towerman
My status is now now widower
Posts: 2,968
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Post by towerman on Mar 11, 2024 23:02:06 GMT
The tube keeping London moving is back on channel 5 Sunday 8pm.
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towerman
My status is now now widower
Posts: 2,968
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Post by towerman on Mar 18, 2024 22:12:01 GMT
Watched the first episode,title’s a bit misleading includes buses as well.
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Post by brigham on Mar 19, 2024 8:32:24 GMT
Perhaps buses are to be included into the definition, the way sub-surface railways et al. have been.
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towerman
My status is now now widower
Posts: 2,968
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Post by towerman on Apr 7, 2024 22:54:27 GMT
Watching this week’s episode they were showing Network Control Centre.Does this replace the HQ Controller that was based at 55 Bdy?
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Colin
Advisor
My preserved fire engine!
Posts: 11,346
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Post by Colin on Apr 8, 2024 10:33:41 GMT
HQ controller is before my time, and I started on LU in 2001!
that being said, I would suggest the answer yes.
The Network Control Centre (not that they actually control anything, other than the Network Incident Response Managers) is now based at Southwark and shares floor space with the British Transport Police control room, LU power control and LU track access control.
As for the programme itself, it was marginally better this week but still falls short of previous series IMO.
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towerman
My status is now now widower
Posts: 2,968
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Post by towerman on Apr 8, 2024 13:35:58 GMT
I beat you by a little bit -1966.
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cso
Posts: 1,043
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Post by cso on Apr 16, 2024 17:06:48 GMT
I don't mind the program, but it really annoys me with the constant flitting between 'story arcs'.
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Post by modeng2000 on Apr 16, 2024 18:42:54 GMT
I don't mind the program, but it really annoys me with the constant flitting between 'story arcs'. I quite agree.
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Post by orienteer on Apr 20, 2024 12:52:04 GMT
Also agree. Plus the narrative implies all the problems are concurrent, but they aren't. Typical TV programme camping up for over-dramatisation.
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