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-   -   [OT]Drinking on Duty (https://www.londonbanter.co.uk/london-transport/13831-ot-drinking-duty.html)

CJB April 17th 14 12:34 PM

[OT]Drinking on Duty
 
Whilst the driver of a tube train recently got caught I wonder how widespread drinking alcohol on duty actually is. Right now I'm connected to wifi in Soho Square. This is next to a very large Crossrail construction works. Many of the workmen from Crossrail in orange or yellow hi-viz jackets etc. have their lunch there. Many are drinking from cans of strong larger. OK - its dusty work but ... I wonder how many workers have been killed on such construction sites from their colleagues drinking alcohol at lunch-time? CJB.

contrex April 17th 14 03:20 PM

[OT]Drinking on Duty
 
On Thursday, 17 April 2014 13:34:55 UTC+1, CJB wrote:
Many are drinking from cans of strong larger. OK - its dusty work but ...


Strong larger what?



Offramp April 17th 14 06:59 PM

[OT]Drinking on Duty
 
On Thursday, 17 April 2014 13:34:55 UTC+1, CJB wrote:
Whilst the driver of a tube train recently got caught I wonder how widespread drinking alcohol on duty actually is. Right now I'm connected to wifi in Soho Square. This is next to a very large Crossrail construction works. Many of the workmen from Crossrail in orange or yellow hi-viz jackets etc. have their lunch there. Many are drinking from cans of strong larger. OK - its dusty work but ... I wonder how many workers have been killed on such construction sites from their colleagues drinking alcohol at lunch-time? CJB..


I'm pretty surprised; is it possible they have finished for the day? It doesn't sound like it - it sounds like the are on a break (workers who have finished would have changed and gone home, or out). Years ago ago miners used to be allowed about ten pints of "small beer" a day to replace lost liquids. But STRONG lager would have a very deleterious effect.

Small beer was only 2-3% ABV, like a Mackeson.

Arthur Figgis April 17th 14 09:16 PM

[OT]Drinking on Duty
 
On 17/04/2014 13:34, CJB wrote:
Whilst the driver of a tube train recently got caught I wonder how
widespread drinking alcohol on duty actually is. Right now I'm
connected to wifi in Soho Square. This is next to a very large
Crossrail construction works. Many of the workmen from Crossrail in
orange or yellow hi-viz jackets etc. have their lunch there. Many are
drinking from cans of strong larger. OK - its dusty work but ... I
wonder how many workers have been killed on such construction sites
from their colleagues drinking alcohol at lunch-time? CJB.


There has been one fatality on Crossrail, and I've not seen any
suggestion that alcohol was involved, so presumably the answer is zero?



--
Arthur Figgis Surrey, UK

[email protected] April 17th 14 09:26 PM

[OT]Drinking on Duty
 
In article ,
(contrex) wrote:

On Thursday, 17 April 2014 13:34:55 UTC+1, CJB wrote:
Many are drinking from cans of strong larger. OK - its dusty work
but ...


Strong larger what?


Cans of course!

--
Colin Rosenstiel

Recliner[_2_] April 17th 14 10:58 PM

[OT]Drinking on Duty
 
Arthur Figgis wrote:
On 17/04/2014 13:34, CJB wrote:
Whilst the driver of a tube train recently got caught I wonder how
widespread drinking alcohol on duty actually is. Right now I'm
connected to wifi in Soho Square. This is next to a very large
Crossrail construction works. Many of the workmen from Crossrail in
orange or yellow hi-viz jackets etc. have their lunch there. Many are
drinking from cans of strong larger. OK - its dusty work but ... I
wonder how many workers have been killed on such construction sites
from their colleagues drinking alcohol at lunch-time? CJB.


There has been one fatality on Crossrail, and I've not seen any
suggestion that alcohol was involved, so presumably the answer is zero?


Yup, I think the answer is precisely Zero.

Michael R N Dolbear April 17th 14 11:28 PM

[OT]Drinking on Duty
 

"Offramp" wrote

On Thursday, 17 April 2014 13:34:55 UTC+1, CJB wrote:

[...]

Years ago ago miners used to be allowed about ten pints of "small beer" a
day to replace lost liquids. But STRONG lager would have a very deleterious
effect.


Small beer was only 2-3% ABV, like a Mackeson.



There was no standardisation and before Gay-Lussac no measurement but
probably not even 'near beer' strength unless the brewer used spent malt and
you got lucky.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Small_beer


--
Mike D



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