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#21
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On Jan 19, 6:13 pm, Mizter T wrote:
On 19 Jan, 17:50, Edward Cowling London UK wrote: In message , asdf writes On Sat, 19 Jan 2008 12:44:10 +0000, Edward Cowling London UK wrote: While we're taking about the Victoria Line can someone fix the computer to make the breaking less last minute and less fierce. It's the only line that seems to routinely try to throw everyone on the floor ! Please don't; I'd rather have the faster journey times. More grab-rails can be installed if necessary. I'm getting on a bit (brings out violin) and my back doesn't like all the excitement of the unplanned roller coaster ride the Victoria Line can be. Roll on the invention of inertial dampers :-) Fair enough, I see your point - and yes, I suppose the Victoria line can be a bit jerky. Perhaps the new stock on the upgraded line will manage to do the job in a smoother manner, without sacrificing the speed. Isn't the upgrade actually going to increase the speed? http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/e...on/5186896.stm says journey times will improve by 16%. |
#22
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On Sat, 19 Jan 2008 19:13:55 +0000, Edward Cowling London UK wrote:
Hi fellow brother of the damned, I do the same awful route :-) I've lost track of the times I've started to move towards the doors, only to have the train stop dead and chuck me about. I don't get this on the Piccadilly line. Plus the trains don't wait at the platform like the human driven trains do if there is a bad morning with the trains up ahead. They just stop in the bloody tunnel. All in all give me a human being at the wheel any day. It's still a human being that presses the buttons to close the doors and start the train moving. That's like calling the guy in the space capsule a pilot :-) My point was that whether or not the trains wait in the platform when there's a delay up ahead is still entirely human-controlled. |
#23
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On Sat, 19 Jan 2008 19:24:58 +0000, Tom Anderson wrote:
Fair enough, I see your point - and yes, I suppose the Victoria line can be a bit jerky. Perhaps the new stock on the upgraded line will manage to do the job in a smoother manner, without sacrificing the speed. That seems perfectly possible - they could lower the rate of change of deceleration, without significantly sacrificing the magnitude of the deceleration. You beat me to it! The rate of change of acceleration [1] is known as 'jerk rate', [1] The fourth derivative of position with respect to time - fourth! Third, surely? |
#24
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"Tom Anderson" wrote in message
h.li... On Sat, 19 Jan 2008, asdf wrote: On Sat, 19 Jan 2008 10:13:13 -0800 (PST), Mizter T wrote: I'm getting on a bit (brings out violin) and my back doesn't like all the excitement of the unplanned roller coaster ride the Victoria Line can be. Roll on the invention of inertial dampers :-) Fair enough, I see your point - and yes, I suppose the Victoria line can be a bit jerky. Perhaps the new stock on the upgraded line will manage to do the job in a smoother manner, without sacrificing the speed. That seems perfectly possible - they could lower the rate of change of deceleration, without significantly sacrificing the magnitude of the deceleration. You beat me to it! The rate of change of acceleration [1] is known as 'jerk rate', and it's primarily that, rather than the magnitude of the acceleration, which determines passenger comfort. Well, until the acceleration is a significant fraction of gravity, but i don't think we're likely to see that - normal braking is usually on the order of 1 m/s^2, i think. You can indeed reduce the jerk rate while maintaining the same deceleration; it means it'll take a little longer to come up to full braking, but the extra time is negligible compared to the time then spent at full brake. The jerk rate is entirely limited by the sophistication of the control system, i believe; the primitive computers on the current Victoria line trains probably don't make any attempt to control it, and just switch between acceleration rates as quickly possible. I'd hope the new stock makes more effort here. tom [1] The fourth derivative of position with respect to time - fourth! Velocity is the first derivative, and acceleration is the second derivative. What are you regarding as the third derivative if you are calling the rate of change of acceleration the fourth derivative? -- David Biddulph |
#25
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On Sat, 19 Jan 2008, asdf wrote:
On Sat, 19 Jan 2008 19:24:58 +0000, Tom Anderson wrote: Fair enough, I see your point - and yes, I suppose the Victoria line can be a bit jerky. Perhaps the new stock on the upgraded line will manage to do the job in a smoother manner, without sacrificing the speed. That seems perfectly possible - they could lower the rate of change of deceleration, without significantly sacrificing the magnitude of the deceleration. You beat me to it! The rate of change of acceleration [1] is known as 'jerk rate', [1] The fourth derivative of position with respect to time - fourth! Third, surely? Fourth if you start counting at zero! [runs away] tom -- Things fall apart - it's scientific |
#26
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#27
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#28
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#29
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On Jan 19, 12:39 pm, "David Biddulph" groups [at] biddulph.org.uk
wrote: Velocity is the first derivative, and acceleration is the second derivative. What are you regarding as the third derivative Which - as was posted above - is ''jerk'' which does exactly what it says on the label. I had noticved this on the Vic. too. Agreed the Central does seem to have got that bit right ... although the whole was a long time coming. Had I not taken the job I have now I *would*have been on the Victoria line resignalling project and no doubt might have been able to offer some insight into comments in this thread. But I'm not, so I can't. That job was with Metronet so I dodged than one ... phewww ... ![]() -- Nick |
#30
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On Sat, 19 Jan 2008 20:09:35 +0000, asdf
wrote: On Sat, 19 Jan 2008 19:24:58 +0000, Tom Anderson wrote: Fair enough, I see your point - and yes, I suppose the Victoria line can be a bit jerky. Perhaps the new stock on the upgraded line will manage to do the job in a smoother manner, without sacrificing the speed. That seems perfectly possible - they could lower the rate of change of deceleration, without significantly sacrificing the magnitude of the deceleration. You beat me to it! The rate of change of acceleration [1] is known as 'jerk rate', [1] The fourth derivative of position with respect to time - fourth! Third, surely? "In the fall of 1972 President Nixon announced that the rate of increase of inflation was decreasing. This was the first time that a sitting president used the third derivative to advance his case for reelection." - Hugo Rossi, Mathmetician. |
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