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Posted
4 hours ago, stuboy said:

i got one never used it

8161ec3e-1057-4845-9177-ee5748987014.__CR0,0,970,600_PT0_SX970_V1___.jpg

s-l1200.webp

I've never heard of these either. The hours I could have saved over the years removing sign writing from vans, its a really boring task.

Posted
9 hours ago, grogee said:

 

general-election-2019-delivers-a-new-conservative-government-for-the-uk.jpg

Privatisation of British Rail, by them, in the 90s.  Failure to bring Britsh Rail back into public control by labour when they got into power and failure by the conservatives to come up with a vision that didn't involve billions of investment and overspend  and decades of waiting for it to happen. 

Actually. No political parties in this country have the ability or vision to build a public transport system suitable for a world *leading economy, in the 21st century. 

Other countries must piss themselves at our shitness. 

Posted
2 hours ago, New POD said:

Other countries must piss themselves at our shitness. 

Am I correct in thinking that the majority of our public transport is owned by companies in other countries. 

Arriva - Deutsche Bahn for example. 

 

  • Like 1
Posted
2 hours ago, Volksy said:

Am I correct in thinking that the majority of our public transport is owned by companies in other countries. 

Arriva - Deutsche Bahn for example. 

 

In which case can we learn from them ? 

Posted
1 hour ago, New POD said:

In which case can we learn from them ? 

Going by what my German colleagues say, the German rail system is not very efficient or on time either. Another myth that we import. 

 

A quick Google bring up a whole host of problems:

Nearly one-quarter of high-speed trains did not reach their destination on time in 2021. Long delays and canceled trains have become routine across Germany.5 Jan 2022

https://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.dw.com/en/germany-rail-operator-deutsche-bahn-admits-major-drop-in-punctuality/a-60338352

 

This sounds familiar?

Deutsch Bahn - Strike by the EVG trade union from 14 May 2023

DB long-distance services will be suspended from 14.05.2023 10 p.m. to 16.05.2023 midnight due to a strike by the EVG trade union. 

Local transport will be massively affected nationwide.

https://help.raileurope.co.uk/article/41251-germany-delays-disruptions

 

 

Not even a new problem as this article in 2018 suggests

‘We are becoming a joke’: Germans turn on Deutsche Bahn

https://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.theguardian.com/world/2018/dec/20/trains-on-time-germans-deutsche-bahn-railway

 

A relatively recent article here. 

https://archive.li/T79ef

 

Anecdotally from my own experience commuting by train in the UK, they're on the whole pretty reliable. Most of the issues stem from idiots (kids) mucking around on the train line. Or the new Hitachi trains having issues that Hitachi refuse to fix and then they are stuck running slow or short of carriages. 

Posted

All the parts have been delivered for the galaxy back box... sadly the weather said not today.  So I stuffed them on back seat for another day..

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Posted
21 hours ago, grogee said:

Did you say you were changing your dash? I noticed yet another heater control layout on a Ledbury car recently, with three rotary controls in the centre of the dash. Like a 'normal' car. That makes (I think) three heating and ventilation systems developed for the Maestro, the first being vacuum operated. Clowns. 

late maestros got the '89 montego dash & console

Posted

Fixed this non-motoring contrivance last night, didn't even have any screws left over. 

If any of you have a tumble dryer that works but is intolerably noisy, it might be the drum support wheels. The rubber 'tyres' on mine had started to crumble so the drum was getting a rough ride and was loud AF. 

Cheap fix but they're buried quite deep in the matrix so a good 90 mins to change. Learned a lot along the way, though. 

@beko1987, it's a Beko. 

Screenshot_20230802_201404_eBay.jpg

  • Like 2
Posted
7 hours ago, SiC said:

Going by what my German colleagues say, the German rail system is not very efficient or on time either. Another myth that we import. 

 

A quick Google bring up a whole host of problems:

Nearly one-quarter of high-speed trains did not reach their destination on time in 2021. Long delays and canceled trains have become routine across Germany.5 Jan 2022

https://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.dw.com/en/germany-rail-operator-deutsche-bahn-admits-major-drop-in-punctuality/a-60338352

 

This sounds familiar?

Deutsch Bahn - Strike by the EVG trade union from 14 May 2023

DB long-distance services will be suspended from 14.05.2023 10 p.m. to 16.05.2023 midnight due to a strike by the EVG trade union. 

Local transport will be massively affected nationwide.

https://help.raileurope.co.uk/article/41251-germany-delays-disruptions

 

 

Not even a new problem as this article in 2018 suggests

‘We are becoming a joke’: Germans turn on Deutsche Bahn

https://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.theguardian.com/world/2018/dec/20/trains-on-time-germans-deutsche-bahn-railway

 

A relatively recent article here. 

https://archive.li/T79ef

 

Anecdotally from my own experience commuting by train in the UK, they're on the whole pretty reliable. Most of the issues stem from idiots (kids) mucking around on the train line. Or the new Hitachi trains having issues that Hitachi refuse to fix and then they are stuck running slow or short of carriages. 

I dunno. I'm not sure the German system is even close to the UK in terms of unreliability, at least in my experience. Sure I haven't got any stats to back this up, but are the Germans/Swiss/Polish/Chinese using fucking Pacers? 

Like the utilities, the railways have been starved of investment and milked for profit. Ticket prices are obscene and almost always more than the cost of fuel for the equivalent car journey. Privatisation is the worst thing to happen to UK rail. 

  • Like 2
Posted
28 minutes ago, grogee said:

I dunno. I'm not sure the German system is even close to the UK in terms of unreliability, at least in my experience. Sure I haven't got any stats to back this up, but are the Germans/Swiss/Polish/Chinese using fucking Pacers? 

I only know what I've been told by others but my German colleagues say they're absolutely awful out there and far worse than here. Especially the trains between major areas. They also have a lot of old rough rolling stock, especially for the regional services. Not as bad as pacers but they're all but extinct in most areas now anyway.

I've certainly never seen one in use on our GWR line. But that's a main line to London and so possibly couldn't take a pacer anyway. That said we do have the smaller commuter trains (no idea on type). We also have the HST but they're trying to phase then out according to the train guards I've spoken to as they're getting on a bit and very fuel hungry. 

Looking at the stats it's difficult to judge as UK and Germany measure things differently.

In the UK 85.8% of trains on average were within a maximum of 3 mins late. 98.4% within 15 mins.

https://dataportal.orr.gov.uk/statistics/performance/passenger-rail-performance/

Germany defines a train late as 6minutes. Hence a higher 92.5% were on time. However shockingly the long distance only managed 69.6% within 6 minutes.

https://zbir.deutschebahn.com/2022/en/interim-group-management-report-unaudited/product-quality-and-digitalization/punctuality/

36 minutes ago, grogee said:

Like the utilities, the railways have been starved of investment and milked for profit. Ticket prices are obscene and almost always more than the cost of fuel for the equivalent car journey. Privatisation is the worst thing to happen to UK rail. Privatisation is the worst thing to happen to UK rail. 

German train network is apparently suffering the same problem with under investment. So much so, there has been a spate of incidents where the rails/sleepers have failed. Now there is a big project to check them all which makes delays even worse from the maintenance programs.

I'm not saying the British rail system is perfect (it's far from it) but other countries have their own problems and some are similar to ours too. The car lobbying groups have had far too much power for too long. 

Posted
On 8/1/2023 at 3:28 PM, wuvvum said:

Last connection has been cancelled.  Fortunately only a 33 minute wait for the next one, but why does no long distance journey by public transport in this country ever go smoothly?  Also Azuma seats are f***ing horrible. 

The horrible seats which have been universally condemned are entirely the fault of the government, though I'm not sure which one. Contracts for the IEPs were signed under Labour but built under the coalition so it could have been any of them.

For some reason the government decided no private train operating company could fund the replacement of fleets the size of the HSTs and 91s on the Great Western and East Coast. Even though Virgin did exactly that, replacing the entire West Coast Main Line fleet. But anyway the new trains were specced by the government, or more likely civil servants, which is why they look like the inside of a fridge with ironing board seats. They basically went for the cheapest thing possible. The train companies that have to use them had no say in the matter.

On 8/2/2023 at 9:27 AM, Volksy said:

Am I correct in thinking that the majority of our public transport is owned by companies in other countries. 

Arriva - Deutsche Bahn for example. 

 

Yes.

22 hours ago, New POD said:

In which case can we learn from them ? 

No.

They didn't come over here, taking our trains, to improve anything, they came over to milk the system. It's changed a bit since COVID but the previous franchise system was geared that only massive companies could really afford it. All the smaller companies that appeared at the start of franchising were slowly edged out until the only people who could really afford to bid were state owned foreign companies. Even First Group had to put in a joint bid with FS - Italian state railways for the bid that foisted Virgin off the West Coast and out of the railway business.

Anyway, I'll stop there before we all get shuffled off to the politics section.

Posted
15 hours ago, grogee said:

I dunno. I'm not sure the German system is even close to the UK in terms of unreliability, at least in my experience. Sure I haven't got any stats to back this up, but are the Germans/Swiss/Polish/Chinese using fucking Pacers? 

Like the utilities, the railways have been starved of investment and milked for profit. Ticket prices are obscene and almost always more than the cost of fuel for the equivalent car journey. Privatisation is the worst thing to happen to UK rail. 

The problem is, train infrastructure and rolling stock is very expensive now, so much so that it's almost impossible to run a lot of services without vast subsidies. 

The railways are held to much higher standards than any other form of land transport. If 3 people get killed in a train crash there are questions in Parliament, and if it turns out to be signal, driver error or track related, the opposition, whoever they are will call for billions in extra investment. But rail accidents that kill multiple people are pretty rare. There were whole years without passenger fatalities back in the 1930s, and there haven't been any large scale rail disasters in the UK for quite a time. Yet triple fatality road accidents happen almost weekly. 

There's no point making the railways so safe and expensive, and environment friendly that Government can't afford to subsidize them and passengers can't afford the tickets.

I don't want to be killed in a train crash, but I don't want to be killed in a road crash either, which is orders of magnitude more likely. But I still use my car.

  • Like 3
Posted

And if you think Germany is some sort of paragon of transport investment I suggest you Google Brandenburg Airport.

Posted

I can only think i climate involves taking a Propeller to the side of the Head 

16D22F40-5D25-4960-8C1D-4E31F42F19C1.jpeg

  • Like 3
Posted

Sensible daily achieved. Type S GT, the car I should have bought a year ago. 

PXL_20230803_150012237.thumb.jpg.bb16490644fcddcba24b69d4c1edc92b.jpg

Posted
On 8/1/2023 at 11:31 PM, wuvvum said:

This is what I've bought, if anyone's interested. 

20230801_174627.thumb.jpg.76d3841f9ef4ee37428f728472eb6c83.jpg

Probably of more interest from an AS perspective is this Dutch-registered beauty I passed on the A1 

20230801_192036.thumb.jpg.72adfcf764da0f9909f9cbeb885d5a39.jpg

I drove a  Ampera when they were new, seemed strange at the time. 

 

P1110481 broad.jpg

  • Like 2
Posted
21 minutes ago, Six-cylinder said:

I drove a  Ampera when they were new, seemed strange at the time. 

 

I don’t think I’ve seen one in the metal.

Posted
22 minutes ago, richardmorris said:

I don’t think I’ve seen one in the metal.

Bizarrely, they share some A/C parts with my Cadillac Eldorado Touring Coupe... 

  • Like 1
Posted
30 minutes ago, Mrs6C said:

Bizarrely, they share some A/C parts with my Cadillac Eldorado Touring Coupe... 

How bizarre, how bizarre 

Not the fact but how do you know it!
 

Posted
51 minutes ago, EyesWeldedShut said:

How bizarre, how bizarre 

Not the fact but how do you know it!
 

nerd. just nerd.

Posted

Father_LabRat has been fighting with his Ford Kuga for the last few months. It's a 2014 TDCI AWD 140 powershift, which in a shocking move no-one saw shat out the gearbox.  Spend £4500 on a recon box through Ford 2 months ago, had it serviced and the timing belt changed last week at £600. On Monday it starts stuttering when accelerating, which got so bad it was visibly bouncing the car yesterday and throwing transmission faults/limp mode. 

Ford have predictably said that there's nothing wrong with the recon box and it must be something else, so we'll keep it in and do some investigation, but it could be 2-3 weeks before it gets sorted as the code reader isn't showing anything wrong (Lincolnshire, so no rush for anything here!)

He's at his wits end with the damn thing, so did the AS approved option- bought another car. A 2011 Renault Laguna 3 coupe dynamique with the 2.0 DCI 150 engine. 1 giffer owner, 95k miles and full Renault service history for the princely sum of £2000. It's fucking immaculate and drives perfect, even the sat nav still works! (For now, he's well aware of Renault's electrical gremlins)

Comes to something when it feels less likely to bankrupt him than the bloody Kuga!

  • Like 3
Posted
22 minutes ago, LabRat said:

Father_LabRat has been fighting with his Ford Kuga for the last few months. It's a 2014 TDCI AWD 140 powershift, which in a shocking move no-one saw shat out the gearbox.  Spend £4500 on a recon box through Ford 2 months ago, had it serviced and the timing belt changed last week at £600. On Monday it starts stuttering when accelerating, which got so bad it was visibly bouncing the car yesterday and throwing transmission faults/limp mode. 

Ford have predictably said that there's nothing wrong with the recon box and it must be something else, so we'll keep it in and do some investigation, but it could be 2-3 weeks before it gets sorted as the code reader isn't showing anything wrong (Lincolnshire, so no rush for anything here!)

He's at his wits end with the damn thing, so did the AS approved option- bought another car. A 2011 Renault Laguna 3 coupe dynamique with the 2.0 DCI 150 engine. 1 giffer owner, 95k miles and full Renault service history for the princely sum of £2000. It's fucking immaculate and drives perfect, even the sat nav still works! (For now, he's well aware of Renault's electrical gremlins)

Comes to something when it feels less likely to bankrupt him than the bloody Kuga!

I don't want to jinx the car, but a 2011 Laguna is well sorted. Much less likely to cause trouble than say, an Audi A5 or a BMW. Although a matter of taste, better looking than them.

Posted

sound a bit suspicious so soon after belt change

Posted

IMG20230802110533.thumb.jpg.0f79994aabfb1dd7257cf854d25537bb.jpg

So a cheap little 1.5 Tsport Yaris has joined the fleet but alas the drivers side rear wheel is a bit wonky donkey.

IMG20230803172235.thumb.jpg.07c1920cdb32d19b7b46e607d992e020.jpg

An hour or so saw the rear beam dropped out revealing the corroded mess that used to be the beams O/S mounting/pivot point.

IMG20230803172321.thumb.jpg.5663c70f5ca065e572e28ddbc8690e11.jpg

N/S not too bad.

IMG20230803172345.thumb.jpg.1fc3da5f332b6c889df4a95760394a6a.jpg

O/S is absolutely jiggered.

IMG20230803192711.thumb.jpg.aac31f61407006d07068cfcefad8acf3.jpg

The beam needs a good clean up to see if it's had it or if it'll go again but the car did come with £40 worth of new mounts.

It's a real shame as the car has had a recent repaint and even the AC works fine.

IMG20230803175236.jpg

Posted
6 minutes ago, Noel Tidybeard said:

sound a bit suspicious so soon after belt change

We said the same, but Ford's "Master Technician" is adamant that the job was done correctly and that something else is the problem. It's a bloody lovely car, when it all works. There was mutterings about the high pressure fuel pump possibly breaking down, at 54k...

  • Sad 1
Posted
2 hours ago, artdjones said:

I don't want to jinx the car, but a 2011 Laguna is well sorted. Much less likely to cause trouble than say, an Audi A5 or a BMW. Although a matter of taste, better looking than them.

Aye, Renault had sorted most of its electrical gremlins by the time the Gooner Three came out.  The one I had was certainly in a different league to the Mk2s quality wise.

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