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Woman killed by lift.

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    #11
    time to retrofit lifts with better safety monitoring. Disabling a safety switch without a maintenance key in should stop the elevator or sound a siren and flash a warning. Even with a maintenance key it should time out after a few minutes.

    50 years ago it made sense not to do this, the technology wasn't available. now it would require a £100 - £1000 retrofit if it became law.

    AIUI apart from the doors or getting into the shaft they are pretty safe.
    Always forgive your enemies; nothing annoys them so much.

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      #12
      Again how hard is it to implement a failover sensor that prevents the lift from moving if the doors are open?
      Knock first as I might be balancing my chakras.

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        #13
        The lift in my old block of flats struck me as a disaster waiting to happen. It's of an old fashioned design that wouldn't be allowed today as there is no inner door, so the doors and floors slide past in front of you as you go up or down, with the potential for digits, limbs and other extraneous items getting caught up (or down). But it was made more dangerous in that someone had put a nail in the bottom door just short enough of being missed by the lift floor. The nail was used to help close the bottom door, because closing that door properly was a bit iffy too. Anyway the nail mysteriously disappeared after I'd been there for a while and later we had a recessed handle cut into the door instead.

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          #14
          Did anybody ever go in one of these:

          Paternoster - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

          There was one at Birmingham University, which I visited a few times on school trips, and my friends and I wasted an hour or so playing on them.

          Amazing that anybody ever thought it was a good idea, but as I was saying above at least you are aware of the danger.
          Will work inside IR35. Or for food.

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            #15
            I always fancied having poles to slide down at shopping centres etc, but 'elf and safety etc.

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              #16
              Last edited by Paddy; 17 December 2011, 11:13.
              "A people that elect corrupt politicians, imposters, thieves and traitors are not victims, but accomplices," George Orwell

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                #17
                Originally posted by VectraMan View Post
                Did anybody ever go in one of these:

                Paternoster - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

                There was one at Birmingham University, which I visited a few times on school trips, and my friends and I wasted an hour or so playing on them.

                Amazing that anybody ever thought it was a good idea, but as I was saying above at least you are aware of the danger.
                Yes we had one at GEC in Borehamwood where I did my apprenticeship.

                I'm told they used it in some episodes of Danger Man. Or The Prisoner.

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                  #18
                  Originally posted by BrilloPad View Post
                  I believe the only time that an elevtor has plunged is when a B52 crashed into the Empire State building?
                  How much other utter bollocks do you believe?

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                    #19
                    Originally posted by VectraMan View Post
                    Did anybody ever go in one of these:

                    Paternoster - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

                    There was one at Birmingham University, which I visited a few times on school trips, and my friends and I wasted an hour or so playing on them.

                    Amazing that anybody ever thought it was a good idea, but as I was saying above at least you are aware of the danger.
                    Yes - in the Library at (memory fails) either Leeds or Sheffield University. There was nowt wrong with 'em so far as I could see - I think they were supposed to stop if someone got jammed in the gap - although no a theory I was keen to test.

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                      #20
                      Originally posted by VectraMan View Post
                      Did anybody ever go in one of these:

                      Paternoster - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

                      There was one at Birmingham University, which I visited a few times on school trips, and my friends and I wasted an hour or so playing on them.

                      Amazing that anybody ever thought it was a good idea, but as I was saying above at least you are aware of the danger.
                      Yes, there's one in the eighteen storey Attenborough Tower at Leicester University. I used to use it every day, and have even been trapped in the pit beneath for a few minutes when it stopped while I was passing through there for fun

                      In four years I never heard of so much as a sprained ankle resulting from its use, and that was with it being so busy that you had to queue for up to five minutes at certain times of day.

                      Edit: it's even got a Facebook page: The Attenborough Tower Paternoster Lift Appreciation Society | Facebook

                      Edit again: and a video

                      Last edited by NickFitz; 17 December 2011, 13:16.

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