When the track circuit clears...
Ummm......
When the track circuit clears...
InOban's comments are amongst the most ignorant postings I've ever seen on this forum. That's really saying something.
I look forward to his justification of them...
I may not know trains, but I suspect he gets his train knowledge from the same place he gets his aviation knowledge...
I believe in the future of our railways. But it doesn't exist to employ people. It exists to provide a service to those who use it, and directly or indirectly, pay the wages of everyone who works on it.
I fully admit my front line ignorance. But we have a crisis in the funding of our railways. A passenger system that should less expensive to operate than, say, a bus, ends up costing far more. It is cheaper to transport oil in a succession of road tankers than in one train. And the taxpayers see a system operated using procedures and job descriptions which date back 150 years or more. No other industry that I can think of survives like that. And in many other countries they do quite well with different rules.
I believe in the future of our railways. But it doesn't exist to employ people. It exists to provide a service to those who use it, and directly or indirectly, pay the wages of everyone who works on it.
I fully admit my front line ignorance. But we have a crisis in the funding of our railways. A passenger system that should less expensive to operate than, say, a bus, ends up costing far more. It is cheaper to transport oil in a succession of road tankers than in one train. And the taxpayers see a system operated using procedures and job descriptions which date back 150 years or more. No other industry that I can think of survives like that. And in many other countries they do quite well with different rules.
I believe in the future of our railways. But it doesn't exist to employ people. It exists to provide a service to those who use it, and directly or indirectly, pay the wages of everyone who works on it.
Questions:
1. Why should a railway be cheaper to operate than a bus service (it isn't)?
2. Is it cheaper to ship oil, or other goods, by road than by rail? Figures please.
3. Which railway job descriptions date back 150 years +? As a driver in 2017, mine certainty don't. No firebreaks for me
4. Which countries "do well with different rules"?
I'm off to bed.
It is cheaper to transport oil in a succession of road tankers than in one train.
Bull. One of our trains carrys about 1.75 million litres of product. To carry it by road would take about 45 lorry loads and given the distance, slow roads and driving hour restrictions it's very doubtful a lorry driver could make 2 loaded trips. Explain to me how the road would be cheaper than rail.
Well, apart from a select few, there aren't any drivers left with the skills to drive steam engines. Likewise, would a driver from 70 years ago be able to drive in today's modern railway? Drivers are far more monitored these days than they were up until about 15 years ago, so I would say the role is actually far more skilled than it used to beSeveral posters have talked about the danger of deskilled drivers. But haven't they been deskilled already when compared with the drivers of steam engines?
Yes, but the train heading towards the train which has just made an unauthorised move at 10mph could be travelling at 125mphNot quite sure how that might lead to death, considering crossovers generally are low speed, and that their use is generally protected by the signalling system.
Two polite questions:
-- How could using a crossover you've never used, by which I presume you mean one on a route you sign but one which is only used in emergencies, lead to a load of people being killed?
-- Why does have a degree represent a negative factor in the ability of managers?
But then you'd know nothing about signals, low adhesion, braking points etc etc. For example they say that if you give a Fratton/Bournemouth driver a special stop order between Woking and Surbiton they'll lose a LOT of time.
Well, apart from a select few, there aren't any drivers left with the skills to drive steam engines. Likewise, would a driver from 70 years ago be able to drive in today's modern railway? Drivers are far more monitored these days than they were up until about 15 years ago, so I would say the role is actually far more skilled than it used to be
Two polite answers:
I thought this whole thread was about doing away with drivers signing routes, so in theory no one would sign crossovers
Someone with a degree tends to assume they fully aware of everything and know better than those who have been doing a job for 20/30/40 years. Generally they are youngsters with no experience from the university of life, either. And a lot of the time someone has previously tried their suggestion in the past and failed.
No attempt to score points, cheap or otherwise. As I said, computer vision is lagging behind data storage but not by much.The eyeball is as much use as your comparison on its own as well. Put together, as I intended, it's unbeatable for the foreseeable future. Dont try and score cheap points by isolating a bit of what I said.
Questions:
1. Why should a railway be cheaper to operate than a bus service (it isn't)?
2. Is it cheaper to ship oil, or other goods, by road than by rail? Figures please.
3. Which railway job descriptions date back 150 years +? As a driver in 2017, mine certainty don't. No firebreaks for me
4. Which countries "do well with different rules"?
I'm off to bed.
So, much like live traffic updates, which have been a feature of road-based GPS devices for many years?But then you'd know nothing about signals, low adhesion, braking points etc etc. For example they say that if you give a Fratton/Bournemouth driver a special stop order between Woking and Surbiton they'll lose a LOT of time.
1. A train carrying, say, 250 passengers will, at present, have two crew.
With commercial, rather than consumer grade, equipment? Should be trivial. Commercial grade equipment, using GPS+GLONASS and an external antenna can get a useful fix in seconds where consumer grade equipment can't even get a clear useable signal from a single satellite.Great. Now try to get a decent and ACCURATE GPS fix along parts of the Cambrian route.
Two points: (a) It's not yet shown that any system would need to cost a lot - indeed, one of the reasons that airlines moved to EFBs is precisely because they cost less than keeping paper charts up to date; and (b) it's not just about diversionary routes (though that was what made me start thinking about it) - simple things like having an automated reminder of TSRs/ESRs would have a positive impact on safety during normal operation as well.We are discussing implementing something purely because a diversionary route doesn't run because the Driver didn't sign it. Yay, lets completely overhaul the system and push fares and more technical problems ever higher. Awesome.
Two points: (a) It's not yet shown that any system would need to cost a lot
and (b) it's not just about diversionary routes (though that was what made me start thinking about it)
- simple things like having an automated reminder of TSRs/ESRs would have a positive impact on safety during normal operation as well.
No, at least that wasn't the intention. The idea was about making information about routes available in an electronic form, presented to the driver on an as-needed basis so that lack of traditional route knowledge wouldn't prevent a competent driver from driving a given route.I thought this whole thread was about doing away with drivers signing routes, so in theory no one would sign crossovers.
No, at least that wasn't the intention. The idea was about making information about routes available in an electronic form, presented to the driver on an as-needed basis so that lack of traditional route knowledge wouldn't prevent a competent driver from driving a given route.
During out of course running, they would be able to drive routes that they don't normally sign under guidance.
I would expect that the driver would still sign the routes that they normally drive and their normal day-to-day routine would be largely unchanged from today, the only difference being that they would get an automated reminder of any TSR/ESRs in force.
During out of course running, they would be able to drive routes that they don't normally sign under guidance.
When the track circuit clears...
With commercial, rather than consumer grade, equipment? Should be trivial. Commercial grade equipment, using GPS+GLONASS and an external antenna can get a useful fix in seconds where consumer grade equipment can't even get a clear useable signal from a single satellite.
Maybe I'm being a bit thick, but I thought there already was an automated reminder of TSRs/ESRs in the form of the AWS. Why would you need another one?simple things like having an automated reminder of TSRs/ESRs would have a positive imopact on safety during normal operation as well.