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#41
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On 24 Sep, 13:47, Tom Anderson wrote:
Is that just an illusion due to the angle of the shot? From the outside, it looks like there are windows either side of the central one, but they're obscured by the monitors. The driver looks out of the left side window (or the right from outside). It looks to me like the centre cab door is opaque, so the monitors in front of it aren't obscuring anything, and the monitor on the left of the picture is against the side wall. There's a tiny window to the left of it for seeing stopping marks and such. Pretty much the same view as in other trains with cab-end doors. U |
#42
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Neil Williams wrote:
(re Merseyrail) 6 cars are still used in the peaks. Indeed they are, but on surprisingly few trains. My observation is that only on the heaviest-loaded trains is there any need for them, and even that only extends to a couple of stops out of the loop. I don't know so well what things are like on Hunts Cross to Southport. -- http://gallery120232.fotopic.net/p9632878.html (33 106 at Reading, 4 Mar 1980) |
#43
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"Neil Williams" wrote
"John Salmon" wrote: Merseyrail isn't a good example of how it should be done. The entire electrified system including the loop and link lines were designed for six-car operation, then after a very short time the trains were reduced to three cars - which is why SET and LO ended up with Class 508 units. No. The 508s were spare because they didn't need to go to 6-car on all trains due to lower demand than expected, and because MTL thought they could make do with fewer (and us passengers saw the short- formations and cancellations start straight away). 6 cars are still used in the peaks. Quite. So when you typed 'No' you meant 'Yes'. I don't think we're actually disagreeing about anything. |
#44
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#45
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On 24 Sep, 13:42, Tom Anderson wrote:
Have you ever actually used the tube? Specifically, C stock, which has the most comparable layout? The space between the seats can be and is used for plenty of standing. And is bloody inconvenient as such, because there is nowhere to stand in C stock where you are not in the way of someone. The OP has a good point - if TfL won't/can't fund longer trains (which is the optimal solution), fewer seats and proper standbacks might actually be better. Neil |
#47
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On 24 Sep, 14:50, Chris Tolley wrote:
Indeed they are, but on surprisingly few trains. My observation is that only on the heaviest-loaded trains is there any need for them, and even that only extends to a couple of stops out of the loop. I don't know so well what things are like on Hunts Cross to Southport. The Link lines are generally far busier - not sure about the Southport line but a 3 car would load full and standing as far as Maghull or Kirkby, easily. Neil |
#48
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On 24 Sep, 13:42, Tom Anderson wrote:
On Tue, 23 Sep 2008, MIG wrote: On Sep 24, 1:40*am, Mizter T wrote: On 23 Sep, 21:56, Rupert Candy wrote: On Sep 22, 5:58*pm, "Paul Scott" wrote: 'Rail Manager online' reporting the first 378 to travel south tomorrow, and the possibility of Third Rail electrification of the GOB line... http://91.186.0.3/~keepingt/rm/164/RMAN_164.pdf There's a sizeable feature in this week's Railway Herald (www.railwayherald.com) about the 378s, with several pictures. Anyone else struck by the lack of handles at useful heights for that massive standing space in between the seats? You'd think they'd have learnt their lesson from the 376s. I'd seen this photo and had a similar thought about the lack of handles:http://www.upmain.fotopic.net/p53614368.html However I wonder if the bars which are suspended from the ceiling might actually be low enough for many people to use. If not perhaps they might have to add straps or handles to those bars - indeed, perhaps that's already part of the plan? After the way the 376s were delivered, I could believe anything. I entirely accept the need for standing space, but surely by now it's bleedin obvious that this can't be achieved by mixing seating and standing space in the same part of the carriage. No. It would be better to have areas purely for standing either side of the doors (slighly bigger than in 376s, without obstructions and with plenty to hold on to) and short areas of transverse seating in between. Longitudinal seating may appear to leave standing space according to calculations, but in real life, space full of seated people's legs and heads can't realistically be used for anything like as much standing as a dedicated standing area. Have you ever actually used the tube? Specifically, C stock, which has the most comparable layout? The space between the seats can be and is used for plenty of standing. Of course I have. The layout on the Jubilee, for example, is awful, with space for one and half people to stand between the end of the seats and the first obstruction. The C stock has so many doors that it wouldn't really be possible to have both standing and sitting space between them. Of course the space between can be used for standing, but not as efficiently as it might. A similar layout was tried and abandoned (thank gawd) on the DLR, and the current DLR arrangement is pretty damn good. The problem with 376s (really a reply to Mizter T, sorry) is that the seated area is too long and the standing area too small and cluttered to be taken proper advantage of. |
#49
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Paul Corfield wrote:
The boundary point is known as Mantle's Wood. An odd bit of railway given it's LU property but never used by LU passenger trains - only Chiltern. And last time I went up there the boundary between the two was rather noticeable, as you had an obvious transition from sectional track (LU) to continuous welded rail (NR), and from LU high density signalling to incredibly long signal sections. (If memory serves, there are only three or four signals between Mantles Wood and Aylesbury). Cheers, Barry |
#50
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Mr Thant wrote:
On 24 Sep, 12:33, Boltar wrote: And a few hundred people from each thameslink train walk over the small bridge try and squash onto a circle line train to finish their journey. Farringdon will be utter chaos every morning and evening. Which is why they're putting in a much bigger bridge. If memory serves, the 1990s plan for Crossrail featured Farringdon and Liverpool Street being "double ended", affording interchange with Barbican and Moorgate, respectively. Cheers, Barry |
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