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#11
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On Feb 19, 8:44*am, Edward Cowling London UK
wrote: Northern Line Information". Now it's being given a challenge by "This train will be held here to be regulated". I think they seem to think if they delay the train it'll somehow magically be able to alleviate overcrowding further down the line when theres a gap in the service. Trouble is , what the geniuses in the control room don't seemed to have worked out is that a full train aint gonna pick up any more people whether it leaves now or in 10 minutes so they might just as well let it go on its way so at least the passengers it already is carrying won't be delayed along with everyone on the platforms. B2003 |
#12
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"Edward Cowling London UK" wrote ...
Why keep an already over full train stood at the platform ? People get stressed, LU staff get stressed, and you could tell the driver was getting stressed. Pointless jobsworth regulation doesn't help the public and it doesn't do much good for LU staff. regulation really isn't pointless - though it is not always successful and could probably be managed much better. While your train may be packed - and on time - the train behind may be even more packed, meaning longer loading/unloading and so falling more behind, thus meeting more and more full platforms and falling even more behind ... etc. But it would probably be better to spot the problem before five minutes 'regulation' was needed; a quiet word to the driver to dawdle by 15 seconds at each station would be smoother and much less in-yer-face and frustrating. An even better solution would be to run more trains - but the Picc has another ten years before that happens - not just the extra trains, but the signalling to go with it. -- Andrew "If A is success in life, then A = x + y + z. Work is x; y is play; and z is keeping your mouth shut." ~ Albert Einstein |
#13
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#14
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Do points often randomly move on their own when a
signals fails to red or whatever the victoria line equivalent is? AIUI - its in the wiring of the said point/s and signal. The "green" proves to the driver that the points are both set and LOCKED (safe) However with a red signal the associated points *may* A) Be in the wrong position (being diff to the signalmans diagram) B) WONT be locked (unsafe) and for that reason those points "could" move as a train passes over them (remember its a failure and with no "green" there is no proof thay are locked). Or they may even simply be set for a wrong route. |
#15
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#16
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On Feb 19, 11:12*am, "John Rowland"
wrote: To effect quick turnarounds you need to roster in "stepping back" which is used at Brixton. However you can't just magic drivers out of nowhere Why would you have to magic up a driver? The train already has one and since he can't get to where he was going anyway why can't he just drive it back in the other direction? Can't Boltar just go one day without some major fsckup? Actually he inadvertently has a point here - aren't the new Thameslink trains being specced with CCTV in the driver's cab so s/he can back up without changing ends if required...? -- John Band john at johnband dot org www.johnband.org |
#17
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On Feb 19, 11:41*am, Mike Bristow wrote:
Often, the root cause of the signal failure is a failure of the points locking mechanisim (or the magic that tells the signalling system it is locked). Fair enuff , I didn't know that. Perhaps it would be too expensive but couldn't each set of points have a backup locking system? B2003 |
#18
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![]() wrote in message ... On Feb 19, 11:41 am, Mike Bristow wrote: Often, the root cause of the signal failure is a failure of the points locking mechanisim (or the magic that tells the signalling system it is locked). Fair enuff , I didn't know that. Perhaps it would be too expensive but couldn't each set of points have a backup locking system? B2003 Another thing is that the affected points are not always immediately in front of the driver and could be round a bend or 300 yds further up which he is unable to see, and one signal may be linked to a total of 3 "sets" of points before its able to turn green and any one of the three may be the problem. He wont know which ones are causing the problem. |
#19
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