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London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London. |
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On Tue, 08 Oct 2013 23:37:53 +0100, Arthur Figgis
wrote: On 08/10/2013 20:49, Basil Jet wrote: On 2013\10\08 20:39, Colin McKenzie wrote: The map I would find most useful is a 'turn up and go' map, showing all lines and stations with a train at least every 10 minutes throughout the day. Most people use the tube map as the nearest available approximation to this, but this misses out some very useful national rail services and includes some low-frequency tube branches. If the map were popular it would give an incentive to companies to run more frequent or more regular services. It should probably exclude anything Oyster isn't valid on. That mightn't be as easy as it might seem. For instance, Waterloo to Wimbledon might be TUAG, Waterloo to Surbiton might be TUAG, but Wimbledon to Surbiton might not be. (That's an imaginary example.) I agree this could be troublesome, but I suspect not in many places. Colour coding, footnotes, and leaving some stations off, would solve most of it. And what happens with lines where there are longer gaps at peak (sic)times, and shorter gaps during the day? They don't go on the map. I was using all day as shorthand for something like 7am to 7pm. Colin McKenzie -- Cycling in the UK is about as safe as walking, and helmets don't make it safer. Make an informed choice - visit www.cyclehelmets.org. |
#2
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On 10/10/2013 09:18, Colin McKenzie wrote:
On Tue, 08 Oct 2013 23:37:53 +0100, Arthur Figgis wrote: On 08/10/2013 20:49, Basil Jet wrote: On 2013\10\08 20:39, Colin McKenzie wrote: The map I would find most useful is a 'turn up and go' map, showing all lines and stations with a train at least every 10 minutes throughout the day. Most people use the tube map as the nearest available approximation to this, but this misses out some very useful national rail services and includes some low-frequency tube branches. If the map were popular it would give an incentive to companies to run more frequent or more regular services. It should probably exclude anything Oyster isn't valid on. That mightn't be as easy as it might seem. For instance, Waterloo to Wimbledon might be TUAG, Waterloo to Surbiton might be TUAG, but Wimbledon to Surbiton might not be. (That's an imaginary example.) I agree this could be troublesome, but I suspect not in many places. Colour coding, footnotes, and leaving some stations off, would solve most of it. And what happens with lines where there are longer gaps at peak (sic)times, and shorter gaps during the day? They don't go on the map. I was using all day as shorthand for something like 7am to 7pm. Which could risk wiping a fair chunk of the map. OK, so few people might miss Epsom Downs, and Wimbledon - Sutton is no good for turn up and go, but Sutton - West Croydon is a fairly handy link between two towns which people might feel it was a shame to drop off for the sake of 20 min headways in the peak (it is still quicker than a 407 or probably an X26). -- Arthur Figgis Surrey, UK |
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