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#71
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Troll-feeding Senile IDIOT Alert!
On Sat, 15 Dec 2018 07:06:28 +0000, The Natural Idiot blathered again:
Since when were Northern European men decent?* :-) Since they put on clothes to keep the ice and snow out? Since they stopped falling for the silliest baits some brain damaged troll sets out for them, The Natural Idiot? BG |
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#72
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Blue railway signals?
On Sat, 15 Dec 2018 01:07:11 GMT, "Kristy Ogilvie"
wrote: On Sat, 15 Dec 2018 00:40:37 -0000, Rod Speed is a xposting troll. PDNFTT -- Bah, and indeed, Humbug. |
#73
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Blue railway signals?
"Kristy Ogilvie" wrote in message news On Sat, 15 Dec 2018 00:40:37 -0000, Rod Speed wrote: "JNugent" wrote in message ... On 14/12/2018 11:33, Nightjar wrote: On 14/12/2018 09:27, Rod Speed wrote: Nightjar wrote Fred Johnson wrote I wonder why the red is at the bottom on rail lights and the top on traffic lights? On railways it is at the bottom so that there is no light shade below it, on which snow could build up and obscure the light. So why didn't that continue with street lights ? Perhaps the American who invented them hadn't thought about that problem. Overground railway light signals were not standardised until rather later - in 1924. I have never seen a set of road traffic lights obscured by built-up snow, not even during the worst of UK blizzards. Has anyone else? https://www.google.com/search=traffi...+snow&tbm=inch How did you manage to misspell isch as inch as part of a URL? The stupid spell checker keeps defaulting to change instead of ignore and its easy to not notice that when ignoring what it whines about. Did your spellchecker treat it as a word? Corse any spell checker has to. The worrying thing is my brain immediately spotted inch as incorrect for a google search parameter. You should do the decent thing and disembowel yourself. You also omitted ?q after the word search. You can't insert parameters without a ? to indicate them. I inserted nothing. Interesting that it mostly appears to be driven show forming a disc over the entire lens rather than a pile that eventually gets high enough to obscure the top one, sitting on the visor of a lower one. Because vertically falling snow with no wind can't get to the lower visors, due to the upper visors getting in the way. It has to be snow on a windy day. There is **** all snow without any wind. Also interesting those are all in the USA, although I guess they get more snow than the UK. Guess again. Or maybe our lights are more slippery? Unlikely. |
#74
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Blue railway signals?
"Kristy Ogilvie" wrote in message news On Fri, 14 Dec 2018 00:55:55 -0000, Rod Speed wrote: "Fred Johnson" wrote in message news On Thu, 13 Dec 2018 23:43:41 -0000, Rod Speed wrote: "Fred Johnson" wrote in message news On Thu, 13 Dec 2018 23:12:50 -0000, Rod Speed wrote: "Fred Johnson" wrote in message news On Thu, 13 Dec 2018 21:03:57 -0000, Mike Humphrey wrote: Fred Johnson wrote: Can anybody else remember blue traffic lights on railways? Can't find any evidence on google. I'm sure whereas cars have red/amber/green, railways always had a 4th blue light. What does it mean and why has it disappeared from Google? Railway signals in modern times have always had red, yellow (not amber) I've never been fussy enough to even notice the difference between yellow, amber, orange. I could tell the difference if they were side by side, but I just think of a road traffic light as either yellow or orange. I couldn't even tell you what amber colour is compared to yellow and orange. I don't do things like "mauve", etc. Just purple, light purple, etc. and green. A four-aspect signal has two yellows - the sequence approaching a stop signal goes G, YY, Y, R. There can be a number of other indications as well as the main signal but these are almost invariably white. I assume this is to allow trains the longer stopping distance they require than road vehicles. There's a number of uses for blue and purple, but not appearing with the R/Y/G "traffic light" signals, at least in the UK. I might be thinking of non "traffic light" signals, or I might be thinking of a light which was off and was just seeing the blue lens which had a yellow light behind to make green. If you want to look at the full range of signs and signals, http://www.railsigns.uk/ has a very comprehensive guide. That's a lot for a driver to remember! At least with road signs the symbol is meaningful. I wonder why the red is at the bottom on rail lights and the top on traffic lights? Basically because when there are two ways of doing something, you can be sure someone will do it both ways. Like my bloody French car which has the wiper switch going down to increase speed. And with light and power switches in houses etc. Down should always be on The yanks feel otherwise. The yanks don't think at all. I said feel, not think, stupid. (except two or more way switches of course). And then some bugger shows up who decides to do them sideways so there is no confusion at all, and we end up with 4 different ways of doing it instead of just 2. Never seen a sideways lightswitch in a house. But you do see it with power switches. Not here. There is completely irrelevant. They're similar to light switches, although more rugged as they switch a higher current. Anyway with automatic ones, there are no switches. There are in mine. A couple of mine have manual overrides, my bedroom for example is normally on a 15 second timer, so it goes off just after I get into bed, but sometimes I press the switch to leave it on if I'm doing something else in there. And don't go inserting rude things! Nothing rude about ****ing, wanking or even changing the sheets or untangling the blankets or cleaning up after you have ****ed the bed again. But most of them are auto only. None of mine are. I can always make them come on when it's light by covering the sensor momentarily. Me too. And with whether hot and cold taps have the hot one on the right of the pair or the left. I can never remember which way round mine are, until I go to use one. Because when I use one in another house that's the other way round, I always get it wrong. Never had any other car that way round. Yeah, the frogs are much worse for that than most. They even speak backwards, putting the noun before the adjective. And some buggers even write backwards. Muslims. And some write upside down. Like I said, whenever there is more than one way to do it, you can be sure some will do it one way and some the other. Yes, there are always morons. And ******s like you. Every time I try to turn on the wipers, I'm pushing it the wrong way. One day I'll snap it off. |
#75
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Lonely Psychotic Senile Ozzie Troll Alert! LOL
On Sat, 15 Dec 2018 22:02:40 +1100, cantankerous trolling geezer Rot Speed,
the auto-contradicting senile sociopath, blabbered, again: Yes, there are always morons. And ******s like you. Not to forget troll-feeding senile idiots like you that like to suck off the ******! -- about senile Rot Speed: "This is like having a conversation with someone with brain damage." MID: |
#76
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Lonely Psychotic Senile Ozzie Troll Alert! LOL
On Sat, 15 Dec 2018 21:55:01 +1100, cantankerous trolling geezer Rot Speed,
the auto-contradicting senile sociopath, blabbered, again: FLUSH the two prize idiots' usual idiotic drivel unread -- Bod addressing abnormal senile quarreller Rot: "Do you practice arguing with yourself in an empty room?" MID: |
#77
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Blue railway signals?
On 14/12/2018 11:45, JNugent wrote:
On 14/12/2018 11:33, Nightjar wrote: On 14/12/2018 09:27, Rod Speed wrote: Nightjar wrote Fred Johnson wrote I wonder why the red is at the bottom on rail lights and the top on traffic lights? On railways it is at the bottom so that there is no light shade below it, on which snow could build up and obscure the light. So why didn't that continue with street lights ? Perhaps the American who invented them hadn't thought about that problem. Overground railway light signals were not standardised until rather later - in 1924. I have never seen a set of road traffic lights obscured by built-up snow, not even during the worst of UK blizzards. Has anyone else? I don't know whether it was actually a problem on the railways, or simply something that it was thought a good idea to take precautions against. -- -- Colin Bignell |
#78
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Blue railway signals?
On Sat, 15 Dec 2018 11:02:40 -0000, Rod Speed wrote:
"Kristy Ogilvie" wrote in message news On Fri, 14 Dec 2018 00:55:55 -0000, Rod Speed wrote: "Fred Johnson" wrote in message news On Thu, 13 Dec 2018 23:43:41 -0000, Rod Speed wrote: "Fred Johnson" wrote in message news On Thu, 13 Dec 2018 23:12:50 -0000, Rod Speed wrote: "Fred Johnson" wrote in message news On Thu, 13 Dec 2018 21:03:57 -0000, Mike Humphrey wrote: Fred Johnson wrote: Can anybody else remember blue traffic lights on railways? Can't find any evidence on google. I'm sure whereas cars have red/amber/green, railways always had a 4th blue light. What does it mean and why has it disappeared from Google? Railway signals in modern times have always had red, yellow (not amber) I've never been fussy enough to even notice the difference between yellow, amber, orange. I could tell the difference if they were side by side, but I just think of a road traffic light as either yellow or orange. I couldn't even tell you what amber colour is compared to yellow and orange. I don't do things like "mauve", etc. Just purple, light purple, etc. and green. A four-aspect signal has two yellows - the sequence approaching a stop signal goes G, YY, Y, R. There can be a number of other indications as well as the main signal but these are almost invariably white. I assume this is to allow trains the longer stopping distance they require than road vehicles. There's a number of uses for blue and purple, but not appearing with the R/Y/G "traffic light" signals, at least in the UK. I might be thinking of non "traffic light" signals, or I might be thinking of a light which was off and was just seeing the blue lens which had a yellow light behind to make green. If you want to look at the full range of signs and signals, http://www.railsigns.uk/ has a very comprehensive guide. That's a lot for a driver to remember! At least with road signs the symbol is meaningful. I wonder why the red is at the bottom on rail lights and the top on traffic lights? Basically because when there are two ways of doing something, you can be sure someone will do it both ways. Like my bloody French car which has the wiper switch going down to increase speed. And with light and power switches in houses etc. Down should always be on The yanks feel otherwise. The yanks don't think at all. I said feel, not think, stupid. But you meant think, or should have done. Deciding on a switch mechanism involve thinking, not emotions. (except two or more way switches of course). And then some bugger shows up who decides to do them sideways so there is no confusion at all, and we end up with 4 different ways of doing it instead of just 2. Never seen a sideways lightswitch in a house. But you do see it with power switches. Not here. There is completely irrelevant. We are the centre of the world. Most countries were colonised by us, we have the 0 GMT point, we invented the language most people use, etc. They're similar to light switches, although more rugged as they switch a higher current. Anyway with automatic ones, there are no switches. There are in mine. A couple of mine have manual overrides, my bedroom for example is normally on a 15 second timer, so it goes off just after I get into bed, but sometimes I press the switch to leave it on if I'm doing something else in there. And don't go inserting rude things! Nothing rude about ****ing, wanking or even changing the sheets or untangling the blankets or cleaning up after you have ****ed the bed again. If you were closer I'd spank you for saying those things. But most of them are auto only. None of mine are. I don't see the point in manual override in most rooms. I can always make them come on when it's light by covering the sensor momentarily. Me too. I'm surprised so few people have auto lights. And with whether hot and cold taps have the hot one on the right of the pair or the left. I can never remember which way round mine are, until I go to use one. Because when I use one in another house that's the other way round, I always get it wrong. Never had any other car that way round. Yeah, the frogs are much worse for that than most. They even speak backwards, putting the noun before the adjective. And some buggers even write backwards. Muslims. And some write upside down. Who? Like I said, whenever there is more than one way to do it, you can be sure some will do it one way and some the other. Yes, there are always morons. And ******s like you. That would imply deliberately mis-designing your own product. |
#79
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Blue railway signals?
On Sat, 15 Dec 2018 10:33:25 -0000, Kerr-Mudd,John wrote:
On Sat, 15 Dec 2018 01:07:11 GMT, "Kristy Ogilvie" wrote: On Sat, 15 Dec 2018 00:40:37 -0000, Rod Speed is a xposting troll. What have trolling and crossposting to do with each other? PDNFTT Bless you. |
#80
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Blue railway signals?
Kristy Ogilvie wrote:
On Sat, 15 Dec 2018 11:02:40 -0000, Rod Speed wrote: "Kristy Ogilvie" wrote in message news On Fri, 14 Dec 2018 00:55:55 -0000, Rod Speed wrote: "Fred Johnson" wrote in message news On Thu, 13 Dec 2018 23:43:41 -0000, Rod Speed wrote: "Fred Johnson" wrote in message news On Thu, 13 Dec 2018 23:12:50 -0000, Rod Speed wrote: "Fred Johnson" wrote in message news On Thu, 13 Dec 2018 21:03:57 -0000, Mike Humphrey wrote: Fred Johnson wrote: Can anybody else remember blue traffic lights on railways? Can't find any evidence on google. I'm sure whereas cars have red/amber/green, railways always had a 4th blue light. What does it mean and why has it disappeared from Google? Railway signals in modern times have always had red, yellow (not amber) I've never been fussy enough to even notice the difference between yellow, amber, orange. I could tell the difference if they were side by side, but I just think of a road traffic light as either yellow or orange. I couldn't even tell you what amber colour is compared to yellow and orange. I don't do things like "mauve", etc. Just purple, light purple, etc. and green. A four-aspect signal has two yellows - the sequence approaching a stop signal goes G, YY, Y, R. There can be a number of other indications as well as the main signal but these are almost invariably white. I assume this is to allow trains the longer stopping distance they require than road vehicles. There's a number of uses for blue and purple, but not appearing with the R/Y/G "traffic light" signals, at least in the UK. I might be thinking of non "traffic light" signals, or I might be thinking of a light which was off and was just seeing the blue lens which had a yellow light behind to make green. If you want to look at the full range of signs and signals, http://www.railsigns.uk/ has a very comprehensive guide. That's a lot for a driver to remember! At least with road signs the symbol is meaningful. I wonder why the red is at the bottom on rail lights and the top on traffic lights? Basically because when there are two ways of doing something, you can be sure someone will do it both ways. Like my bloody French car which has the wiper switch going down to increase speed. And with light and power switches in houses etc. Down should always be on The yanks feel otherwise. The yanks don't think at all. I said feel, not think, stupid. But you meant think, or should have done. Deciding on a switch mechanism involve thinking, not emotions. (except two or more way switches of course). And then some bugger shows up who decides to do them sideways so there is no confusion at all, and we end up with 4 different ways of doing it instead of just 2. Never seen a sideways lightswitch in a house. But you do see it with power switches. Not here. There is completely irrelevant. We are the centre of the world. Most countries were colonised by us, we have the 0 GMT point, we invented the language most people use, etc. They're similar to light switches, although more rugged as they switch a higher current. Anyway with automatic ones, there are no switches. There are in mine. A couple of mine have manual overrides, my bedroom for example is normally on a 15 second timer, so it goes off just after I get into bed, but sometimes I press the switch to leave it on if I'm doing something else in there. And don't go inserting rude things! Nothing rude about ****ing, wanking or even changing the sheets or untangling the blankets or cleaning up after you have ****ed the bed again. If you were closer I'd spank you for saying those things. But most of them are auto only. None of mine are. I don't see the point in manual override in most rooms. I can always make them come on when it's light by covering the sensor momentarily. Me too. I'm surprised so few people have auto lights. And with whether hot and cold taps have the hot one on the right of the pair or the left. I can never remember which way round mine are, until I go to use one. Because when I use one in another house that's the other way round, I always get it wrong. Never had any other car that way round. Yeah, the frogs are much worse for that than most. They even speak backwards, putting the noun before the adjective. And some buggers even write backwards. Muslims. And some write upside down. Who? Like I said, whenever there is more than one way to do it, you can be sure some will do it one way and some the other. Yes, there are always morons. And ******s like you. That would imply deliberately mis-designing your own product. **** off Hucker. |
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