![]() |
UTLer in the news
In message , at
13:21:35 on Thu, 5 Feb 2009, Tom Anderson remarked: The 4 x 4 vehicle was marked clearly as a paramedic vehicle in bold red and green colouring Huh. It does rather look like that's an error in the report, then. Red and yellow is fi http://www.ukemergency.co.uk/fire/dscd0609.jpg (Or sometimes ambulances sigh http://www.ukemergency.co.uk/ambulance/dsc02302.jpg ) Yellow and green is paramedics: http://www.ukemergency.co.uk/ambulance/p1150013.jpg As is white and green: http://www.ukemergency.co.uk/ambulance/p1140214.jpg Haven't found any red and green yet. Closest is Orange and green (animal ambulance) http://www.ukemergency.co.uk/ambulance/dscd0552.jpg or maybe just red (yes there are solid red ambulances too) http://www.ukemergency.co.uk/ambulance/dsc10814.jpg -- Roland Perry |
UTLer in the news
Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 13:21:35 on Thu, 5 Feb 2009, Tom Anderson remarked: The 4 x 4 vehicle was marked clearly as a paramedic vehicle in bold red and green colouring Huh. It does rather look like that's an error in the report, then. Red and yellow is fi http://www.ukemergency.co.uk/fire/dscd0609.jpg (Or sometimes ambulances sigh http://www.ukemergency.co.uk/ambulance/dsc02302.jpg ) Yellow and green is paramedics: http://www.ukemergency.co.uk/ambulance/p1150013.jpg As is white and green: http://www.ukemergency.co.uk/ambulance/p1140214.jpg Haven't found any red and green yet. Closest is Orange and green (animal ambulance) http://www.ukemergency.co.uk/ambulance/dscd0552.jpg or maybe just red (yes there are solid red ambulances too) http://www.ukemergency.co.uk/ambulance/dsc10814.jpg Red/green colour-blindness? Should Colin have a test? This sounds increasingly like a plausible Rumpole-style defence. There was an episode about a defendant who was belatedly found to be illiterate and hence unable to have read and signed his police confession. |
UTLer in the news
magwitch wrote:
Red/green colour-blindness? Should Colin have a test? This sounds increasingly like a plausible Rumpole-style defence. Not really, unless he's paramedic-deaf as well. The paramedic told him he was a paramedic on a call-out. A roof-rack with coloured lights, and the words "Ambulance" liberally scattered around the vehicle, wouldn't really support that defence either. Jon -- SPAM BLOCK IN USE! To reply in email, replace 'deadspam' with 'green-lines'. |
UTLer in the news
In message , at 14:48:40 on
Thu, 5 Feb 2009, magwitch remarked: Red/green colour-blindness? It's the newspapers that are claiming the paramedic's car was red and green. -- Roland Perry |
UTLer in the news
On Feb 5, 2:48*pm, magwitch wrote:
Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 13:21:35 on Thu, 5 Feb 2009, Tom Anderson remarked: * The 4 x 4 vehicle was marked clearly as a paramedic vehicle in bold * red and green colouring Huh. It does rather look like that's an error in the report, then. Red and yellow is fi http://www.ukemergency.co.uk/fire/dscd0609.jpg (Or sometimes ambulances sigh * *http://www.ukemergency.co.uk/ambulance/dsc02302.jpg) Yellow and green is paramedics: http://www.ukemergency.co.uk/ambulance/p1150013.jpg As is white and green: http://www.ukemergency.co.uk/ambulance/p1140214.jpg Haven't found any red and green yet. Closest is Orange and green (animal ambulance) http://www.ukemergency.co.uk/ambulance/dscd0552.jpg or maybe just red (yes there are solid red ambulances too) http://www.ukemergency.co.uk/ambulance/dsc10814.jpg Red/green colour-blindness? Should Colin have a test? This sounds increasingly like a plausible Rumpole-style defence. There was an episode about a defendant who was belatedly found to be illiterate and hence unable to have read and signed his police confession..- "I was approaching the red traffic light, so the Doppler effect made it appear green." I have a feeling that one may actually have been tried. |
UTLer in the news
In article , magwitch wrote:
Red/green colour-blindness? I imagine the paramedic driver knows what colour his vehicle is even if he is colour blind. Elsewhere in the report he says that it is green and yellow down the side, red and yellow check to the rear end, and that it displays the word ambulance (in unspecified colours). Should Colin have a test? Why should Colin have a test because someone else wrote a misleading description of the vehicle? The description of the vehicle as marked "in bold red and green colouring" is in the section headed "Mr Austine's evidence", not the section headed "Councillor Rosenstiel's evidence", and it appears to be the investigator's summary of the paramedic's more accurate description. |
UTLer in the news
In message , at 17:44:07 on
Thu, 5 Feb 2009, Alan Braggins remarked: Elsewhere in the report he says that it is green and yellow down the side, red and yellow check to the rear end, and that it displays the word ambulance (in unspecified colours). http://www.ukemergency.co.uk/ambulance/dcp01118.jpg The description of the vehicle as marked "in bold red and green colouring" I suppose you could interpret the vehicle pictured above as "White and Yellow" with "Red and Green markings", but it wouldn't be my most intuitive way of expressing it. -- Roland Perry |
UTLer in the news
On Thu, 05 Feb 2009 18:09:00 -0000, Roland Perry
wrote: In message , at 17:44:07 on Thu, 5 Feb 2009, Alan Braggins remarked: Elsewhere in the report he says that it is green and yellow down the side, red and yellow check to the rear end, and that it displays the word ambulance (in unspecified colours). http://www.ukemergency.co.uk/ambulance/dcp01118.jpg The description of the vehicle as marked "in bold red and green colouring" I suppose you could interpret the vehicle pictured above as "White and Yellow" with "Red and Green markings", but it wouldn't be my most intuitive way of expressing it. Yup, most of us would refer to it as an ambulance:-) |
UTLer in the news
Alan Braggins wrote:
In article , magwitch wrote: Red/green colour-blindness? I imagine the paramedic driver knows what colour his vehicle is even if he is colour blind. Elsewhere in the report he says that it is green and yellow down the side, red and yellow check to the rear end, and that it displays the word ambulance (in unspecified colours). Should Colin have a test? Why should Colin have a test because someone else wrote a misleading description of the vehicle? The description of the vehicle as marked "in bold red and green colouring" is in the section headed "Mr Austine's evidence", not the section headed "Councillor Rosenstiel's evidence", and it appears to be the investigator's summary of the paramedic's more accurate description. The plot thickens. I must say I rather think the 'Ambulance' sign on the vehicle is most compelling evidence... in fact on reflection, the colour combination perhaps might be a red herring after all. |
UTLer in the news
Jon Green wrote:
magwitch wrote: Red/green colour-blindness? Should Colin have a test? This sounds increasingly like a plausible Rumpole-style defence. Not really, unless he's paramedic-deaf as well. The paramedic told him he was a paramedic on a call-out. A roof-rack with coloured lights, and the words "Ambulance" liberally scattered around the vehicle, wouldn't really support that defence either. Jon Yeah but if he can't read... see what I'm getting (doggedly) at? Perhaps it's some sort of 'data-exhaustion' syndrome, with which City councillors seem to be increasingly afflicted, poor loves. |
All times are GMT. The time now is 02:56 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin®
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2006 LondonBanter.co.uk