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#81
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![]() "David Hansen" wrote in message ... On Fri, 29 Aug 2003 21:13:24 +0000 (UTC) someone who may be "Peter Masson" wrote this:- Where exactly is Hurst in Kent? The BBC has a little map that shows the system and rough positions. This link might take you to it, http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/shared/spl/h...5263/html/1.st m if not then go to http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/3190143.stm and click on the "Open" bit in the "POWER CUT SOURCE" box near the bottom. -- David Hansen, Edinburgh | PGP email preferred-key number F566DA0E I will always explain revoked keys, unless the UK government prevents me using the RIP Act 2000. |
#82
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![]() "David Hansen" wrote in message ... Where exactly is Hurst in Kent? The BBC has a little map that shows the system and rough positions. This link might take you to it, http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/shared/spl/h...5263/html/1.st m if not then go to http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/3190143.stm and click on the "Open" bit in the "POWER CUT SOURCE" box near the bottom. This looks like somewhere in the Sidcup/Bexley area. The road from near Sidcup Station to Bexley is Hurst Road, and there's a Hurst Place along it, so I presume it's somewhere around there, though I've never heard of the area being called simply 'Hurst'. If Bill Hayles is looking in he may be able to help, as he was familiar with Hurst Road. Peter |
#83
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![]() "David Hansen" wrote in message ... On 29 Aug 2003 09:56:23 -0700 someone who may be (Richard Catlow) wrote this:- Perhaps a small scale in terms of the number of substations, or even the geographical area affected, but big in terms of consumers, megawatts, gigawatt hours and ciruits to which the surface railway are connected. Thanks for the information, which I am considering along with the BBC's map which may be at http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/shared/spl/h...5263/html/1.st m as I said in an earlier message. Of course having this information makes me a terrorist, according to Section 58 of the Terrorism Act 2000, so you may not hear from me again for a while. Yeah, you'll have that FMNT80 bloke posting a reply with... Concerns sent to or whatever it was. : ) |
#84
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In article ,
Roland Perry wrote: The power failure lasted just over half an hour - and there was no chain reaction in the way that happened in North America. Surely the second failure, after 7 seconds, was a chain reaction. Even if there wasn't a third link in that chain. I've not seen anything that suggested that the second failure was a consequence of the first. -- __ __ __ __ __ ___ _____________________________________________ |__||__)/ __/ \|\ ||_ | / Acorn StrongArm Risc_PC | || \\__/\__/| \||__ | /...Internet access for all Acorn RISC machines ___________________________/ |
#85
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In article ,
Richard J. wrote: BBC reports that the Greenwich standby generator is "designed to power safety lights in trains and stations". The Times said something similar this morning. It seems we may have been seriously misled about the capability of the Greenwich power station. All this stuff about LU's legal obligation to have a second power supply. Not much good if it can't run the trains. But it would be an absolute disaster if passengers were to be evacuated from trains into unlit stations. -- __ __ __ __ __ ___ _____________________________________________ |__||__)/ __/ \|\ ||_ | / Acorn StrongArm Risc_PC | || \\__/\__/| \||__ | /...Internet access for all Acorn RISC machines ___________________________/ |
#86
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Chris Game wrote:
Roland Perry said: In article , Chris Game writes The faults were generally reported as 'unrelated'. Do you know better? I haven't seen any reports that used the word "unrelated". The Energy Minister's comments on the BBC on Friday. Oh, a politician. -- James Farrar | London SE 13 | |
#87
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David H Wild wrote:
In article , Richard J. wrote: BBC reports that the Greenwich standby generator is "designed to power safety lights in trains and stations". The Times said something similar this morning. It seems we may have been seriously misled about the capability of the Greenwich power station. All this stuff about LU's legal obligation to have a second power supply. Not much good if it can't run the trains. But it would be an absolute disaster if passengers were to be evacuated from trains into unlit stations. Of course. That's why Seeboard Powerlink has installed battery lighting in all stations. -- Richard J. (to e-mail me, swap uk and yon in address) |
#88
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On Sat, 30 Aug 2003 20:43:42 +0100 someone who may be Paul Terry
wrote this:- If traction current is lost and the decision is made to de-train passengers, what do you do if power is restored while that process is still underway, Deciding to do so is not a decision made in the blink of an eye. It needs to be thought-out and communicated to those in charge of the power supply and signalling [1]. Before evacuating trains staff will place short-circuiting bars on the conductor rails to prevent them being energised and then conduct the passengers away. It is a long slow process and once started finishing will cause far less disruption than trying to stop it. [1] From a handful or reports it seems that the BR signalling continued working on standby generators. Does anyone know how LU signalling behaves in similar circumstances? and how do you recover from the mess of trains stuck half in stations, some clear of passengers and others not, and of trains stuck in tunnels? Presumably someone is detailed to walk through a section, checking for passengers, advising train staff and watching them put short-circuiting bars back in the train. Then it can be energised. If you mean that LU should go back to generating (70% I think it was) of its own power usage, that would mean an enormous investment (think "tube fares") and I don't know that it would really be the answer Probably not. It will be interesting to see how reliable the current arrangement is over say a decade, compared to the old one (which suffered several bad power failures). -- David Hansen, Edinburgh | PGP email preferred-key number F566DA0E I will always explain revoked keys, unless the UK government prevents me using the RIP Act 2000. |
#89
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Paul Terry said:
Risk is ever-present in life. Managing risk is both an art and a science, but one must not let the emotions rule. A power-cut such as this was very much shorter than many cities could even dream of. The technical issues of what caused the outage should be simple enough to find out. What the Mayor of London should be asking are questions about the impact of such events, and the capacity of the city to cope with thousands of people in various states of anger and shock all milling about not knowing what to do. How good were the flows of information about the event and it's resolution, and how were people informed so they could make sensible choices about what to do. -- ============================================= Chris Game chrisgame@!yahoo!dotcodotuk ============================================= |
#90
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James Farrar said:
I haven't seen any reports that used the word "unrelated". The Energy Minister's comments on the BBC on Friday. Oh, a politician. Presumably talking after a briefing by the National Grid people. -- ============================================= Chris Game chrisgame@!yahoo!dotcodotuk ============================================= |
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