Mark A
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« Reply #3 on: October 06, 2024, 11:34:13 » |
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***** On the train ... things I did not expect in my youth (and, yes, I often changed onto long distance trains):
OK, forgive me: I've used your list as a climbing frame for a memory-riff.
Power; Well... not to be found. But then, people didn't carry gadgets and railway carriage engineers found it a struggle even to provide electric lighting. And then, carriage cleaners... did they use a shore supply or perhaps none? I'm also imagining a never-implemented steampunk solution: steam taps in carriages for a variety of passenger uses. Potentially very useful and I wonder why that wasn't done. Ah, hang on...
USB; Science fiction. (And USB2 should have stayed that way...)
Power doors; A great rarity, but I think the much missed children's gallery at London's Science Museum had a demo, as well as various other user-activated marvels, who who encountered it would forget the untouchable ball mounted in the middle of a steel table? *A huge advance in safety* as train doors really required passenger training before use as well as regular refresher courses to guard against complacency as the penalties in terms of injury could be horrendous. Also, see 'Luggage racks', below.
Air Conditioning; Much anticipated. There was at least one well-known prior example, but it could be said that air con arrived with the HST▸ and that was a revelation. Air con. On a standard train in service. You bought a ticket, took yourself to the platform, and there was this ordinary train. For you. You climbed aboard, the carriage end door automatically opened and closed for you, and then, in the carriage, the double glazing's reduced noise levels, dry, ventilated, the feeling of being off on travels and insulated from the outside world. This was only around seven years after passengers on the last trains from Bath Green Park had walked to their train past the wafts of escaping steam-heat steam, settled into their seat, prudently closed any open windows as the entire carriage was shortly to be completely enveloped in smoke, steam, lasting condensation. Twice. No streaming videos then, the appearance of Lyncombe Vale, for passengers on the Somerset and Dorset there, was forever destined to be a mystery, obscured by streaming windows.
Heating; Patchy. The charms of steam heat in a diesel age. Poorly insulated carriages. The damp. And did anyone on the forum experience the freezing conditions plus that characteristic smell aboard many southern electric trains as they rolled into London suburban stations around 5:30 in the morning, or the much obscured views of Sussex from a fast train to Brighton or another climbing out of Folkestone some time before dawn, shoes setting off a firework display as they pulled amps out of the reluctant conductor rail well insulated by ice.
Loos; Put me in mind of the original mens loos sometimes to be found at preserved railway stations. There's been a tendency to roof in their original unroofed magnificance, and this hasn't always been to their atmospheric advantage. The signature point though is no more disharging train toilets onto the track. No more is to be seen the sign "Do not flush the toilet when the train is at the station" - sometimes appended with 'Except Woking...'.
Tables ; Now you say it, yes, they were sometimes confined to carriages where food might be served.
Catering Trolley; Is this a species that at that time not yet evolved from its precursor, the ecological niche being well filled by the buffet and its larger sibling, the restaurant kitchen?
WiFi; Hats off to was it the M&SW that pioneered phone calls from a train back in 1910 or so. That aside, wireless apparatus ... Cumbersome, flakey when moved and generally somewhat delicate and not to be found on a train. In place of the mobile phone, occasionally, (expensive) telegrams could fill the gap but was there an instance of telegram equipment installed on a train, enabling the even more short term sending of message such as: "Arriving Kings Cross 1:03pm. Please meet me."
About 6 months before Sony started selling the Walkman, I recall being on a southbound train at Shap listening to Joan Armatrading tape via a smallish stereo radiocassette and a pair of headphones and thinking 'This could catch on'.
Announcements; [/b] Largely confined to stations, and who among us has not triggered the request for a bespoke announcement to, for example, alert a passenger (me) on a service arriving at Paddington to changed circumstances?
Cycle Spaces; I can't recall any issue with taking a cycle on a train. Also, even in the 1980s BR▸ accepted accompanied motorbikes (though needed the fuel tank to be drained). Luggage compartments were commonplace. It was in one of those that my cycle managed to stop a down train to Exeter in open country short of Basingstoke, when the tyre bead escaped the rim and the inner tube went off like a rifle shot, causing the guard to pull the communication cord. Oh, and another incident: the last train on a Sunday to Worcester with a connection to Kidderminster. The express pulled in to Worcester but stopped the luggage compartment along with the last carriage off the end of the platform. Staff on the Kidderminster connection, thinking that all passengers had transferred, then set off before staff on the arriving train had organised it to pull forward. There ensued a fairly late night cycle ride Worcester to Kidderminster and even then the A449 wasn't the most cycle friendly road. There was also passengers luggage-in-advance, so something like a cycle could be organised to travel independently of the passenger.
Luggage Racks; I can't recall a shortage of those... in the remote past the string ones were known to be a good place to put a child to bed. More recently, the above-seat luggage racks on... were they called 4-VEPS?... saved the life of a drunk passenger when he woke and assumed the rock steady carriage at line speed on the straight between Tonbridge and Ashford meant that it was stationary alongside the platform, abruptly got to his feet and flung the door open. I attached one end of me to the drunk and the other end I wrapped round the luggage rack at which point all three of us were going no-where (relative to the train) so all was good once again.
CCTV▸ ▸ ; Really tricky. Science fiction really. TV cameras were non-trivial and fussy, as was recording video.
Level Access ; Science fiction. (And it shouldn't be, the only positive is that its common absence at the platform train interface is keeping the trains free of daleks. But really, level access isn't something near which humour should be allowed)
Destination Displays; Plentiful, and robust, even if they occasionally involved chalk technology and a member of staff. Who among us hasn't arranged to meet a friend by the green mechanical indicator board at Waterloo? No one now says 'I'll see you at six beneath Waterloo's advertising screen...
Carpets; Ew. Part of their value is the improved acoustic environment though. GWR▸ 's IETs▸ are an example of a current train whose interior fit-out struggles with its fabrics, and this includes the carpets.
Blinds; Often now a passenger annoyance alas.
Ticket Checks; They happened then, they happened now. Certain current ticket formats are provocatively terrible, perhaps.
Arm Rests; Strange contraptions, occasionally present then and now, & occasionally coincide with the traveller's body size. Can be quite useful to help set a boundary for personal space.
Coat Hooks; Luggage racks tended to stand in for bespoke coat hooks.
Seat Reservation Lights; The technological dream but taken to the edge the moment the train slurps its reservation data once the passengers are aboard. Also, the notorious cross country voyager from Penzance to Bristol, its passengers reduced to hysteria after the seat reservations not only appeared after departure, but then for some reason vanished after an hour, to reappear with a different set of reservations... and then half an hour later did so for the third time... resulting in... scenes.
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