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London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London. |
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On Sat, 8 Apr 2017 14:46:03 +0100, "michael adams"
wrote: "Basil Jet" wrote in message news ![]() On 2017\04\08 13:41, michael adams wrote: Whereas in fact drivers should never find themselves in the position where they're having to refuse take out trains as a direct result of slipshod maintenance. As its their neck which will be on the line if anything goes wrong. That sounds like you're suggesting they'll be fired or disciplined if a fault develops, The finger will point at them until such time as the evidence indicates otherwise. Which might take days or weeks. The general public without the requisite technical knowledge are probably more likely as first at least to attribute any such occurance to operator or driver error. As that's something everyone can understand, Wereas the systems they're operating are supposedly designed not to fail. Same as with these wheel flats. As a member of the travelling public I've not a got a clue whether there are any safety implications in driving with wheel flats. Again I can't really believe that drivers weren't reporting this problem, before all of a sudden it became necessary for drivers to actually refuse to take out trains and for the decision to be made to take large numbers of trains out of service . Drivers would certainly report wheel flats if they became aware of them, but a flat somewhere in the middle of the train may not be audible in the cab. So a member of station staff or even a passenger may report a bad one. That's a fault that is easy to check, and it's part of the driver's job if s/he becomes aware of one. If it's a bad flat, the train will be withdrawn from service. The problem arises with rare, intermittent faults that are hard to reproduce (such as the doors that allegedly opened spontaneously between stations). There's plenty in the news about drivers being disciplined or dismissed for various offences. I've yet to read anywhere of a single member of the LT management or Board (if such still exists) being dismissed as a result of their decision to cut back on wheel maintainence and inspections on the Picaddilly Line. That wasn't what caused the wheel flats. There hadn't been any cutbacks on wheel maintenance or inspections. when it's more that they will have a really horrific day if a door opens unexpectedly and a few people fall off a moving tube train. How many people other than his fellow drivers will accept that the door opened "unexpectedly" for any other reason than that the driver somehow opened it himself by accident ? There's no way a driver could open a single passenger door while the train was on the move, so no-one would blame him if it happened. The question was whether the reports of such door openings were spurious. |
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