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no they wouldn'tbadger wrote:Ha, thats brilliant!
Imagine the health and safety nuts in the UK if that happened here, they'd blow a fuse!!
no they wouldn'tbadger wrote: wrote:
Ha, thats brilliant!
Imagine the health and safety nuts in the UK if that happened here, they'd blow a fuse!!
they would just make everyone wear high vis jackets and hard hats...
(so the train driver can see them and to protect their heads from falling comets)
Don't be too sure about that! I was travelling in an old, tired, EMU some weeks before Christmas last year, and after leaving the next to last stop, we suddenly just rolled very slowly forward for about 1 km, until standing still in the middle of nowhere.Rob wrote:This is only possible in India.
This is exactly what I meant, normally people aren't allowed to exit the train because they could get run over by another passing train.AndersI wrote:Don't be too sure about that! I was travelling in an old, tired, EMU some weeks before Christmas last year, and after leaving the next to last stop, we suddenly just rolled very slowly forward for about 1 km, until standing still in the middle of nowhere.Rob wrote:This is only possible in India.
After 20 minutes or so, the driver finally had received instructions (phone? radio?) and went out with some tools in his hands.
He had to manually raise the pantograph (I don't know exactly how it worked, as the passengers were not allowed out of the train), and then the trip could continue.
In the Philippines, so-called "squatters" are literally living on the railway tracks.Rob wrote:In India the people even ride on the roof of the train and hanging out the doors. Not very safe but it happens.
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