fairysdad
Member
I hesitate to post this...
I shall start by saying that by asking this question, I am by no means lessening the job of a Driver, nor the work you do, or anything like that. This is a genuine question about something I have been wondering about recently having just had a job interview as a bus driver, and through reading some of the threads elsewhere on the site.
* takes deep breath *
Why is route knowledge so important as a train driver? Why do drivers have to know every inch of the tracks they drive? I understand that it is important that a driver knows their route, but there appear to be situations where a driver has had to say 'sorry, I'm not signed for that route' when they are asked to take a train into Platform 8 rather than one of 1-7 which they are signed for (this is just an off-the-top-of-my-head example). Taking something like the Stourbridge branch. Before the Parrys on the route, it ran with, I understand, 150s. Surely anybody who has the knowledge of driving a 150 (say an Exeter driver) could have driven the Stourbridge branch without necessarily having to 'sign' it. Or surely the driver of my hypothetical train above could take the train into Platform 8 even though they haven't signed it.
Like I say, please don't think I'm lessening the fact that Drivers have route knowledge, I'm just geuninely curious why the Railway industry seems to make it such a big thing when bus drivers don't have to know their routes exactly the same (I'm sure we've all been on buses where the driver doesn't know where they're going!).
I shall start by saying that by asking this question, I am by no means lessening the job of a Driver, nor the work you do, or anything like that. This is a genuine question about something I have been wondering about recently having just had a job interview as a bus driver, and through reading some of the threads elsewhere on the site.
* takes deep breath *
Why is route knowledge so important as a train driver? Why do drivers have to know every inch of the tracks they drive? I understand that it is important that a driver knows their route, but there appear to be situations where a driver has had to say 'sorry, I'm not signed for that route' when they are asked to take a train into Platform 8 rather than one of 1-7 which they are signed for (this is just an off-the-top-of-my-head example). Taking something like the Stourbridge branch. Before the Parrys on the route, it ran with, I understand, 150s. Surely anybody who has the knowledge of driving a 150 (say an Exeter driver) could have driven the Stourbridge branch without necessarily having to 'sign' it. Or surely the driver of my hypothetical train above could take the train into Platform 8 even though they haven't signed it.
Like I say, please don't think I'm lessening the fact that Drivers have route knowledge, I'm just geuninely curious why the Railway industry seems to make it such a big thing when bus drivers don't have to know their routes exactly the same (I'm sure we've all been on buses where the driver doesn't know where they're going!).