Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London. |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#16
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon, 28 Jan 2008 22:08:33 +0000, Paul G
wrote: In message , Dusty Shelves writes Well, apart from traffic levels & overcrowding of course. I have to suffer this damn incessant voice almost every day... Why? I hope there is some kind of backlash against it! http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/4991326.stm I was on the 298 route on Saturday evening and I thought it was very good (although I note other people's comments on how it could be improved). The best part was, as the bus approached Southgate Station, the control/depot phoned in and asked the driver where he was. I can't remember what the driver answered, but the control/depot pointed out he was running early and the driver apologised and said he would pull up at the next stop until he was on time. The half hourly bus had managed to become over 10 minutes early in fact (the roads just aren't as busy at night as during the daytime). The only way that I can think that control bothered phoning in is that they must have installed some automated flagging system for when buses are running seriously early and connected it to iBus. Fantastic! (better than the timetables were more sensible; but this will do as an alternative). Of course, with such a system, in terms of driver training the control ought to be initially able to set it up for routes running 10 minutes early and decrease it to 5 minutes when the drivers are better behaved! Depot based control is part of I-Bus. With the GPS tracking controllers can see exactly where buses are. AIUI the system will automatically flag variances against the schedule / timetable. The driver also has a module in the cab with a display that also shows in real time whether the bus is early or late. I noticed this for the first time on a 192 and was genuinely surprised at how neat the unit was. The system can obviously track the service over the whole day and the collation of operational statistics should help to improve future timetables. Once it becomes clear how each route performs on a typical day as well as in unusual conditions then schedules will be able to be tweaked to make services more reliable and resilient. -- Paul C Admits to working for London Underground! |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
iBus and stop names | London Transport | |||
TfL's iBus program -- a dud? | London Transport | |||
Annoying pigeons in Victoria Coach Station | London Transport | |||
Annoying CC form | London Transport | |||
Apology if Mad Bill Pal m er has been annoying members of uk.local.birmingham? | London Transport |