saying or implying that numbers went from 0171/0181 to 0207/0208. I was out of London at the time and missed some of the actual BT adverts but my recollection is that it was certainly summed up as "numbers beginning this become that" in the media. But putting it the other way round - was the remerger of the two areas highlighted much? |
#20
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Rob wrote:
The Greathead statue one is interesting. Others Ive heard of - Pavillion in Park Crescent One in a building in Cloudsley Sq Islington Are you sure? I heard there was one in Gibson Sq, which is very close by. Opposite Warren St station Half way down City Road ....which is of course the closed City Road Station. This is definitely one in Rotherhithe Street... http://maps.live.com/default.aspx?v=...9214&encType=1 ISTR this being one, in Downtown Road... http://maps.live.com/default.aspx?v=...2759&encType=1 And ISTR this being one near Culling Circus... http://maps.live.com/default.aspx?v=...5807&encType=1 Definitely one in Netherton Road... http://maps.live.com/default.aspx?v=...7938&encType=1 Two close together at London Bridge... One aligned north-south (Northern line?) http://maps.live.com/default.aspx?v=...2636&encType=1 One aligned northwest-southeast (Jubilee Line) http://maps.live.com/default.aspx?v=...2636&encType=1 ....although I can't think why fanshafts would have structures which indicate the orientation of the line beneath. This can't be a fanshaft, I wonder what it is? http://maps.live.com/default.aspx?v=...5313&encType=1 There are of course various holes in the roof of the Circle Line, such as the one next to Great Portland Street station. I'll keep an eye out for more fanshafts and email you when I find them. |
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