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NEWS: Tube Driver Faints
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Tube Driver Faints
"Joe Patrick" wrote in message om... http://www.freewebs.com/news.html#news24 Tube Driver Faints on Moving Train Was probably ****ed up on booze. |
Tube Driver Faints
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Tube Driver Faints
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Tube Driver Faints
"Steve Naïve" wrote in message ... One day the media will actually get the place right in one of their reports! |
Tube Driver Faints
In message , Steve Naïve
writes Tube bosses are investigating the incident, which happened at 11.30am on September 25 and sparked delays on the Circle Line. Fell on the conductor rails, did he? -- Roland Perry |
LondonTransport live chat
I put this irc client on me website now so all one has to do is click the
url. Then nobody has to get into the technicalities of downloading mIRC. Mind you i'm not sitting there all the time waiting however. http://www.centaur.plus.com -- regards, Pre`38 tube [DR] westLondon, UK |
Tube Driver Faints
"Joe Patrick" wrote in message ...
http://www.freewebs.com/railwaysonline/news.html#news24 You have to wonder what kind of man feels sick and faints just because some other guys are discussing a vasectomy. I'm relly not sure I'd want this lightweight in charge of my train and god knows how he'd react in an emergency that possibly involved injuries. Burst into tears and throw up over the passengers? B2003 |
NEWS: Tube Driver Faints
In article ,
(Joe Patrick) wrote: http://www.freewebs.com/news.html#news24 Tube Driver Faints on Moving Train One important thing that doesn't seem to have been picked up anywhere in the various reports of this is why was the train going along with the cab door open anyway? If the story is true as told, then it doesn't say much for the quality of the I/Op (road trainer) that was training him and this is definitely a disciplinary issue. It would seem that the trainee was very lucky in just getting away with a few bruises. The I/Op (road trainer) is in charge of the train. Cab doors should never be open when the train is moving unless there are exceptional circumstances. The same also goes for the droplights being fully open on the 1972 type stock. I know it is done, especially in the extra hot weather to improve the very limited ventilation and indeed I have had to run with the offside door open on a couple of occasions when the air conditioning has failed in a (sealed) 1995 stock cab. However an I/Op is supposed to be a responsible person and, if only for my own safety when somebody else is driving, I would ensure the doors/droplights were closed and the interlocks (if fitted) were not cut out. A decent I/Op would have stopped discussing anything if that was giving problems to the trainee, whether it is something discussed between others in the cab or even if there were only the trainee and the I/Op in the cab. More importantly, it was obviously distracting the trainee from what he was doing - observing the road and driving the train. Ideally, the trainee should have just walked off the train and reported the matter but, understandably, trainees are always loathe to report a trainer, especially when it means that they will probably be one of their work colleagues when they are fully qualified later. Various comments have been made about the trainee fainting; that is irrelevant and is no reflection on how he may perform as a driver or during an incident, or even how he may perform if somebody was to jump under his train. Often squeamish people have been the pillar of strength in an incident and those that you thought could cope with anything have turned to jelly at the sight of a loose body part. Roger |
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