Bombay Railway [was: "Super-dense crush load..."]
[x-posted to uk.transport.london]
[original thread on uk.railway]
On May 1, 4:51 pm, Michael Bell wrote:
Last night's BBC TV documentary on the railways of Bombay/Mumbai
mentioned at length the crowding, and called 14 persons/M^2 "Super
dense crush loading". But is it really unique? I think I've seen that,
taken part in that, on the London tube.
(I must say it was an extraordinary railway operation. And the
featured driver has killed about 2 people/year over the length of his
career. A driver in this country would be thought unlucky to have
killed one!)
"Bombay Railway" (BBC2) I presume - excellent that this programme is
being shown again, I missed it last time round, but remember reading
some of the comments about it on here - in particular I remember Paul
C's apparent amazement at it all.
Basic programme info including showing times and embedded iPlayer
video, plus link to main iPlayer page (where the download option
resides):
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b007xb0j
Two programmes, the second one showing this election day Thursday
(6th) on BBC2 at 7pm (England & NI only) - those in Wales or with
satellite can see the first one on BBC2 Wales on Wednesday (5th) at
23:.20
Re crush loading on the Tube - I've partaken in some pretty tight
subterranean squeezes over the years, but sorry, afraid I'm pretty
hazy on what the numbers might be.
(And yes, I strongly suspect that my use of "partaken" is a bit dodgy!)
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