ack
New Member
The person could have well been a tourist from a place where train doors are as forgiving as elevator doors and trains don't leave a minute before the published schedule.
Where in the world are train doors as forgiving as elevator doors? This is a completely foreign concept to me.
Doors on regional trains in Germany, Austria and Switzerland usually reopen with the slightest obstruction and cycle with no apparent limit (I've seen up to 8x). In practice after a few cycles the crew barks out an admonishment over the PA and people step back. Some long-distance equipment, such as WESTbahn's KISS, also has doors like this.Where in the world are train doors as forgiving as elevator doors? This is a completely foreign concept to me.
There is not.Surely there's a switch to stop the cycling.
Assuming trains run all day than only at peak time. Missing the last peak train is the rider fault as well any train if they drive by car. In some cases it caused by the local transit that maybe held up by traffic.There is not.
For the rest of the messages I’m going to refer you to Paul’s message from above, if they play nice to people and reopen the door every time there’s someone else running to the train, no GO trains would depart anywhere on time.
Service is being expanded to the point that missing a train will be no big deal but we aren’t there yet, until then people need to learn that if they miss it they miss it, same applies for a subway, plane, ferry, spaceship; any other mode of transport.
To a point. I've seen completely empty platforms where they've closed the door with a single person on the platform madly running. And then you look at your clock, and see they are 15-seconds early. And one station out from Union, so about to have an 8-minute lay-over.There is not.
For the rest of the messages I’m going to refer you to Paul’s message from above, if they play nice to people and reopen the door every time there’s someone else running to the train, no GO trains would depart anywhere on time.
Except there isn’t a frequency in these problems on GO, this is one of the first times I’ve ever seen or heard this happening, and it happened to cascade to a larger issue because it was a Aurora-bound Barrie Line train.frequency of door problems in service.
I've seen it before on Lakeshore.Except there isn’t a frequency in these problems on GO, this is one of the first times I’ve ever seen or heard this happening, and it happened to cascade to a larger issue because it was a Aurora-bound Barrie Line train.
Issues with people holding doors past their limit is not a common problem on GO, and it rarely escalates to an issue like yesterday.
This wasn’t a peak train either, it was a weekend train that just happened to be the first departure after a Blue Jays gameI've seen it before on Lakeshore.
On one occasion last year, the train was beyond crush-loaded - I suspect the problem wasn't so much that people were holding the door, but that people in the train weren't far enough away from the door. Ultimately they couldn't get the door to close, and then locked everyone in the train for about 31 minutes past the departure time. Which meant everyone missed the following train.
I don't know what the rest of them did, as they'd surely grossly overwhelm the next train - 30 minutes away - I jumped on TTC.
Perhaps Aurora trains aren't as overloaded off-peak.
Was it overloaded?This wasn’t a peak train either, it was a weekend train that just happened to be the first departure after a Blue Jays game
It was busy, not in the coach I was in however, because people don’t go to the 1st coach behind the engine as they’re coming from the Rogers Centre.Was it overloaded?
All of Germany, Austria, (including the Desiros that operate to Bratislava and Sopron), Switzerland (though not on every vehicle), and Toronto’s streetcars. Putting your hand in the door while it is closing will reopen it automatically (they have the same object detection systems as elevators).Where in the world are train doors as forgiving as elevator doors? This is a completely foreign concept to me.




