Are they at New Cross Gate station?I'm not local and the Nearest tram town to me is a few miles away.
But, on my regular commute into London (with a zillion other riders) I come across two expansion gaps on a road bridge, they each travel PARRALELL to the direction of flow and are a tyres width..perfect for trapping a rider and throwing them into the two lanes of heavy traffic.
I have reported to fill that hole and all the guys I know who ride this section seem to be aware...but new riders checking their shoulders will easily fall into them.
I am amazed nothing serious has happened so far.
My point is...sorry, there is one...that common sense goes out the window sometimes and local town planners rely on litigation to learn a lesson...or perhaps they measure success of cost saving by the amount of litigation.
So, join the compensation culture, it's the only way that planner will learn to plan roads that work for all, rather than roads that work for some.
Yup...bloody awful things and a mare for new riders approaching the bridge at some speed from the college end.Are they at New Cross Gate station?
Yep been like that for as long as I can remember. It's a plan well ahead jobbie but it doesn't always work out as plannedYup...bloody awful things and a mare for new riders approaching the bridge at some speed from the college end.
Actually worse in the opposite direction as you invariably have to cross them to circumnavigate the busses that stop just past the station...and cover the gaps until the very last minute...for extra stress.
I had an idea for tram lines.
They need a platform that covers the gap, it would be sprung loaded, so when pressed it dropped down.
Springs are set up with so much resistance that a cycle wouldn't be able to press them down. But the weight of the wheels on a tram would press them down, allowing it to be a normal tram line while it passes, returning back to the safer bridged version when it has passed.
My mind does wander when I have little to do![]()
Sounds like a good invention ...have you patented it yet?I had an idea for tram lines.
They need a platform that covers the gap, it would be sprung loaded, so when pressed it dropped down.
Springs are set up with so much resistance that a cycle wouldn't be able to press them down. But the weight of the wheels on a tram would press them down, allowing it to be a normal tram line while it passes, returning back to the safer bridged version when it has passed.
My mind does wander when I have little to do![]()
I had an idea for tram lines.
They need a platform that covers the gap, it would be sprung loaded, so when pressed it dropped down.
Springs are set up with so much resistance that a cycle wouldn't be able to press them down. But the weight of the wheels on a tram would press them down, allowing it to be a normal tram line while it passes, returning back to the safer bridged version when it has passed.
My mind does wander when I have little to do![]()
My surname does not have a "g" in it also the city is spelt Edinburgh.Sounds like a good invention ...have you patented it yet?
Anyone have the number for Edingborough's city planners...
Ah, sorry. I must have been thinking of Edingborough, Pedantsville.My surname does not have a "g" in it also the city is spelt Edinburgh.