Darkinsider
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- 3 Mar 2017
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Isn't that where the exhaust pipes go? So there isn't room?
I assume the regulations are the same for DMU and EMU.
Andrew
Well the 2 current orders for Northern and Anglia don't really need wide corridor connections, the West Midlands order would be a more likely candidate for them if they are allowed on DMU's
They could send the exhaust pipes towards the front and over the cab like this:
Why can they not be directed directly downwards is there a regulation that states they have to go to roof level?
At stations the punters would get covered in fumes rising up from underneath the train, voyagers are bad enough for that, but an actual design doing it is a bad idea.
But surely this is no different to side exiting truck exhaust when you walk down the pavement and there's a truck idling at traffic lights for instance next to you. and surely with modern diesels that should comply to the latest euro emissions standards it wouldn't be too bad also the use of "AdBlue"?
Considering that walking down a busy fume filled street is hardly ideal I'm not sure why we would try and emulate it on the railway?
Wide internal corridors are supposed to encourage movement along the train and to enhance the perception of security.
The big downside of them is the inability to move safely to another coach in case of fire/smoke/terrorist attack.
The aircon (on S stock at least) is designed to circulate on a per-carriage basis, this would prevent a bunch of smoke simply drifting down the train. It's not good enough to provide a barrier seal, of course, but more than enough to mitigate major hazards within the length of a car or two.
Is a DMU more likely to catch fire than an EMU? I guess so, given the tanks of diesel underneath.
Diesel fuel will not spontaneously ignite other than inside the engine when put under pressure.
An EMU however can have e.g. a high-voltage electrical short causing imediate combustion of adjacent parts.
Until the power fails, then you're back where you were.
Not to mention standees being potentially thrown the full length of the train in a collision.
The big downside of them is the inability to move safely to another coach in case of fire/smoke/terrorist attack. This would surely increase the risk of uncontrolled evacuations to the track.
Is a DMU more likely to catch fire than an EMU? I guess so, given the tanks of diesel underneath.
I doubt they are automatic though. They are probably there to lock out a carriage if needed (no lights, or bodily fluids everywhere etc)Looking closely at the inside of a 700 gangway, some of them in each set have what appear to be sliding doors that are permanently open. I assume these are intended to close if smoke is detected, to prevent it spreading right down the train (but preferably with some means for passengers on the "wrong" side to open them!). If so there's no reason why a DMU couldn't have the same.
Looking closely at the inside of a 700 gangway, some of them in each set have what appear to be sliding doors that are permanently open. I assume these are intended to close if smoke is detected, to prevent it spreading right down the train (but preferably with some means for passengers on the "wrong" side to open them!). If so there's no reason why a DMU couldn't have the same.
Is that any worse than having their head smashed into a solid wall!
More people potentially being thrown further, so yes, it is, for more of them.
I think that this idea of being thrown the length of a train is somewhat unlikely. For a start, a train in a collision does not stop instantly unless we consider the case of the Moorgate incident on the Northern City line and the foreshortening of the first car to a fraction of its normal length created a deceleratioin curve that increased the survivability of the following cars. An open gangway design wouldn't have made much difference there. To scale that up to a 345/700 event would need a very high speed collision into a solid mass with all lateral movement totally constrained. With the exception of Crossrail, how many single bore tunnels are there where such an event is even remotely likely?
Even if such an even did occur, the rate of deceleration would result on few if any passengers travelling more than a single car's length before hitting the floor and slowing down even quicker. If the trains had any standing passengers, there just wouldn't be room for them to 'fly' between the 2+2 seats, avoiding the vertical grab bars at each set of doors.
I'm sure that to get design safety approval, this type of layout has been cleared in the context of:
a) the probability of such a absolute deceleration in a perfect straight line
b) the probability of passengers, most who would be holding onto a seat back or other grab handle at the time being launched along the centrline of the train
c) the probability of any passengers staying airborne for more than a few metres
Such approval would have been given elsewhere in Europe and the far-east years ago, well before the UK 'discovered' through open gangwayed rolling stock. I think that the idea of a clear path for even a single human body beyond what already exists has come from the ability to see that far. Just because you can see past the grab bars, accessible toilets etc., it doesn't mean that object as large as a human body would get very far. Imagining that a whole crowd of unfortunate passengers as projectives barreling through multiple cars is unrealistic and has no bearing on the absolute survivability of even a very rare type of collision.
If anybody is offended by my graphical description above then I apologise in advance, but such practical considerations are part of the safety world that is ultimately designed to protect us.