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#341
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![]() "Clive" wrote in message ... In message , Grant Crozier writes With a bit of luck in eighteen months time the UK will be governed by a decent party with a man at the helm who knows what he is doing . First of all, they've got to find one. -- Clive Not the conservatives then |
#342
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"iantheengineer" wrote in message
... "Nick Finnigan" wrote in message ... Under the assumption that there are no cars, vans, bikes would there still be congestion? Assume the usage is the same as the total passenger km as on an urban bus route at the moment, and whatever bus frequency is optimal (which I expect to be at least 30 buses in the peak hour). Its an unanswerable question as it depends upon link and junction capacities so each location is different., You can not say whether there would be congestion when the only traffic on the road is buses? Or you can not say whether the PT travel speed in ideal conditions is any better than it is at the moment? but it is fair to say that the throughput of people would be greater so congestion would a lot less than it is at present Well, I hadn't mentioned throughput, but what would you expect the maximum PT throughput per lane to be? |
#343
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everyone knows the theory of public transport, however you are forgetting
the disadvantages of bus use, that's what puts most people off. |
#344
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Pete Smith wrote:
BTW, isn't rocks rolling down a hillside, behaving like water called a "Rockslide"? (I'd personally have used the term Avalanche too - I've seen it used in relationship to rocks before). Pete. I've experienced one, well two actually, one ahead and one behind, we had to hide under the landrover to avoid the smaller stones. |
#345
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iantheengineer wrote:
"NM" wrote in message m... iantheengineer wrote: How fast would urban public transport be with no cars on the road? (and no vans, cycles, taxis etc. if that helps). Is this a question, is it not obvious enough. It will be exactly the travel time + the stops for pick up/drop off, without any delay occurring due to congestion, and there would be no need for bus lanes! Without busses and bus lanes there would be even less congestion. How many cars does it take to move 72 people, at say 5 seats per car 15, okay and what area does a car take up 5.75m by 2.5m roughly so 14.4m2 times 15 = 216m2, and what area does a double decker take 12.9m long by 2.5m = 32.25m2, hmm I need say no more. Take off your rose tinted's and actually look at your average bus, usually about 5 or less passengers, I went from Cheltenham to London by coach the other day, there were as many passengers as I could get in my car with seats left over. |
#346
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On Sat, 8 Nov 2003 13:33:26 -0000, "iantheengineer"
wrote: "Paul Weaver" wrote in message news ![]() On Fri, 07 Nov 2003 22:23:48 +0000, iantheengineer wrote: It doesnt need to for most of the commute Ahh, so the bus splits into 72 parts at each end? No not at all, and I would think that the theory behind it is obvious, the key to bus usage is modal interchange, Is that your name for what we call a bus stop? ie facilities to allow transfer from opne mode of travel to another. you mean you ride the bus to the bus stop, get off and walk the rest of the way home. Fotr the most part of the commute menay people are travelling in the same direction however upon reaching the very last section of the journey and at the very start of the journey we all live and work in slightly different places, but we use the same main corridors. In cities, it is generally the case that most people can walk from their bus stop to their office. Complications arise for people who work to site etc, but for the most part many people are 9-5 approx and stay office bound. IF you carry out any o-d survey you will see that certain routes are trafficked by people from the same areas going to the same areas, and it is for these that public transport works. Buses may be OK if you work in the centre of a city and live in a suburb of that same city near to an arterial road to the city centre and are lucky (the bus stop being near to your house). If you live in one suburb and work in another you can forget about PT. The main problem with public transport is the effective routing. You're wrong there the main problem with public transport is the dreich people you have to share your space with. The last time I used a bus there was a man in a dirty shabby mac sat next to me, smelling of wee, his face covered in sores, and a "dewdrop" glistening on the end of his nose like a pearl. In order to make it profitable a bus must collect x punters to make the service profitable, cloudy thinking, what has profitability to do with it? It is the function of the bus to pick up and carry passengers. The bus must pick up passengers - period, or it might as well stay in the depot all day. in order to do this sometimes it is necessary to protract the route to serve a certain catchment Second thoughts you're right, a public transport system that didn't have to pick up passengers would run much more efficiently. Another example of the travelling public being unreasonable. and by doing this it incurrs delays compared to the direct route of using the car, but , by many people using their cars they create delays through traffic congestion. Bus lanes assist to redress this balance a litlle, but at present do not provide sufficient advantage to make the bus seem attractive. Correct, it would take *some* doing. DG |
#347
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On Sat, 8 Nov 2003 14:02:15 -0000, "iantheengineer"
wrote: "Clive" wrote in message ... In message , Grant Crozier writes With a bit of luck in eighteen months time the UK will be governed by a decent party with a man at the helm who knows what he is doing . First of all, they've got to find one. -- Clive Not the conservatives then Not unless the NHS, Education, Railway chickens come home to roost for Labour or there's another monumental cockup like Foot & mouth. Are you a betting man? DG |
#348
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On Fri, 7 Nov 2003 22:53:32 -0000, "iantheengineer"
wrote: As an engineer I do know that many fundamental principles can be applied to many different materials, however what isnt being accepted is that different problems require different solutions and the same principles do not apply to all things, Steve seems to think that all problems can be solved through increasing capacity, which they can be solved, but at what expense???, however he is not considering the problem from all aspects to increase conveyance is only one way of solving the problem. I am by original training a drainage engineer and for many years (before my time) the only solutions to drainage problems were to increase the conveyance or capacity of the system. This has resulted (along with different rainfall patterns) in the floods that we experienced in 1998 and 2000. Engineers now look at this problem more holistically looking at the source of the rainfall and how it runs off the ground, in an attempt to attenuate the flow to more greenfield states. We cant as yet at least prevent rainfall falling at high intensity during the summer months and for long durations during the winter months, but we can slow its journey to the river system and reduce the peak flows in the river. Unlike rainfall we have another alternative with traffic we can restrain the source if we choose, which along with the other tools including where necessary road building will help the road system cope with the traffic. As for your example of stones deflecting well thats a new one on me. Subsidence is due to the mines or other underground tunnel etc gradually collapsing and what normally happens is failure of the foudation leaving a crack visible in the supported wall either through the blocks or the mortar joints whichever is the weakest. Stone and concrete are strong in compression but weak in tension so as you get a force acting on one side causing compression in one face through bending, you get tensiile forces on the other face which normally resulst in cracking and subsequent failure. I daresay that stone will deflect to a degree but this would be unmeasurable to the naked eye. Professor Unwin, I assure you that around here I can show you stone (most likely millstone grit) walls that have deflected (The stones have bent it's not that the all the motor joints have broken and the wall is just a collection of stones in formation) by about an inch in a 5 foot run under their own weight and the weight of the stones above them. DG |
#349
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#350
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On Thu, 6 Nov 2003 17:27:04 -0000, Pete Smith
wrote: In article , says... "Steve Firth" wrote in message ... iantheengineer wrote: Not everything works on the same principles are you so stupid??? Water flows under gravity does that mean rock will too??? Well yes it does actually. Avalanche. Landslip. Continental drift Lava flow An avalanche ( arent these made of snow which formed water!!!) made of rock , I think you are talking of a pyroclastic cloud. Go on then Steve upto what level and in what areas are you educated too??? You're thinking of a pyroclastic _flow_, which is hot rocks & dust from a volcano, behaving in _exactly_ the same way as water. Can't see any references which say it behaves _exactly_ like water. it's very unlikely in fact. One of these is what "destroyed" Pompeii. BTW, isn't rocks rolling down a hillside, behaving like water called a "Rockslide"? Never heard of a rockslide. Landslide, yes. (I'd personally have used the term Avalanche too - I've seen it used in relationship to rocks before). In Physical Electronics a phenomena known as avalanche multiplication occurs when a particle accelerated in an electric field can travel long enough to aquire sufficient energy to liberate one or more additional particles which themselves are accelerated by the field and go on to create more collisions USW, USW. A lot of "Zener" diodes are in fact avalanche diodes.Similar phenomena occur in Geiger counting tubes, although in that case the "gain" is so high that every single atom of the gas in the tube becomes ionised, (avalanche multiplication mode) using a lower electric field it is possible to operate the tube in a linear (so-called proportional) mode and output is proportional to the energy of the original ionising event, but the "gain" is much lower. I personally regard any self-perpetuating chain of events in an energy field as an avalanche. A rockslide, landslide or snowfall may/may not be an avalanche. By my definition Pyroclastic flows are not avalanches. WRT Pompei (I've been there, by car :-) ). AIUI during the eruption many, many kilotons of material were ejected 20+ Km into the stratosphere and was being kept aloft by the momentum of the gases and solids contiguously being ejected, eventually the force of the eruption waned this process could not continueand this material started falling to earth. This led many of the population of Pompei to look at the eruption as it was happening and think they were safe. :-( DG |
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