Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#181
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
TimB wrote:
On Aug 14, 7:49 pm, Arthur Figgis wrote: Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 15:57:14 on Fri, 14 Aug 2009, Sam Wilson remarked: A recent report says that it is worth spending up to £10,000 to turn just one person into a regular cyclist. A few years ago they spent about that much per cyclist [1] putting a brand new shared cycle/foot path alongside one of the roads from Cambridge to an adjoining village. Obviously, all the serious cyclists refuse to use such a thing. Depending on how it was constructed, that might be very understandable.. I'm not suggesting the costs were out of proportion to the civil engineering involved, but it seemed a huge investment to encourage a handful of cyclists - who despise that sort of facility in the first place. Was it installed in the last week of the financial year? Or does a bigwig with a bike perhaps live there? (which village, BTW?) -- Arthur Figgis Surrey, UK More likely to do with being seen to do something about providing a safe route for kids to cycle to school (with coincidental benefit of being able to cut back on school buses) and spending a budget allocated for that purpose. Yes, probably done in a rush at the end of the financial year. So confident adult cyclists naturally choose not to use it, while white man van thinks he can honk and intimidate and tell them to get onto the bloody cycle track, my taxes paid for that and you beggers don't bother using it.... Indeed. Though round here I find "professional" drivers - including white van men - to be a lot more willing to give space to other road users than some other drivers are. My pulled-out-of-the-air theory is that white van man probably has a bike himself, and even he doesn't use it he almost certainly used one in the past. But the woman who applies her make-up and makes a phone call while driving at speed towards the narrow gap probably hasn't cycled much herself. (none of this applies on the days when we all head to Aylesbury to sacrifice babies to Beelzebub, of course) -- Arthur Figgis Surrey, UK |
#182
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Aug 14, 8:59 pm, Arthur Figgis wrote:
TimB wrote: On Aug 14, 7:49 pm, Arthur Figgis wrote: Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 15:57:14 on Fri, 14 Aug 2009, Sam Wilson remarked: A recent report says that it is worth spending up to £10,000 to turn just one person into a regular cyclist. A few years ago they spent about that much per cyclist [1] putting a brand new shared cycle/foot path alongside one of the roads from Cambridge to an adjoining village. Obviously, all the serious cyclists refuse to use such a thing. Depending on how it was constructed, that might be very understandable.. I'm not suggesting the costs were out of proportion to the civil engineering involved, but it seemed a huge investment to encourage a handful of cyclists - who despise that sort of facility in the first place. Was it installed in the last week of the financial year? Or does a bigwig with a bike perhaps live there? (which village, BTW?) -- Arthur Figgis Surrey, UK More likely to do with being seen to do something about providing a safe route for kids to cycle to school (with coincidental benefit of being able to cut back on school buses) and spending a budget allocated for that purpose. Yes, probably done in a rush at the end of the financial year. So confident adult cyclists naturally choose not to use it, while white man van thinks he can honk and intimidate and tell them to get onto the bloody cycle track, my taxes paid for that and you beggers don't bother using it.... Indeed. Though round here I find "professional" drivers - including white van men - to be a lot more willing to give space to other road users than some other drivers are. My pulled-out-of-the-air theory is that white van man probably has a bike himself, and even he doesn't use it he almost certainly used one in the past. But the woman who applies her make-up and makes a phone call while driving at speed towards the narrow gap probably hasn't cycled much herself. (none of this applies on the days when we all head to Aylesbury to sacrifice babies to Beelzebub, of course) -- Arthur Figgis Surrey, UK Aylesbury? Is Tony Polson involved? |
#183
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#184
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Peter Campbell Smith wrote
Even if that is true and relevant, the standard car figures have the windows closed (as well as AirCon.excluded/ off). I don't know the real answer either, but a car with aircon is carrying the extra weight around all year, and there must also be a slight extra drag on the engine all year as the belt to the aircon compressor is turning all the time. If the car stays in the UK, especially the more northern parts, I would imagine that cost of that over 365 days is just as significant as the additional fuel cost when the aircon is running for, say, 20 days in the year. Which reminds me that the energy usage figures for electric cars don't include winter heating either. One of the advantages of internal combustion is that heating is almost free whereas in Britain (and even more so in Canada) an electric has to use resistance heating. Making sure the battery doesn't freeze is also required. -- Mike D |
#185
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Fri, 14 Aug 2009 05:12:05 -0700 (PDT), Andy
wrote: Really? Can you explain how turbulent air gets hotter without friction? You're talking about skin friction between the train and the air. I'm talking about turbulence. Two very different things, as I am sure you will continue to fail to appreciate. I majored in fluid flow at University. |
#186
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Aug 15, 12:28*pm, Bruce wrote:
On Fri, 14 Aug 2009 05:12:05 -0700 (PDT), Andy wrote: Really? Can you explain how turbulent air gets hotter without friction? You're talking about skin friction between the train and the air. * Where did I say that? I just mentioned friction. I'm talking about turbulence. *Two very different things, as I am sure you will continue to fail to appreciate. I majored in fluid flow at University. Really and you are still talking ********, I'm impressed. There is NO heating directly from the turbulent air. All the heating which might arise from turbulence comes from fricton. Both between the moving air and the tunnel walls and between air flows moving at different speeds. Bulk flow of any fluid doesn't make it hotter; but the interaction of different moving sections of air gives rise to friction and it is this the friction that causing the air to get hotter, not the turbulence itself. You were the one saying that friction is the minority cause of heating when, in fact, it is pretty much the only direct cause of heating. Just to emphasize the point. TURBULENCE causes FRICTION which leads to HEAT, which part don't you understand? |
#187
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Michael R N Dolbear" wrote in message
news:01ca1d3c$b2822f80$LocalHost@default Peter Campbell Smith wrote Even if that is true and relevant, the standard car figures have the windows closed (as well as AirCon.excluded/ off). I don't know the real answer either, but a car with aircon is carrying the extra weight around all year, and there must also be a slight extra drag on the engine all year as the belt to the aircon compressor is turning all the time. If the car stays in the UK, especially the more northern parts, I would imagine that cost of that over 365 days is just as significant as the additional fuel cost when the aircon is running for, say, 20 days in the year. Which reminds me that the energy usage figures for electric cars don't include winter heating either. One of the advantages of internal combustion is that heating is almost free whereas in Britain (and even more so in Canada) an electric has to use resistance heating. Making sure the battery doesn't freeze is also required. And, presumably, electric cars don't have enough juice to provide air-conditioning? Even if they do, it's something else to shorten the range. |
#188
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Adrian" wrote in message
... Peter Campbell Smith gurgled happily, sounding much like they were saying: I don't know the real answer either, but a car with aircon is carrying the extra weight around all year Mebbe 10-15kg - or about 1% of the average car's kerb weight. and there must also be a slight extra drag on the engine all year as the belt to the aircon compressor is turning all the time. Yes, but when the compressor's clutch is disengaged, it really is very little extra load. In the case of my car a single belt drives a number of auxiliaries, including the a/c compressor, and there are at least two idler and tensioning pulleys as well. The a/c compressor with its clutch disengaged is equivalent to an idler pulley. These days cars tend to have a/c designed in, rather than as an optional extra, so it is difficult to asess the effect it has on fuel consumption. On my car there is a link to the engine management system to cut out the a/c compressor at full throttle so that all power is available for acceleration. I once drove a small-engined rental car in a tropical climate where an essential part of every overtaking manouevre was to switch off the a/c manually so there would be enough power available! D A Stocks |
#189
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Bruce" wrote in message ... On Thu, 13 Aug 2009 20:38:46 +0800, "DW downunder" noname wrote: The internal diameter was (IIRC) 12'3" (3734mm) for cast iron and 12'6" (3810mm) for concrete lining segments. This compares with the Yerkes' standard of 11'8 1/4" (3562mm). Correct. The missing statistic is the post-Yerkes standard, which was 11' 6". Whoa! 11'6" was the diameter of tunnels in the central section of the Central Line. Unlike the C&SL, the trackbed wasn't broken up in the Central on enlargement, but segments were inserted to give an eccentic profile, large enough to accommodate stock which ran through 11'8 1/4" tunnels. As we have found, that created a need for a raised third rail and associated ("hi-lift") collector shoe beam. Also, post-Yerkes, most new Tube tunnels have been lined at 12'3 or 12'6 - not sure about the JLE. DW down under |
#190
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Fri, Aug 14, 2009 at 12:21:12PM +0100, Recliner wrote:
It also means that even if someone's typical journeys are within this range, they will be deterred from buying if they need to do the occasional longer trip for which public transport isn't a reasonable option. Of course. If you need a normal car for those few longer journeys, then it makes sense to also use it for the shorter journeys, rather than tieing up twice as much capital (or, more likely, paying back twice as big a debt!) to have two cars. So, the electric car will cost more to use, have a very impractical range, be tedious to re-charge compared to the occasional trip to a filling station for a quick fill-up, ... The one thing that would make me start to take electric cars seriously for general-purpose use is standardised battery packs. Then it will start to make sense for service stations to offer a "fill-up" where they simply swap your battery pack for a charged one, then recharge the old one and swap that for someone elses and so on. Yes, that would require lots of infrastructure, which would take time to roll out (just look at how slowly LPG is spreading), but at least it would make such a roll out possible. Can't see it happening though. Not for a very long time at least. -- David Cantrell | Minister for Arbitrary Justice Longum iter est per praecepta, breve et efficax per exempla. |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Why isn't the 2009 stock walk through like the S stock? | London Transport | |||
Ian Jelf: Shameless Plug for Free Walk | London Transport | |||
31 Minutes to walk from Kings Cross to St. Pancreas - Is this true!? | London Transport | |||
TfL Journey Planner - how dare you walk, while we use your money to fill the streets with empty buses! | London Transport | |||
SWT Trains through East Putney today | London Transport |