ChatterBank5 mins ago
Escalators
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No best answer has yet been selected by Susan123. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.A few thoughts:
Some escalators seem frustratingly slow.
Walking up or down does provide a little exercise (which is always a good idea).
Getting past a group of other people can sometimes be useful.
Often, the hand-rail moves at a different rate from the steps (and many of the people will fall over because they are too stupid to let go).
Quizmonster � I like to walk up the escalator A. because I�m inpatient! And B. because I see it as an opportunity for a bit of extra free exercise. Stair walking is incredibly good for you y�know! All these things that are designed to �take the strain� and make life more convenient are some of the contributing factors as to why we are turning into a fat nation! So good on anyone who walks up the escalator I say!
So you walk up the escalator because you are impatient and because in your impatience people get in your way, and it's their fault?
And there was me thinking a healthy body lead to a healthy mind. Perhaps rather than get escalator-rage you should take it easy and chill by just standing still, or walk slowly up the stairs instead. Far healthier.
it is pretty standard that you 'keep to the left'.
lots of places have signs stating this, but not all. they should print it on the steps themselves, as well as have signs. I hate it when I am in a rush and there is a group of people having a chat blocking the way, or people are standing in a zigzag formation, and who then stop dead at the top or bottom, and stand there looking around them vacantly unaware of the people bunching up behind them
The longest escalator on London Underground is some 60 metres in length and the average escalator speed is 43.2 metres per minute. So - if my arithmetic is still up to it - that trip should take about 1 minute 23 seconds.
The Athens Olympics 100 metre Gold Medal was won with a speed of 9.79 seconds, so 60 metres can be covered in 6 seconds, say. (By the world champion!)
Given that I don't suppose anyone on AnswerBank actually is the world champion and that escalators involve upward or downward motion - each probably more demanding than level pegging, it might just be possible for a mere mortal runner to traverse that escalator in the 23 seconds mentioned earlier.
Thus, the most time one could save on the longest escalator on the Undergound is 1 minute. Unless that's the difference between missing and catching a mainline train, what's the point in hurrying? Slow down and take the exercise you need when you've got time to devote to it, I'd say.
I�m with susan on this one. It�s not too much to ask for people to have a bit of courtesy and stand to one side!
I take exercise when I have time to devote to it, AND also when I can grab any extras like escalator walking. It might seem like hardly anything but all the little extras add up! Maybe this is one I�m one of the few people in my peer group who has a happy & healthy body?!
Couple of things:
1. In London it seems to be accepted that you stand to the left. But seemingly not in the North. When visiting London with a friend who'd never used the tube before I had to explain it to him.
2. I can't really walk up the escalator as I don't have full use of my knee. I can do stairs, but pretty slowly which makes it pointless to walk up the escalator - may as well let it take the strain, as others have suggested. Because i'm not obviously disabled to look at or elderly, people will stand behind me on them and huff and puff trying to hint at me to start walking so they can walk too. I say to everyone, have a little patience - there may be a very good reason why someone isn't walking up.