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Old March 13th 08, 09:18 PM posted to uk.transport.london,uk.railway
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John Rowland wrote:
MIG wrote:
On 12 Mar, 20:44, wrote:

However, I feel that an obvious suggestion has been overlooked. Why
not paint the end walls of platform tunnels a distinctive colour to
indicate the normal direction of travel - or perhaps to mark ends
from which movements are not normally carried out? The driver would
have clocked he was heading the wrong way down the platform straight
away.


Yeah, I thought that. At a cost of a pot of paint and a few hours'
work per line. Could just be a coloured square or something.


A red disc with a white cross bar is more traditional.


Or you could have repeater signals in the correct direction and a sign
visible from the cab saying STOP in the wrong direction. Oh, they had those
already, so what makes people think another sign would work?

When we discussed this in June (thread at http://tinyurl.com/2v5qcb ), there
was a rumour that there was a fixed red signal next to the STOP sign, but it
had been bagged over.

My photo of the site at which is at
http://rjnews.fotopic.net/p42305755.html does indeed show what looks like a
bagged object. It's also just visible in the photo of the STOP sign in the
AAIB report, though no mention is made of it. They say in paragraph 109
that it would not be worth the cost of installing a trainstop with a signal,
but they don't comment on whether a fixed red signal without a trainstop
would be better than an unlit STOP sign. My feeling is that this would be a
better solution than painting the headwalls in distinctive colours.

(My photo also shows the sodium lights illuminating the junction, referred
to in the AAIB report.)
--
Richard J.
(to email me, swap 'uk' and 'yon' in address)



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Old March 13th 08, 09:36 PM posted to uk.transport.london,uk.railway
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Richard J. wrote:

Or you could have repeater signals in the correct direction and a sign
visible from the cab saying STOP in the wrong direction. Oh, they
had those already, so what makes people think another sign would work?

When we discussed this in June (thread at http://tinyurl.com/2v5qcb
), there was a rumour that there was a fixed red signal next to the
STOP sign, but it had been bagged over.

My photo of the site at which is at
http://rjnews.fotopic.net/p42305755.html does indeed show what looks
like a bagged object. It's also just visible in the photo of the
STOP sign in the AAIB report, though no mention is made of it. They
say in paragraph 109 that it would not be worth the cost of
installing a trainstop with a signal, but they don't comment on
whether a fixed red signal without a trainstop would be better than
an unlit STOP sign. My feeling is that this would be a better
solution than painting the headwalls in distinctive colours.


Would a sign such as that one be a reflective material like a road sign, or
just painted normally? As Tom has suggested, maybe red 'cats eyes' might
stand out more, and be cheaper to install than a fixed light, I suppose
whatever was done the cleaning requirement would be similar?

Paul S



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Old March 14th 08, 09:07 AM posted to uk.transport.london,uk.railway
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On 13 Mar, 21:18, "Richard J." wrote:
John Rowland wrote:
MIG wrote:
On 12 Mar, 20:44, wrote:


However, I feel that an obvious suggestion has been overlooked. Why
not paint the end walls of platform tunnels a distinctive colour to
indicate the normal direction of travel - or perhaps to mark ends
from which movements are not normally carried out? The driver would
have clocked he was heading the wrong way down the platform straight
away.


Yeah, I thought that. *At a cost of a pot of paint and a few hours'
work per line. *Could just be a coloured square or something.


A red disc with a white cross bar is more traditional.


Or you could have repeater signals in the correct direction and a sign
visible from the cab saying STOP in the wrong direction. *Oh, they had those
already, so what makes people think another sign would work?


I and the earlier poster were assuming something visible from the
platform (useful to passengers also) indicating which was the front or
not the front.

The point at which the mistake was made was when walking along the
platform, so that might be the place to prevent it.

Sitting in the cab facing the wrong way is not something that anyone
would be used to, so the warnings wouldn't be familiar, whereas
looking along the platform and finding the right end happens
constantly.
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Old March 14th 08, 01:24 PM posted to uk.transport.london,uk.railway
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MIG wrote:
On 13 Mar, 12:46, "John Rowland"
wrote:
MIG wrote:
On 12 Mar, 20:44, wrote:


However, I feel that an obvious suggestion has been overlooked. Why
not paint the end walls of platform tunnels a distinctive colour to
indicate the normal direction of travel - or perhaps to mark ends
from which movements are not normally carried out? The driver would
have clocked he was heading the wrong way down the platform
straight away.


Yeah, I thought that. At a cost of a pot of paint and a few hours'
work per line. Could just be a coloured square or something.


A red disc with a white cross bar is more traditional.


Two pots of paint then.


Or you could just buy the signs in from the Highways Agency - they have lots
of them. Alternatively, put the name of the station across the white cross
bar, and you'd have one of the old-style solid roundels. Just so the driver
never forgets which station he got the sack at.


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Old March 14th 08, 02:45 PM posted to uk.transport.london,uk.railway
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Default Northern Line near collision

this is off topic kind of, im not very good at staying on topic but i
think theres some kind of clever thing to stop piccadilly line trains
near Earl's Court eastbound/northbound from going into the district
line tunnels which are smaller, something to do with cylinders of
mercury hanging in mid-air somehow, the idea is if the piccadilly line
train goes onto the wrong track the train will be big enough to smash
the cylinders and the mercury short circuits the track so the train
won't go any further, its really clever

so if they can do something like that wouldn't it be no more difficult
to set something up that short circuits if the train goes the wrong
way down the track?


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Old March 14th 08, 02:58 PM posted to uk.transport.london,uk.railway
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MIG wrote:
On 13 Mar, 21:18, "Richard J." wrote:
John Rowland wrote:
MIG wrote:
On 12 Mar, 20:44, wrote:


However, I feel that an obvious suggestion has been overlooked.
Why not paint the end walls of platform tunnels a distinctive
colour to indicate the normal direction of travel - or perhaps to
mark ends from which movements are not normally carried out? The
driver would have clocked he was heading the wrong way down the
platform straight away.


Yeah, I thought that. At a cost of a pot of paint and a few hours'
work per line. Could just be a coloured square or something.


A red disc with a white cross bar is more traditional.


Or you could have repeater signals in the correct direction and a
sign visible from the cab saying STOP in the wrong direction. Oh,
they had those already, so what makes people think another sign
would work?


I and the earlier poster were assuming something visible from the
platform (useful to passengers also) indicating which was the front or
not the front.

The point at which the mistake was made was when walking along the
platform, so that might be the place to prevent it.


It wasn't *the* mistake, it was the first of at least three. Also, since
the driver seems to have turned right without thinking about whether it was
the right direction, why do you suppose that he would have noticed some
feature on the headwall with which he would not normally be familiar?

Sitting in the cab facing the wrong way is not something that anyone
would be used to, so the warnings wouldn't be familiar, whereas
looking along the platform and finding the right end happens
constantly.


No, it happens constantly to *passengers*, but drivers normally join their
trains at a few well-known stations where the knowledge of which way to turn
would not require a conscious process of "finding the right end".

--
Richard J.
(to email me, swap 'uk' and 'yon' in address)



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Old March 14th 08, 03:06 PM posted to uk.transport.london,uk.railway
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In message
Sophie wrote:

this is off topic kind of, im not very good at staying on topic but i
think theres some kind of clever thing to stop piccadilly line trains
near Earl's Court eastbound/northbound from going into the district
line tunnels which are smaller, something to do with cylinders of
mercury hanging in mid-air somehow, the idea is if the piccadilly line
train goes onto the wrong track the train will be big enough to smash
the cylinders and the mercury short circuits the track so the train
won't go any further, its really clever

so if they can do something like that wouldn't it be no more difficult
to set something up that short circuits if the train goes the wrong
way down the track?


Cost a fortune in mercury because the train would trip it evry time it passed
regardless of the direction of travel. The point of the Piccadilly line
devices is that they are high enough for tube trains to pass under but the
taller suface stock will hit them.

To be technical they don't short circuit but break a circuit which puts the
signals to red and activates the trip stops.

--
Graeme Wall
This address is not read, substitute trains for rail.
Transport Miscellany at http://www.greywall.demon.co.uk/rail/index.html
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Old March 14th 08, 03:32 PM posted to uk.transport.london,uk.railway
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Graeme Wall wrote:
In message


Sophie wrote:

this is off topic kind of, im not very good at staying on topic but i
think theres some kind of clever thing to stop piccadilly line trains
near Earl's Court eastbound/northbound from going into the district
line tunnels which are smaller, something to do with cylinders of
mercury hanging in mid-air somehow, the idea is if the piccadilly
line train goes onto the wrong track the train will be big enough to
smash the cylinders and the mercury short circuits the track so the
train won't go any further, its really clever

so if they can do something like that wouldn't it be no more
difficult to set something up that short circuits if the train goes
the wrong way down the track?


Cost a fortune in mercury because the train would trip it evry time
it passed regardless of the direction of travel. The point of the
Piccadilly line devices is that they are high enough for tube trains
to pass under but the taller suface stock will hit them.

To be technical they don't short circuit but break a circuit which
puts the signals to red and activates the trip stops.


And because mercury is supposed to be dangerous, they use something else
instead; I think it's now a metal coating inside a glass tube.

But to return to Sophie's suggestion, they could set up something to stop
any train which attempts to go the wrong way. The standard way of doing
this would be a fixed red signal and trainstop, but the RAIB report said
that the costs would not be justified. "The control of the associated train
stop to prevent a northbound train being inappropriately stopped would incur
costs disproportionate to the benefit and the RAIB does not recommend it."
--
Richard J.
(to email me, swap 'uk' and 'yon' in address)


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Old March 14th 08, 08:17 PM posted to uk.transport.london,uk.railway
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"Tom Anderson" wrote in message
h.li...
On Thu, 13 Mar 2008, MIG wrote:


Or you write on the floor by the cab door 'NORTH' or 'SOUTH' as
appropriate. or 'HIGH BARNET' or 'MORDEN', whichever you like.


....or just a couple of large white arrows pointing the right way ?
A few minutes work with a stencil and paintpot.

Jim Hawkins




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