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W&C timetable oddities
If you download the Bank to Waterloo timetable from the TFL site, it has odd footnotes which serve no obvious purpose.... does anyone know how this quirk got into the system? |
W&C timetable oddities
"Basil Jet" wrote
If you download the Bank to Waterloo timetable from the TFL site, it has odd footnotes which serve no obvious purpose.... does anyone know how this quirk got into the system? I assume you mean this one: http://journeyplanner.tfl.gov.uk/use...__00004f19.pdf (I wish you'd posted the link: it's not easy to find!) I don't know the answer. I agree with you that it's daft! |
W&C timetable oddities
"John Salmon" wrote in message ... "Basil Jet" wrote If you download the Bank to Waterloo timetable from the TFL site, it has odd footnotes which serve no obvious purpose.... does anyone know how this quirk got into the system? I assume you mean this one: http://journeyplanner.tfl.gov.uk/use...__00004f19.pdf page cannot be found (I assume that this was personal timetable that you created?) tim |
W&C timetable oddities
Basil Jet wrote on 29 September
2009 18:37:35 ... If you download the Bank to Waterloo timetable from the TFL site, it has odd footnotes which serve no obvious purpose.... does anyone know how this quirk got into the system? Thanks for the lack of a link! Select Getting Around / Timetables / Tube and bus, scroll down to "Tube timetable - Tube line", select W&C, select "Towards Bank", select from the list of stations "Waterloo" [1], click on "View Waterloo Underground Station timetable" (what else do they think I want to do?), and hey presto, a PDF timetable appears. Well, a timetable for first and last trains and "about every X to Y minutes" for the rest of the day. The footnotes apply to the first and last trains, thus (for Waterloo to Bank): a=only Wednesday and Friday, b=not on Wednesday and Friday, c=not on Monday and Wednesday, d=only Monday and Wednesday Then you realise that there are pairs of trains departing at the same time, one with 'a' and the other with 'b', or with 'c' and 'd'. My theory is that there is a half-minute difference in departure time in the working timetable on certain days which leads to different entries, but the times in the public timetable are rounded to whole minutes. That theory would explain why on the Bank departures timetable, one pair of early morning departures is listed in b-a order instead of a-b. But I can't quite see how the theory fits the THREE departures from Bank at 21:48: 21:48 e "only Monday" 21:48 f "only Wednesday" 21:48 d "not on Monday or Wednesday" And then of course, there's the question of why the timetable is different at all on particular days. [1] If you select "Bank", presumably wanting to see arrival times, you get a PDF file consisting of one blank page, similarly for Waterloo arrival times. -- Richard J. (to email me, swap 'uk' and 'yon' in address) |
W&C timetable oddities
"tim....." wrote
"John Salmon" wrote "Basil Jet" wrote If you download the Bank to Waterloo timetable from the TFL site, it has odd footnotes which serve no obvious purpose.... does anyone know how this quirk got into the system? I assume you mean this one: http://journeyplanner.tfl.gov.uk/use...__00004f19.pdf page cannot be found (I assume that this was personal timetable that you created?) No, I don't think so. In fact I've just closed my browser, clicked on the link again and it has come up again (using Firefox). If you still can't get it to work, see Richard J's post in a separate sub-thread which shows how to find it. It's unfortunate that the OP didn't post the link in the first place! |
W&C timetable oddities
Richard J. wrote:
Basil Jet wrote on 29 September 2009 18:37:35 ... If you download the Bank to Waterloo timetable from the TFL site, it has odd footnotes which serve no obvious purpose.... does anyone know how this quirk got into the system? Thanks for the lack of a link! I didn't post a link because I knew the link would only work for me. Select Getting Around / Timetables / Tube and bus, scroll down to "Tube timetable - Tube line", select W&C, select "Towards Bank", select from the list of stations "Waterloo" [1], click on "View Waterloo Underground Station timetable" (what else do they think I want to do?), and hey presto, a PDF timetable appears. Well, a timetable for first and last trains and "about every X to Y minutes" for the rest of the day. The footnotes apply to the first and last trains, thus (for Waterloo to Bank): a=only Wednesday and Friday, b=not on Wednesday and Friday, c=not on Monday and Wednesday, d=only Monday and Wednesday Then you realise that there are pairs of trains departing at the same time, one with 'a' and the other with 'b', or with 'c' and 'd'. My theory is that there is a half-minute difference in departure time in the working timetable on certain days which leads to different entries, but the times in the public timetable are rounded to whole minutes. That theory would explain why on the Bank departures timetable, one pair of early morning departures is listed in b-a order instead of a-b. But I can't quite see how the theory fits the THREE departures from Bank at 21:48: 21:48 e "only Monday" 21:48 f "only Wednesday" 21:48 d "not on Monday or Wednesday" Nice theory... IIRC the W&C is the only line which uses quarter minute times instead of half minute times. And then of course, there's the question of why the timetable is different at all on particular days. |
W&C timetable oddities
Basil Jet wrote:
Richard J. wrote: My theory is that there is a half-minute difference in departure time in the working timetable on certain days which leads to different entries, but the times in the public timetable are rounded to whole minutes. That theory would explain why on the Bank departures timetable, one pair of early morning departures is listed in b-a order instead of a-b. But I can't quite see how the theory fits the THREE departures from Bank at 21:48: 21:48 e "only Monday" 21:48 f "only Wednesday" 21:48 d "not on Monday or Wednesday" Nice theory... IIRC the W&C is the only line which uses quarter minute times instead of half minute times. Quarter minute times? You are joking me?!! The train departing at 21:48.15sec only leaves on Monday, whereas on Wednesday the train goes at 21:48.30!!! It's so crazy it has to be true. -- Stevo |
W&C timetable oddities
Stephen O'Connell wrote:
Quarter minute times? You are joking me?!! Nope. The journey time on the W&C is so short that regulating to the quarter minute is about the only sane way of keeping the service going, it seems. Cheers, Barry |
W&C timetable oddities
Barry Salter wrote on 30 September 2009
10:57:23 ... Stephen O'Connell wrote: Quarter minute times? You are joking me?!! Nope. The journey time on the W&C is so short that regulating to the quarter minute is about the only sane way of keeping the service going, it seems. The joke here is the absurdly casual approach to timekeeping that LU has on the other lines. As far as I can see, drivers get no help at all to keep to time apart from being issued with a working timetable (at a resolution of ½ minute) and using their watch. OK, they get regulated at certain stations, but that's *after* things have gone adrift. In Paris, the timings are to the nearest 5 seconds, with a headwall display at each station or a beep in the cab DLR-fashion to say it's time to go. -- Richard J. (to email me, swap 'uk' and 'yon' in address) |
W&C timetable oddities
On 30 Sep, 17:20, "Richard J." wrote:
Barry Salter wrote on 30 September 2009 10:57:23 ... Stephen O'Connell wrote: Quarter minute times? You are joking me?!! Nope. The journey time on the W&C is so short that regulating to the quarter minute is about the only sane way of keeping the service going, it seems. The joke here is the absurdly casual approach to timekeeping that LU has on the other lines. *As far as I can see, drivers get no help at all to keep to time apart from being issued with a working timetable (at a resolution of ½ minute) and using their watch. *OK, they get regulated at certain stations, but that's *after* things have gone adrift. *In Paris, the timings are to the nearest 5 seconds, with a headwall display at each station or a beep in the cab DLR-fashion to say it's time to go. -- Richard J. (to email me, swap 'uk' and 'yon' in address) It's hard to see why the W & C needs a timetable at all. How far from the schedule can a driver or train end up? I mean, a train six hours late is still at a maximum of four minutes from where it ought to be. As long as they are signalled out of each station at an appropriate interval, what difference can it make? |
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