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Leo Mindel April 1st 05 11:52 AM

District Stock
 
Travelling in by car earlier this week on the M4 I pulled up next to a
freshly painted D stock on a trailer (I assume going to Ealing depot)

It was carriage 17002. From the outside, looks similar to the one they
redid a few years ago, red doors, white and blue trim. Two main things I
noticed the press or opens have been removed (well there were never turned
on anyway) and there are big disabled stickers on the end doors.

Also all the glass looks to be heavily tinted (I think they were anyway on
this stock) so I guess that is the poor man's Air Conditioning fitted :)


Regards



Leo




[email protected] April 1st 05 05:33 PM

District Stock
 

Leo Mindel wrote:
Travelling in by car earlier this week on the M4 I pulled up next to

a
freshly painted D stock on a trailer (I assume going to Ealing depot)

It was carriage 17002. From the outside, looks similar to the one

they
redid a few years ago, red doors, white and blue trim. Two main

things I
noticed the press or opens have been removed (well there were never

turned
on anyway) and there are big disabled stickers on the end doors.


If it was 17002 then isn't it the one they did re-do a few years ago?


Richard J. April 1st 05 08:24 PM

District Stock
 
wrote:
Leo Mindel wrote:
Travelling in by car earlier this week on the M4 I pulled up next
to a freshly painted D stock on a trailer (I assume going to
Ealing depot)

It was carriage 17002. From the outside, looks similar to the one
they redid a few years ago, red doors, white and blue trim. Two
main things I noticed the press or opens have been removed (well
there were never turned on anyway) and there are big disabled
stickers on the end doors.

If it was 17002 then isn't it the one they did re-do a few years
ago?


No, that was 17008. 17002 was in the old livery until it went to
Wakefield for refurbishment on 10 Dec 2004.
--
Richard J.
(to e-mail me, swap uk and yon in address)


Andrew April 1st 05 11:03 PM

District Stock
 

"Leo Mindel" wrote in message
...
Travelling in by car earlier this week on the M4 I pulled up next to a
freshly painted D stock on a trailer (I assume going to Ealing depot)

It was carriage 17002. From the outside, looks similar to the one they
redid a few years ago, red doors, white and blue trim. Two main things I
noticed the press or opens have been removed (well there were never turned
on anyway) and there are big disabled stickers on the end doors.


Do you mean the buttons to open the doors ? If I remember correctly these
were used during winter months, but during warmer months train operators
were instructed to open all doors at station stops to help with ventilation.

This is remembering from 3+ years ago when I was last in London, so things
may have changed since then..

Andrew.



[email protected] April 2nd 05 01:34 AM

District Stock
 

Andrew wrote:

Do you mean the buttons to open the doors ? If I remember correctly

these
were used during winter months, but during warmer months train

operators
were instructed to open all doors at station stops to help with

ventilation.

This is remembering from 3+ years ago when I was last in London, so

things
may have changed since then..

Andrew.


The buttons don't seem to be used at all nowadays. At a normal stop
all the doors open and the button illuminates, at terminals this
happens then the door buttons go off.

Occasionally the drivers do something at the terminals which makes only
one door per carriage stay open, although I don't know what this is but
it keeps it nice and warm

--
Chris


James Farrar April 2nd 05 09:09 AM

District Stock
 
wrote:
Andrew wrote:


Do you mean the buttons to open the doors ? If I remember correctly


these

were used during winter months, but during warmer months train


operators

were instructed to open all doors at station stops to help with


ventilation.

This is remembering from 3+ years ago when I was last in London, so


things

may have changed since then..

Andrew.



The buttons don't seem to be used at all nowadays.


And haven't been for about five years. I remember when I first came to
London (1997) the doors on D stock were passenger-operated in the winter
but always opened during the summer (as Andrew said). After a couple of
summers they just stayed on always-open all year round. I believe a
decision was taken that some pax were being confused by some trains
having doors with buttons that work and some that didn't. And some
trains with no buttons, of course.

Leo Mindel April 2nd 05 03:44 PM

District Stock
 

"Richard J." wrote in message
...
wrote:
Leo Mindel wrote:
Travelling in by car earlier this week on the M4 I pulled up next
to a freshly painted D stock on a trailer (I assume going to
Ealing depot)

It was carriage 17002. From the outside, looks similar to the one
they redid a few years ago, red doors, white and blue trim. Two
main things I noticed the press or opens have been removed (well
there were never turned on anyway) and there are big disabled
stickers on the end doors.

If it was 17002 then isn't it the one they did re-do a few years
ago?


No, that was 17008. 17002 was in the old livery until it went to
Wakefield for refurbishment on 10 Dec 2004.
--
Richard J.
(to e-mail me, swap uk and yon in address)

Does that mean they are finally doing the whole stock ? If so is it similar
to what they did to 17008 ? Do we get Air Con :)

Regards


Leo



Richard Jeeves April 2nd 05 04:21 PM

District Stock
 

"James Farrar" wrote in message
...
wrote:
Andrew wrote:


Do you mean the buttons to open the doors ? If I remember correctly


these

were used during winter months, but during warmer months train


operators

were instructed to open all doors at station stops to help with


ventilation.

This is remembering from 3+ years ago when I was last in London, so


things

may have changed since then..

Andrew.



The buttons don't seem to be used at all nowadays.


And haven't been for about five years. I remember when I first came to
London (1997) the doors on D stock were passenger-operated in the winter
but always opened during the summer (as Andrew said). After a couple of
summers they just stayed on always-open all year round. I believe a
decision was taken that some pax were being confused by some trains having
doors with buttons that work and some that didn't. And some trains with no
buttons, of course.


I think it may have also had something to do with Health and Safety.



Richard Jeeves April 2nd 05 04:22 PM

District Stock
 

"Leo Mindel" wrote in message
...

"Richard J." wrote in message
...
wrote:
Leo Mindel wrote:
Travelling in by car earlier this week on the M4 I pulled up next
to a freshly painted D stock on a trailer (I assume going to
Ealing depot)

It was carriage 17002. From the outside, looks similar to the one
they redid a few years ago, red doors, white and blue trim. Two
main things I noticed the press or opens have been removed (well
there were never turned on anyway) and there are big disabled
stickers on the end doors.

If it was 17002 then isn't it the one they did re-do a few years
ago?


No, that was 17008. 17002 was in the old livery until it went to
Wakefield for refurbishment on 10 Dec 2004.
--
Richard J.
(to e-mail me, swap uk and yon in address)

Does that mean they are finally doing the whole stock ? If so is it
similar to what they did to 17008 ? Do we get Air Con :)

Regards


Leo


For pictures and more info go to:
www.trainweb.org/districtdave



Sunil Sood April 3rd 05 01:13 AM

District Stock
 

"Leo Mindel" wrote in message
...
Travelling in by car earlier this week on the M4 I pulled up next to a
freshly painted D stock on a trailer (I assume going to Ealing depot)

It was carriage 17002. From the outside, looks similar to the one they
redid a few years ago, red doors, white and blue trim. Two main things I
noticed the press or opens have been removed (well there were never turned
on anyway) and there are big disabled stickers on the end doors.

Also all the glass looks to be heavily tinted (I think they were anyway on
this stock) so I guess that is the poor man's Air Conditioning fitted :)


I just wish they had chosen a different colour scheme though.

As the indicators on the Wimbledon branch line are often wrong (it will say
its an Edgware Road train when its really a City service and vice versa)
using the different colours was a useful way of telling the "true"
destination very easily.

True, if you travel frequently, you know that the carriage's look different
but it was so much easier to describe to other people ("wait on platform for
a red/blue coloured train" or a "white" train)

However, having travelled on the refurbished new stock, at least it looks
nice inside..

Regards
Sunil




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