Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London. |
Reply |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Graham Murray wrote:
eastender writes: I always pay my fare of course. I can't see how you can eliminate evasion easily on these buses or the DLR. Do not get rid of the conductors[1] and make it part of their duties to observe that everyone boarding via the middle or rear door touches in and the green light shows. [1] I thought that they had already gone but when I was in London at the end of last month, the only Boris Bus I travelled on had a conductor[2] and the rear platform doors were open. [2] I am assuming that the man, with a TfL logo on his shirt, standing on the rear platform throughout my journey was the conductor. They are not conductors, of course. They're 'platform attendants'. Their sole job is to try and persuade passenger not to jump off moving buses, or ones stopped in the middle of traffic. Perhaps their presence persuaded more people to touch in, but that wasn't their role, and no-one supervised the middle doors. |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() On 18/09/2016 22:24, Recliner wrote: Graham Murray wrote: [...] I always pay my fare of course. I can't see how you can eliminate evasion easily on these buses or the DLR. Do not get rid of the conductors[1] and make it part of their duties to observe that everyone boarding via the middle or rear door touches in and the green light shows. [1] I thought that they had already gone but when I was in London at the end of last month, the only Boris Bus I travelled on had a conductor[2] and the rear platform doors were open. [2] I am assuming that the man, with a TfL logo on his shirt, standing on the rear platform throughout my journey was the conductor. They are not conductors, of course. They're 'platform attendants'. Their sole job is to try and persuade passenger not to jump off moving buses, or ones stopped in the middle of traffic. Perhaps their presence persuaded more people to touch in, but that wasn't their role, and no-one supervised the middle doors. I recall one looking slightly alarmed as I ran and jumped on to an accelerating bus, something I did that plenty of times on the old Routemasters. (I also learnt my lesson as a kid that jumping off a Routemaster too early wasn't such a great idea! We used to have a bit of a competition to see who was the most daring...) |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() On 18/09/2016 21:58, Graham Murray wrote: eastender writes: I always pay my fare of course. I can't see how you can eliminate evasion easily on these buses or the DLR. Do not get rid of the conductors[1] and make it part of their duties to observe that everyone boarding via the middle or rear door touches in and the green light shows. Bit difficult to do with a paper ticket! (I recall a bendy bus driver deciding he didn't like the look of someone who had got on at the middle door and hadn't touched in. He said something over the PA, and the slightly befuddled passenger walked up to the front and showed the driver his paper Travelcard.) |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 2016-09-18 22:33:37 +0000, Mizter T said:
Bit difficult to do with a paper ticket! You're meant to board at the front if you have a paper ticket, but experience suggests the London bus driver mentality continues to be not to give a monkey's about revenue, so nothing is done about it. (I recall a bendy bus driver deciding he didn't like the look of someone who had got on at the middle door and hadn't touched in. He said something over the PA, and the slightly befuddled passenger walked up to the front and showed the driver his paper Travelcard.) Unusual ![]() Neil -- Neil Williams Put my first name before the @ to reply. |
#5
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() On 19/09/2016 08:41, Neil Williams wrote: On 2016-09-18 22:33:37 +0000, Mizter T said: Bit difficult to do with a paper ticket! You're meant to board at the front if you have a paper ticket, but experience suggests the London bus driver mentality continues to be not to give a monkey's about revenue, so nothing is done about it. No you're not. Only those with Saver tickets (no longer sold) need to board at the front, and present the tear-off half to the driver. See the sign on the door he https://farm1.staticflickr.com/717/20036305714_6862073c64_o_d.jpg New Routemaster drivers have no role in checking tickets apart from collecting the chits from the Saver tickets that is. (I recall a bendy bus driver deciding he didn't like the look of someone who had got on at the middle door and hadn't touched in. He said something over the PA, and the slightly befuddled passenger walked up to the front and showed the driver his paper Travelcard.) Unusual ![]() Yep, I couldn't see anything objectionable about the passenger either. Driver having a bad day perhaps. |
#6
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In another thread that I am unable to find a poster mentioned the button, once used by the second warm-bodied staff-human on the bus to open the rear doors.
On a normal bus one is definitely not meant to use the button positioned over the doors in the middle of the bus to egrete oneself from the bus in traffic, or anywhere. But is one allowed to use the rear door button on a roastmaster? Is it "allowed", and if so, where is it? |
#7
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 2016-09-19 09:00:28 +0000, Offramp said:
In another thread that I am unable to find a poster mentioned the button, once used by the second warm-bodied staff-human on the bus to open the rear doors. On a normal bus one is definitely not meant to use the button positioned over the doors in the middle of the bus to egrete oneself from the bus in traffic, or anywhere. But is one allowed to use the rear door button on a roastmaster? Is it "allowed", and if so, where is it? If running with a conductor, the door is left open. Neil -- Neil Williams Put my first name before the @ to reply. |
#8
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon, 19 Sep 2016 10:43:42 +0100, Neil Williams
wrote: On 2016-09-19 09:00:28 +0000, Offramp said: In another thread that I am unable to find a poster mentioned the button, once used by the second warm-bodied staff-human on the bus to open the rear doors. On a normal bus one is definitely not meant to use the button positioned over the doors in the middle of the bus to egrete oneself from the bus in traffic, or anywhere. But is one allowed to use the rear door button on a roastmaster? Is it "allowed", and if so, where is it? If running with a conductor, the door is left open. Indeed, that's the whole point of the platform attendant. |
#9
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sunday, 18 September 2016 15:16:44 UTC+1, wrote:
I had the distinct ... erm ... pleasure of riding on Roastmaster (a.k.a. Borisbus) the other day. I am neither a designer nor an automotive engineer, but I think that it is safe to say that this is a poorly designed vehicle pretty much by anybody's standards and that this is also what happens when you push through a vanity project. Where was the oversight committee on this? I was on one bus that had openable windows on its upper deck, though I still felt extremely nauseous. I did this after the heatwave and I don't easily get motion sickness, thus making me wonder if there are issues with exhaust venting. The Roastmaster is not fantastic but I think it has some good points. I think they are quieter than normal buses and they don't lurch around as much; normal buses seem to have only an emergency brake, giving the impression that the driver is constantly rehearsing the very first part of a handbrake turn. I also liked the internal colours of brass and deep red, and the two staircases. The idea of the three doors was very good. It made boarding and alighting much quicker. So it was not ALL bad. |
#10
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon, 19 Sep 2016 02:17:37 -0700 (PDT)
Offramp wrote: The Roastmaster is not fantastic but I think it has some good points. I thi= nk they are quieter than normal buses and they don't lurch around as much; = I've never driven a bus but I have driven HGVs and when they're empty the brakes require a bit of finesse unless you want to do an almost emergency stop because they're set up to brake well at maximum load. I wonder if an almost empty bus has the same issues even though the max load as a percentage of the unladed weight is less. normal buses seem to have only an emergency brake, giving the impression th= at the driver is constantly rehearsing the very first part of a handbrake t= urn.=20 There are seemingly a lot of **** bus drivers working in London in my experience. A lot of them don't give a toss if people are halfway up or down the stairs when they accelerate or brake. Probably why you never see many elderly upstairs even if they can walk ok. -- Spud |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Roastmasters. The worst? | London Transport | |||
Which bus-stop is best? Which is worst? | London Transport | |||
Worst map ever | London Transport | |||
BBC's UK's Worst | London Transport | |||
The Worst Tube Station in London....were is it... | London Transport |