..If indeed it is a rule as I have never known of it to be enforced yet since it has been in operation. Yet on most timetables it says doors locked 2 minutes before departure. Is it just a guideline then?
If enforced it makes a mockery of the timetable. If the departure time is xx30, you should be able to board at xx29 3/4.
Failing that the public timetable should record the departure as xx28.
Passengers don't expect to board an aircraft seconds before departure, so why do they expect to do that with a train?
I thought the two minute thing was the gates on to the platforms at Euston. Not the train doors themselves. I have never been on a train where the doors have been shut and locked 2 mins before departure
I can just see a trainload of passengers all looking at their watches and tutting loudly as the "railways" NEVER seem able to get a train away on time.
Passengers don't expect to board an aircraft seconds before departure, so why do they expect to do that with a train?
If enforced it makes a mockery of the timetable. If the departure time is xx30, you should be able to board at xx29 3/4.
Failing that the public timetable should record the departure as xx28.
I thought the two minute thing was the gates on to the platforms at Euston. Not the train doors themselves. I have never been on a train where the doors have been shut and locked 2 mins before departure
If they locked the doors 2 mins before departure at the large majority of stations, they wouldn't even get opened...
Couldn't agree more. If I go for a 1030 train and arrive at the platform at 1029, I would expect to be able to get on it at 1029 and 50 seconds, not see it pulling out. Shut the doors in my face at 1030 and zero seconds, by all means - but 1030 should mean 1030. If PPM figures are the issue then why not make it 0-5 minutes and 0-10 rather than 0-4 and 0-9......but that's probably a debate for another place.
I can just see a trainload of passengers all looking at their watches and tutting loudly as the "railways" NEVER seem able to get a train away on time.
Passengers don't expect to board an aircraft seconds before departure, so why do they expect to do that with a train?
It is 2 minutes at King's Cross. And you will be refused boarding 1 minute before departure time once the door closing procedure has been started.I believe it is normal practice at Paddington to remove trains from the depauture screens 3 mins before departure. If you know the platform you can still get through the gates though.
Couldn't agree more. If I go for a 1030 train and arrive at the platform at 1029, I would expect to be able to get on it at 1029 and 50 seconds, not see it pulling out. Shut the doors in my face at 1030 and zero seconds, by all means - but 1030 should mean 1030. If PPM figures are the issue then why not make it 0-5 minutes and 0-10 rather than 0-4 and 0-9......but that's probably a debate for another place.
Couldn't agree more. If I go for a 1030 train and arrive at the platform at 1029, I would expect to be able to get on it at 1029 and 50 seconds, not see it pulling out. Shut the doors in my face at 1030 and zero seconds, by all means - but 1030 should mean 1030. If PPM figures are the issue then why not make it 0-5 minutes and 0-10 rather than 0-4 and 0-9......but that's probably a debate for another place.
Passengers don't expect to board an aircraft seconds before departure, so why do they expect to do that with a train?
This, I'm sure, is all very true but as a passenger I really couldn't care what has got to be done before departure.As already stated, the time on the timetable is when the train leaves the station, not when it closes the doors. In the example you've given, 1030 is when the wheels start to roll. Roughly, this is the sort of departure procedure
T-30: Guard/Platform Staff/Driver (if DOO service) check that doors are clear of passengers
T-25: Hustle Alarm sounds & doors start to close
T-15: Passenger doors now closed (maybe quicker on some trains)
T-10: Guard performs one last check to make sure passengers are clear and closes local door
T-5: All doors now closed, signal to start given to driver
T+0: Brakes released, power taken, train starts to roll
T+1: Passenger who turned up at T-10 starts swearing and moaning about 'jobsworths'
Some trains will be quicker, usually DOO services where there isn't a need for guards to close local doors, or trains with more rapid door operation, and by the same measure some will be slower because of the need for long door closing procedures (eg the 10 bells on class 377s or Pendolinos with the need to retract the door step as well)
I can't imagine anybody batting an eyelid at the 10.30 leaving at 10.31 and boarding an aircraft really isn't comparable.
It is directly comparable to boarding an aircraft.
Safety dictates that passengers do not try to board whilst the doors are closing.
The only difference is the time required to ensure all persons are clear, close the doors, and get the vehicle moving. (Aircraft about 10 mins, train at my station about 40 secs).
There are two ways of dealing with it. The British way is to say that the train actually starts moving at the advertised departure time, and this means that it has to be absolutely clear to passengers that it's their job to allow enough time for the despatch procedures to take place -- so that if they turn up at 10:29:55 they won't get on because the doors will all be closed. Or you can do it the German way, which is that the doors actually close on 10:30. But this means that the allowance for the despatch procedures has to be included in the first point-to-point time. Both ways work fine, but everyone needs to know (and work to) whichever pattern is being followed.You simply advertise the departure time as 10.29 rather than 10.30 and problem solved!
Passengers are more likely to compare a train to a bus, where it is often possible to run up just as it's leaving and still get on if the driver notices and waits for you (happens in rural areas anyway, maybe other places are stricter). They don't grasp that a train can't do that without having a knock on effect.
You simply advertise the departure time as 10.29 rather than 10.30 and problem solved!
Still, a good debate.