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#71
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#72
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"Andrew Robert Breen" wrote in message
In article , wrote: "Recliner" wrote in message ... Personally, I'd rather ride in a 1967 stock train than the modern Jubilee and Northern line trains that came from the same factory. I certainly wouldn't prefer to ride in a 1967 car compared to almost any modern car[1]. OTOH, I'd avoid any pre-Mk.3 train like the plague, and off the IC routes would prefer to shun anything pre-158. If I'm sitting in something as a passenger, then ride comfort comes very high up the list, and I want seats that don't wreck my back (equally vital in a car, of course, but then the '67 design wins there as well, with better seats than anything else I've come across[2]. And if I'm a passenger, then wind noise and suspension vibration matter more as well. Modern stock really do win out there[1], as well as providing what's generall/y a nicer passenger environment. I rode on the nicely refurbished Mk 1 stock (Royal Scot rake) to Swanage and thoroughly enjoyed the well-sprung armchairs and copious shiny wood. The plush seats were a lot more comfortable than on a Mk 3 or 4, with large windows perfectly aligned with the seats. Yes, the ride does get lively when you get near t0 100mph, and there's no air-conditioning, but it's a very pleasant experience. |
#73
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On Apr 5, 8:39 pm, Tony Polson wrote:
to Le Touquet Shoreham to le Touquet ceased in Feb.2009 when SkySouth cased operations. Not sure but think that might have been the only recent schedlued service itno Le Touquet, and certainly SkySouth the only routes from Shoreham. I had had an idea to go and do the route some tme just for the novelty value of a Piper PA-31 Navajo. -- Nick |
#74
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Tony Polson wrote:
wrote: On Apr 4, 9:39 pm, Tony Polson wrote: Argosy Idle curiosity, what route and when [or was it a military flight ?]. I didn't keep notes, so from memory I think the route was probably Lydd to Le Touquet and this would have been in the 1962-65 period. It was a scheduled flight, either by BEA or a subsidiary. The return trip was by ferry. My grandfather did a lot of work with BEA and the family got some cheap fares with that airline and its subsidiaries, especially Cambrian Airways. I assume you mean the 1950/1960s AW Argosy pass/cargo twin fuselage 4xDart device That's the one. The nose of the fuselage opened to allow vehicles to be loaded on and off via ramps. As a small boy I found it absolutely fascinating. As a postscript, could it have been another similar type of aircraft with an opening nose? A Google search revealed the Carvair (a converted Douglas DC-4) and the Bristol 170 Freighter, both operated by Silver City Airways, later British United Air Ferries, on the Lydd-Le Touquet route. |
#75
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In article ,
Recliner wrote: "Andrew Robert Breen" wrote in message In article , wrote: "Recliner" wrote in message ... Personally, I'd rather ride in a 1967 stock train than the modern Jubilee and Northern line trains that came from the same factory. I certainly wouldn't prefer to ride in a 1967 car compared to almost any modern car[1]. OTOH, I'd avoid any pre-Mk.3 train like the plague, and off the IC routes would prefer to shun anything pre-158. If I'm sitting in something as a passenger, then ride comfort comes very high up the list, and I want seats that don't wreck my back (equally vital in a car, of course, but then the '67 design wins there as well, with better seats than anything else I've come across[2]. And if I'm a passenger, then wind noise and suspension vibration matter more as well. Modern stock really do win I rode on the nicely refurbished Mk 1 stock (Royal Scot rake) to Swanage and thoroughly enjoyed the well-sprung armchairs and copious shiny wood. Your back obviously has a much higher tolerance of bad seats than mine does. If the seats in those coaches are anything lke the usual Mk.1 horrors, I'd have had to stand the whole way. And then there's the noise, harshness and vibration, all there in copious proportions. I can understand how some (not me!) would like this as an occasional novelty, but it's not up to the job of day-to-day transport. And no, polished wood doth not a quality package make (unless it's a boat by Fairey Marine). The aforementioned 1967 (design..) car was blessedly free of such nonsense. -- Andy Breen ~ Not speaking on behalf of the University of Wales, Aberystwyth Feng Shui: an ancient oriental art for extracting money from the gullible (Martin Sinclair) |
#76
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In article ,
wrote: On Apr 4, 9:39 pm, Tony Polson wrote: Argosy Idle curiosity, what route and when [or was it a military flight ?]. I assume you mean the 1950/1960s AW Argosy pass/cargo twin fuselage 4xDart device, not the 1920s AW Argosy biplane. Dunno why airplane makers recycle names for very different products - Lockheed Electra was another one. Why not? Everyone else does it, sometimes causing much confusion (as with those weho still believe that Hardwicke was built in 187-whatever). -- Andy Breen ~ Not speaking on behalf of the University of Wales, Aberystwyth Feng Shui: an ancient oriental art for extracting money from the gullible (Martin Sinclair) |
#77
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#78
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"Andrew Robert Breen" wrote in message
In article , Recliner wrote: I rode on the nicely refurbished Mk 1 stock (Royal Scot rake) to Swanage and thoroughly enjoyed the well-sprung armchairs and copious shiny wood. Your back obviously has a much higher tolerance of bad seats than mine does. If the seats in those coaches are anything lke the usual Mk.1 horrors, I'd have had to stand the whole way. And then there's the noise, harshness and vibration, all there in copious proportions. I can understand how some (not me!) would like this as an occasional novelty, but it's not up to the job of day-to-day transport. And no, polished wood doth not a quality package make (unless it's a boat by Fairey Marine). The aforementioned 1967 (design..) car was blessedly free of such nonsense. I suspect we're just arguing about the subjective comfort of various seating designs. I'm happy to agree that modern intercity trains are quieter, smoother and air-conditioned, so it's just a case of which seat designs we prefer. As far as I'm concerned, no train seats come close to matching the comfort and adjustability of my car's seats, and none let me adjust the temperature to suit myself, so it's just a case of which trains have the worst seats compared to my car or a good business class airline seat. But, with the exception of the awful Mallard standard class seats, I can tolerate any of them for an hour or two without complaint, and the best of them for quite a few hours. |
#79
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#80
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wrote in message
In article , I suspect we're just arguing about the subjective comfort of various seating designs. I'm happy to agree that modern intercity trains are quieter, smoother and air-conditioned, so it's just a case of which seat designs we prefer. As far as I'm concerned, no train seats come close to matching the comfort and adjustability of my car's seats, and none let me adjust the temperature to suit myself, so it's just a case of which trains have the worst seats compared to my car or a good business class airline seat. But, with the exception of the awful Mallard standard class seats, I can tolerate any of them for an hour or two without complaint, and the best of them for quite a few hours. I can't say I have any problems with the Mallard seats personally. I'm tall and therefore bit fussier than some. OTOH I hate airline seats with a vengeance, mainly because they are so claustrophobic. I think the problem with modern train seats is that they have little padding and little or no adjustment -- if the shape happens to suit your shape, they're very comfortable. If they don't, it soon gets painful, and there's no way round it. Older seats were deeply sprung, and it was less essential that they fitted your shape exactly. Car seats are highly adjustable, and in most cases can be made to fit your shape, rather than vice versa. I agree about claustrophobic tombstone seats, though that's different to seat comfort. |
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