People spent pages and pages trying to reason with you because you kept saying things as fact that were not true in practice. You kept going on and on like you knew what you were talking about, treating everyone else like an idiot. Everyone kept making counter points because they didn't agree with you, which was a waste of time because you wouldn't respect what we were saying. Finally days later you say "Since making that remark, I have since found out that the situation is more complex than I thought", yet you still won't admit you were wrong and are now trying to claim the moral high ground. Then you go on to make a big embarrassing rant about nasty unions, which is completely irrelevant to the discussion that was had. This is why I believe you're just trolling us now.
You were the one that called us "bull****ers", amongst other things! Who swore at you?
Let's run over it again, shall we?
What I argued was (mostly) correct, in my opinion:
1. The signaller gets a DSD alarm. He then has a series of regs he must carry out this to protect against the possibility of the driver being incapacitated. I was under the impression even if his radio failed (say during a crash) the system on board the train, or within the code for the base station, would end up showing an alarm anyway. It turns out it does, depending on the TOC/train and safety case. I was under the impression it was universal, I was wrong.
In Kent, the back cab radio was working, and the front one tripped. This is because of a design error.
2. It is fair enough to highlight the Kent case, but in practice the system is being looked at to make it more robust. There are technical solutions which are more reliable, which I have argued all along.
3, The guard didn't save the day in Kent, because it took 10 minutes to contact the signaller. In this case the guard was ineffective. I've noticed you ignored this. It was theorised the guard would act immediately by the people debating with me.
4. Guards have played a minor role, if none existent role, in preventing further collisions in all recent major accidents
- Ufton Nervet, Policeman saw the collision contacted the signaller at Reading, who witnessed several track circuits lit, and points flashing out of correspondence. Public dialled 999. Signals replaced/held to danger.
- Selby: Landrover driver phones 999, operator heard collision. Too late to stop collision with coal train. York IECC has numerous TC failures in area, holding signals at danger. OHL trip.
- Hatfield: Rail broke. Major track circuit failure on KX PSB. Passengers dialled 999. OHL trip.
- Potters bar, station staff and passengers saw collision, dialled 999. DOO train. Major TC/Points failure KX. OHL trip.
- Ladbroke Grove. Signallers tried to stop collision, witnessed major TC failure Slough IECC. Signals replaced to danger/held. Passengers dialled 999. OHL trip.
- Southall. Collision with coal train by HST resulted in overhead line trip, point and TC failure in the area stopping trains and holding signals. Slough IECC took call by STP from driver that survived.
and so on..
5. Guards actually created issues on Merseyside, two occasions. Plus at Ais Gill.
6. Guards and Drivers are not trained in signalling regs, and generally do not have operational experience in this area. This is why they may not understand the whole system - not saying people are idiots, it's just it's not their area. Signallers also have DOO responsibility too. Station staff are also involved in dispatch at busy locations. Guards and drivers are just part of the system, not the whole system. All the DOO responsibility is NOT shifted to the driver.
7. If you want to save lives, it's cheaper to take action with level crossings and other things that pose more of a risk. Spending £7.5 billion on guards over 25 years, which you may only save 1 or 2 lives (speculation on my part, but I suspect the safety case is similar) is frankly not worth it. Retail staff are capable of making emergency calls, frankly as PTS training is about 1/2 a day, they might as well have that too.
8. Guards are better off working within the train helping passengers and collecting revenue - which WOULD justify their role. It would be better if the RMT woke up the changing tech, like they have with the ROCs. You don't see signallers ranting on about how many of them are being made redundant, they just accept technology means things will change for the most part.
9. Running trains in the past DOO has saved lives because a radio has been provided, rather than signals being relied on. So while the system might have had some cons in the past, it has offset this stats too.
10. The RSSB claim it is not less safe, possibly safer in some circumstances.
In conclusion, one item is a bit grey. Right in some circumstances, wrong in others? Okay?
Not trying to claim the moral high ground, I am claiming some people are not exactly perfect either and are pretty good at winding others up or shutting down debate.
Big embarrassing rant? Not really, many will agree. I tried once to stop you, and people like you, digging holes...Have it your way. It's not my dispute, I left the industry 20 years ago. Claiming things are unsafe, when there is no real evidence will just show you up. If you claim something is unsafe you must prove it. And before you say it, no I do not have the stats to prove one way or the other, I am simply countering the points you are making in a FAIR debate. This is the reason I said "bull****ters", you or your union cannot claim it is less safe, however much you wish it was to protect jobs.