At least irony meter manufacturers are guaranteed good business for a decade or so.
. So the issue with the HVAC is a lot more than just 'switch it off', it means it has to be literally disabled in an extraordinary measure, user manual required as to how to do this.
Your link:
So I can't comment on this question, except to note the url contains 'enviro500', so even if I could access it, I don't see it's relevancy to this conversation about enviro 400 buses.
I wouldn't know, I'm not a bus driver. I ask again, do you have a source to support your claim that the driver "should also pull out various bits of the HVAC wiring"?
Utterly irrelevant twaddle, try to retain focus.
Citation needed.
I asked if you had a source for your claims in post #1184. You haven't answered that question. Please answer that question.
Passer by: "Hey, Vixen, you've left your lights on."
FX: Vixen returns to car, while fumbling in her bag for wire cutters.
By odd coincidence my cousin is a design engineer at the very same company who build these buses, and I could just ask him how the driver turns the HVAC on and off. But I can't be bothered because it's so obviously stupid I couldn't explain why I was asking without sounding like a nut case.
It's just a game of seeing how much effort Vixen can provoke us into putting in to prove her obviously made-up nonsense is wrong.
I wish people would learn to recognise PR piffle when they see it. Alexander Dennis DYB is the SUPPLIER of these faulty buses. When there is an issue with product safety or recall, a corporation puts into place a crisis management team, whose function is to 'reassure the public' and to play down the issue. It is called 'Reputation Damage Limitation' ( reputation damage being a key cause of companies going bust). The bus companies in the interest of public safety, having done a risk assessment have pulled these buses out of service. The claim by Alexander Dennis BYD that it is nothing to worry about, as long as the bus driver utilizes a 'temporary solution' of disabling the HVAC when leaving the bus unattended. That is, in addition to switching off the engine and the dashboard electronics and manual operations. That you have fallen hook, line and sinker for the claim that this means the lithium-ion batteries are safe from catching fire if the HVAC system does 'accidentally ignite' shows just how effective this type of damage limitation PR is. 'It's only the HVAC electronics that catch fire, honest. Nothing to see here. Quite safe. Move along please.' ~ Press release from the bus suppliers for immediate release.
...The issue with the buses was the integrated electrical system, which meant that owing to a fault in the HVAC, there was an observable danger that one of these buses could catch fire unattended. A temporary solution has been suggested that the bus driver, after switching off the ignition, now should also pull out various bits of the HVAC wiring to mitigate against the risk of the bus going up in flames...
That doesn't answer my question. Please try to focus.
I asked if you had a source for the highlighted:
So I ask again - do you?
You have yet to link to an article that actually says that. Now would be a good time to do so.The source was the original article in which an Alexander Dennis BYD spokesman played the whole issue down by saying a 'temporary solution' to the issue of the HVAC systems being faulty and prone to catch fire when the bus was unattended, was to disable the HVAC system in addition and over and above the normal procedures for switching the bus engine and operations off.
It is clear it refers to bus drivers and maintenance staff who have gone home for the day after working their shift. IOW it is not something that is routine. This is a common sense interpretation by any reasonable person.
The source was the original article in which an Alexander Dennis BYD spokesman played the whole issue down by saying a 'temporary solution' to the issue of the HVAC systems being faulty and prone to catch fire when the bus was unattended, was to disable the HVAC system in addition and over and above the normal procedures for switching the bus engine and operations off. It is clear it refers to bus drivers and maintenance staff who have gone home for the day after working their shift. IOW it is not something that is routine. This is a common sense interpretation by any reasonable person.
snip...
That you have fallen hook, line and sinker for the claim that this means the lithium-ion batteries are safe from catching fire if the HVAC system does 'accidentally ignite' shows just how effective this type of damage limitation PR is. 'It's only the HVAC electronics that catch fire, honest. Nothing to see here. Quite safe. Move along please.' ~ Press release from the bus suppliers for immediate release.
The source was the original article in which an Alexander Dennis BYD spokesman played the whole issue down by saying a 'temporary solution' to the issue of the HVAC systems being faulty and prone to catch fire when the bus was unattended, was to disable the HVAC system in addition and over and above the normal procedures for switching the bus engine and operations off.
It is clear it refers to bus drivers and maintenance staff who have gone home for the day after working their shift. IOW it is not something that is routine. This is a common sense interpretation by any reasonable person.
"Over and above the normal" is just a fantastical lie. The temporary solution is to switch the HVAC system off. (You recognise the word "switch" I presume.)
Switch off. That's what the maker says, that's what the DVSA says, that's what all the news articles I've seen say too. None of them says "disable". They all say "switch off".
Your entirely made up designation of "engine and operations" has no defined meaning as it's your own invention. An EV has no engine anyway, it has a motor. While the bus is stopped they may well want to leave other systems powered, such as internal lights and doors, and maybe also the heating/cooling and ventilation so the bus is ready for its next run. All the operators have to do for the meantime is not leave the heater running while the bus is standing idle and unattended. That's it.
https://www.aberdeenlive.news/news/almost-1800-buses-recalled-over-9143064“The investigation is still ongoing and the root cause has not yet been identified. As the safety of our customers’ team members, bus drivers and passengers is of the utmost importance to us, a safety bulletin has been issued to all affected operators with temporary precautionary measures to ensure the highest levels of safety are met.”
The Driver and Vehicle Standards Agency (DVSA) issued a formal warning about 1,758 Alexander Dennis Enviro200 and Enviro400 single and double-decker buses, saying there was a fire risk in the heating, ventilation and air conditioning system.
I wish people would learn to recognise PR piffle when they see it. Alexander Dennis DYB is the SUPPLIER of these faulty buses. When there is an issue with product safety or recall, a corporation puts into place a crisis management team, whose function is to 'reassure the public' and to play down the issue. It is called 'Reputation Damage Limitation' ( reputation damage being a key cause of companies going bust).
...the DVSA (Driving Standards) advised a recall and that is what has been done...
route-one.net said:...DVSA notes that if a recall relates to a serious matter, owners will be advised not to drive vehicles in question. That is not the case for the BYD ADL Enviro200EV and Enviro400EV...
MailOnline said:...tax payers now have to fund these expensive buses being taken off the road"...
route-one.net said:...Neither Alexander Dennis nor DVSA’s recall advisory service says that affected buses should be removed from service, leading to a source close to the matter to observe that it has been twisted by the parts of the mainstream media to “fit their narrative.”...
If you want to believe it is just a case of bus driver switching off the HVAC, that is your prerogative. Tfl did not agree with you, nor the other bus service providers as they have been taken out of service.
You're lying again.For crying out loud. You claim to work for Tfl and yet you didn't know that it withdrew 600 of its electric buses. The issue with the buses was the integrated electrical system, which meant that owing to a fault in the HVAC, there was an observable danger that one of these buses could catch fire unattended. A temporary solution has been suggested that the bus driver, after switching off the ignition, now should also pull out various bits of the HVAC wiring to mitigate against the risk of the bus going up in flames (see Wimbledon bus, cited earlier by a poster). Your pretending this is not at all dangerous is disingenuous to say the least.
Each of these buses costs £400,000 so that is an expensive mistake.
Notandum: as an aside, I was in London recently and these buses are so cheaply made I could barely get my legs in and had to perform advanced yoga just to sit down.
You should stop using the term until you know what it actually means.Logical fallacy #6 the non sequitur.
Pfff. Pu238 or nothing.It is technically possible to make a car that's powered by 137Cs. You just shouldn't.