Fixtures March 31st - Manchester City - Etihad Stadium - 3:30 Pm

Kick-Off

       Injuries                 Steve Gleiber



Get the Latest Post Go to the Bottom of Page It is currently Tue Mar 19, 2024 8:41 am

All times are UTC


  


Reply to topic

Users browsing this forum: Bing [Bot], gooner7, warrior and 63 guests

 
Post #471881  Posted: Thu Jun 15, 2017 4:38 am 
Offline
User avatar

Joined: Sun Jan 13, 2008 10:04 am
Posts: 7359
Location: Townsville Australia

old man of hoy wrote:
Gaz from Oz wrote:
But if people don't protest then Wenger runs the line that everyone is happy. Hence his talking about a few unhappy supporters when that was clearly not true.
Speak up or you allow the situation to get worse.
By all means speak up Gaz, but how about a bit of variety in the message? There's not much on TV these days, and the old people's day centre is closed, and my hip is playing me up so I can't get down to bingo. I come on here for a bit of entertainment and the best you can do is whinge on and on and on and and on and on and on about the same subject. Fair play though, you haven't told anybody to kill themselves.

Might I suggest listening to podcasts - start with my Dad wrote a Porno. Absolutely brilliant.

Also would you like to give us an update on the cricket.

_________________
If this policy does not deliver then I would say we have to change it.
AW 150810


 Profile  
 
 
Post #471882  Posted: Thu Jun 15, 2017 4:56 am 
Offline

Joined: Tue Jan 08, 2008 8:02 pm
Posts: 18359

lomekian wrote:
TOP GUN wrote:

As exiled pointed out earlier the tories filibustered the new fire and safety bill. Seriously, if you're life is this empty that you have to protect the wrong doers and evil within our world then please do society a favour and kill yourself.

I hope those responsible for this tragic loss of life get wiped out and removed from planet earth because their existence is pointless.


While we can't pretend to have any certainty about this tragedy and its causes (apart from the thought that tower blocks of that size as appropriate living conditions in the 21st century in a nation as rich as the UK is insane, given the thousands that die every year in similar properties globaly purely as a result of the nature of those properties), even taking into the prior concerns into consideration, the fillibustering of the fire and safety bill by a group of private landlords on the blue side of the house was one of a number of truly disgusting similar acts by the current conservative administration. They really do make you pine for the days for John Major and his cabinet, when there was still a conscience within the party and fillibustering for private gain wasn't a seasonal event.

If the majority of the population of this country were furnished with the facts about this particular conservative administration and its record on a whole range of things over the last few years, a significant number of the MPs in question would be dragged from their offices by the multitude.

I find it astonishing. Given the slog it takes to get there, one can only assume that most politicians enter politics with the desire to improve things from whatever standpoint they come from, but the utter moral bankruptcy of a large number of current Tory mp's sometimes makes me want to vomit. There are some good ones on the blue side of the house, but of late they have been shouted down by the really nasty bastards that seem to be breeding over there. Its amazing how many of them are also awful orators, terrible improvisers and in a few cases, are thick as the proverbial short planks.


So true Lom, look at Phillip Davies as an example and his voting record


Attachments:


 Profile  
 
 
Post #471883  Posted: Thu Jun 15, 2017 6:11 am 
Offline

Joined: Wed May 17, 2017 8:02 am
Posts: 15

Granit <3 Alexis = Broken Dreams


 Profile  
 
 
Post #471884  Posted: Thu Jun 15, 2017 7:00 am 
Offline
User avatar

Joined: Sun Jan 13, 2008 12:22 pm
Posts: 20588

I find it extraordinary in this day and age that sprinkler systems in tower blocks, schools etc are not mandatory.


 Profile  
 
 
Post #471885  Posted: Thu Jun 15, 2017 8:11 am 
Offline

Joined: Tue Jan 08, 2008 8:02 pm
Posts: 18359

Make excuses for *%^@ like this and you are a wanker who betrayed your mother, sister and daughters.

Cheers


https://youtu.be/sjqro8jFRms


 Profile  
 
 
Post #471886  Posted: Thu Jun 15, 2017 9:55 am 
Offline
User avatar

Joined: Sun Jan 13, 2008 1:52 pm
Posts: 18758

Gaz from Oz wrote:
old man of hoy wrote:
By all means speak up Gaz, but how about a bit of variety in the message? There's not much on TV these days, and the old people's day centre is closed, and my hip is playing me up so I can't get down to bingo. I come on here for a bit of entertainment and the best you can do is whinge on and on and on and and on and on and on about the same subject. Fair play though, you haven't told anybody to kill themselves.

Might I suggest listening to podcasts - start with my Dad wrote a Porno. Absolutely brilliant.

Also would you like to give us an update on the cricket.
Wrote a porno? I'm still starring in them when the hip allows.

Cricket - well done Pakistan, but hope Bangla win it. England had a good run, but I blame Wenger for not getting the title. Why not?

_________________
"Young and caught up in life, we seldom watched the skies.”


 Profile  
 
 
Post #471887  Posted: Thu Jun 15, 2017 10:33 am 
Offline

Joined: Sun Jan 13, 2008 7:31 pm
Posts: 4206
Location: Turnford, Broxbourne, Herts

TOP GUN wrote:
Make excuses for *%^@ like this and you are a wanker who betrayed your mother, sister and daughters.

Cheers


https://youtu.be/sjqro8jFRms


If your cowardly attack is made at me then you are even more stupid than I thought. My initial comment was not in support of the Tories but support for Jeremy Corbyn who realised this was the time to support the bereaved and not attack anyone or everyone that could have been responsible. They are still looking for tens of victims who deserve some respect. When that has been done then is the time to start throwing blame around not now.


 Profile  
 
 
Post #471888  Posted: Thu Jun 15, 2017 10:46 am 
Offline

Joined: Mon Jan 14, 2008 12:06 am
Posts: 16347

socrates wrote:
I find it extraordinary in this day and age that sprinkler systems in tower blocks, schools etc are not mandatory.

Thin end of the wedge, Soc. You start with things like fire regulations and bans on assault rifles and paedophilia, and the next thing you know you have a full blown Nanny State.

_________________
Hamba kakuhle, Madiba


 Profile  
 
 
Post #471889  Posted: Thu Jun 15, 2017 10:52 am 
Offline

Joined: Mon Jan 14, 2008 12:06 am
Posts: 16347

TOP GUN wrote:
Make excuses for *%^@ like this and you are a wanker who betrayed your mother, sister and daughters.

Cheers


https://youtu.be/sjqro8jFRms

What a cockroach.

_________________
Hamba kakuhle, Madiba


 Profile  
 
 
Post #471890  Posted: Thu Jun 15, 2017 11:10 am 
Offline
User avatar

Joined: Sun Mar 02, 2008 7:04 pm
Posts: 25758
Location: The North Bank

bubblechris wrote:
TOP GUN wrote:
Make excuses for *%^@ like this and you are a wanker who betrayed your mother, sister and daughters.

Cheers


https://youtu.be/sjqro8jFRms


If your cowardly attack is made at me then you are even more stupid than I thought. My initial comment was not in support of the Tories but support for Jeremy Corbyn who realised this was the time to support the bereaved and not attack anyone or everyone that could have been responsible. They are still looking for tens of victims who deserve some respect. When that has been done then is the time to start throwing blame around not now.


Whilst there are 10s of 1000s of people living in similar accomodation it is always the time to look at where the blame lies, if for no other reason than to try to prevent others dying in such a hideous way. The trouble with waiting for 'the right time' then frankly there is never a right time, nothing gets done, and more people die.

_________________
Oh, to capture just one drop of all the ecstasy that swept that afternoon.


 Profile  
 
 
Post #471891  Posted: Thu Jun 15, 2017 12:49 pm 
Offline

Joined: Sat Jan 19, 2008 6:57 pm
Posts: 26415

socrates wrote:
I find it extraordinary in this day and age that sprinkler systems in tower blocks, schools etc are not mandatory.

Unfortunately they are but only in new buildings of over 30m in height.

I work in the industry and visit plenty of buildings/estates built in the 60's/70's where the fire safety and means of escape for residents of the building is at best unclear and at worst life-threatening.

Similar fires can happen in new buildings, as one did in Dubai a few years back, but the occupants in new buildings are rarely put at risk when the envelope of the building, or a single unit catches fire as there are simple methods to contain the fire and very strict legislation on escaping from a fire. Unfortunately this doesn't extend to existing buildings that pre-date recent legislation.

The enquiry will be interesting because there is a lot of possibly inaccurate speculation about what contributed to the fire spreading so quickly. The one thing I'm pretty certain of is that there would have been zero loss of life if the same fire happened in a new building.


 Profile  
 
 
Post #471892  Posted: Thu Jun 15, 2017 12:56 pm 
Offline
User avatar

Joined: Sun Jan 13, 2008 1:52 pm
Posts: 18758

bubblechris wrote:
TOP GUN wrote:
Make excuses for *%^@ like this and you are a wanker who betrayed your mother, sister and daughters.

Cheers


https://youtu.be/sjqro8jFRms


If your cowardly attack is made at me then you are even more stupid than I thought. My initial comment was not in support of the Tories but support for Jeremy Corbyn who realised this was the time to support the bereaved and not attack anyone or everyone that could have been responsible. They are still looking for tens of victims who deserve some respect. When that has been done then is the time to start throwing blame around not now.
Bubblechris you are fully entitled to make your very reasonable contribution on this terrible fire without having to accept the abusive comments being directed at you on this forum. I am quite sure Steve Gleiber would have been very quick to jump on it.

_________________
"Young and caught up in life, we seldom watched the skies.”


 Profile  
 
 
Post #471893  Posted: Thu Jun 15, 2017 1:03 pm 
Offline
User avatar

Joined: Sun Jan 13, 2008 1:52 pm
Posts: 18758

Exiled wrote:
Whilst there are 10s of 1000s of people living in similar accomodation it is always the time to look at where the blame lies, if for no other reason than to try to prevent others dying in such a hideous way. The trouble with waiting for 'the right time' then frankly there is never a right time, nothing gets done, and more people die.
Yes, you are right, the investigation must get underway as soon as it can. Experience of other disastrous incidents suggests it always takes far too long to reach conclusions that help for the future and also give bereaved families and communities the justice they deserve.

_________________
"Young and caught up in life, we seldom watched the skies.”


 Profile  
 
 
Post #471894  Posted: Thu Jun 15, 2017 1:06 pm 
Offline

Joined: Tue Jan 08, 2008 8:02 pm
Posts: 18359

Exiled wrote:
bubblechris wrote:

If your cowardly attack is made at me then you are even more stupid than I thought. My initial comment was not in support of the Tories but support for Jeremy Corbyn who realised this was the time to support the bereaved and not attack anyone or everyone that could have been responsible. They are still looking for tens of victims who deserve some respect. When that has been done then is the time to start throwing blame around not now.


Whilst there are 10s of 1000s of people living in similar accomodation it is always the time to look at where the blame lies, if for no other reason than to try to prevent others dying in such a hideous way. The trouble with waiting for 'the right time' then frankly there is never a right time, nothing gets done, and more people die.


Exactly !


 Profile  
 
 
Post #471895  Posted: Thu Jun 15, 2017 1:06 pm 
Offline

Joined: Sun Jan 13, 2008 7:31 pm
Posts: 4206
Location: Turnford, Broxbourne, Herts

One of the things that is very strange is that they connected the building to the gas main and ran pipes all the way up the side of the building. I can't think of any block of flats I've lived in that were connected to gas in fact I recall wanting gas but realised later that this could be a problem.

A fire brigade spokesman said that there was a fractured main in the building and it slowed down there getting the fire under control.

The Prime Minister has promised an immediate enquiry. Let's hope it will be thorough.


 Profile  
 
 
Post #471896  Posted: Thu Jun 15, 2017 1:09 pm 
Offline
User avatar

Joined: Mon Jan 14, 2008 2:58 am
Posts: 33859

Oh the sweet irony. A republican congressman says he wants answers about how the gunman got a weapon and his background to see if it could have been prevented and he was a signature to legislation that weakened background checks on gun purchases.

_________________
"Never relegated, Never Will Be" :)


 Profile  
 
 
Post #471897  Posted: Thu Jun 15, 2017 1:10 pm 
Offline

Joined: Tue Jan 08, 2008 8:02 pm
Posts: 18359

old man of hoy wrote:
bubblechris wrote:

If your cowardly attack is made at me then you are even more stupid than I thought. My initial comment was not in support of the Tories but support for Jeremy Corbyn who realised this was the time to support the bereaved and not attack anyone or everyone that could have been responsible. They are still looking for tens of victims who deserve some respect. When that has been done then is the time to start throwing blame around not now.
Bubblechris you are fully entitled to make your very reasonable contribution on this terrible fire without having to accept the abusive comments being directed at you on this forum. I am quite sure Steve Gleiber would have been very quick to jump on it.


Oh do give over ! Also he started it by telling me to "stfu you *%^@" if I recall

I'm sure if Steve was around today he'd be disappointed at the apologists for murderers on ere.


 Profile  
 
 
Post #471898  Posted: Thu Jun 15, 2017 2:23 pm 
Offline
User avatar

Joined: Sun Jan 13, 2008 1:52 pm
Posts: 18758

TOP GUN wrote:
old man of hoy wrote:
Bubblechris you are fully entitled to make your very reasonable contribution on this terrible fire without having to accept the abusive comments being directed at you on this forum. I am quite sure Steve Gleiber would have been very quick to jump on it.


Oh do give over ! Also he started it by telling me to "stfu you *%^@" if I recall

I'm sure if Steve was around today he'd be disappointed at the apologists for murderers on ere.
Yes you are right about the original post, but you have ramped it up inordinately since then, including your shameful conclusion above. We all share this forum, and disagreements and sometimes heavy duty ones are part and parcel of it, but I won't give over complaining about the content and tone of the sort of posts you have recently made. Who on earth wants to hear it?

_________________
"Young and caught up in life, we seldom watched the skies.”


 Profile  
 
 
Post #471899  Posted: Thu Jun 15, 2017 2:47 pm 
Offline

Joined: Tue Jan 08, 2008 8:02 pm
Posts: 18359

old man of hoy wrote:
TOP GUN wrote:

Oh do give over ! Also he started it by telling me to "stfu you *%^@" if I recall

I'm sure if Steve was around today he'd be disappointed at the apologists for murderers on ere.
Yes you are right about the original post, but you have ramped it up inordinately since then, including your shameful conclusion above. We all share this forum, and disagreements and sometimes heavy duty ones are part and parcel of it, but I won't give over complaining about the content and tone of the sort of posts you have recently made. Who on earth wants to hear it?


If diddums doesn't like it he shouldn't give it out. End of

Oh and btw can I save the time of waiting for an investigation on this one, it will blame the contractor and won't say the truth which is those people were not listened to, were abandoned by their government and died because they were poor.

Won't be commenting anymore on the bubble who is having a bubble.


 Profile  
 
 
Post #471900  Posted: Thu Jun 15, 2017 3:05 pm 
Offline

Joined: Mon Jan 07, 2008 2:02 pm
Posts: 8161

As Rich said, sprinklers are required in new buildings over 30m high but they do not have to be retro-fitted in existing high buildings.

Moving on, it’s quite common for gas to be available in high rise blocks both for heating and for cooking. Gas heating is far more sustainable than electric and some ethnic minorities will only cook over an open flame.

The route by which the individual gas pipes get up to the flats differs and there are a number of options, though the common feature is ventilation so as to avoid a potentially dangerous build-up of gas. The simplest method is to run the supply pipes up the side of the building where any leak vents to the open air. Alternatively, they can be run within a pipe or a duct that is ventilated top and bottom. A more contentious method, though legal and often deemed acceptable, is to run the gas pipes in the stairwell; the theory here is that gas is heavier than air so in the event of a leak, the gas will sink to the lowest level and as soon as the escape door is opened, the stairwell is effectively vented. There are variants on this routing method and I have no idea of the precise strategy employed at Grenfell.

From my understanding of the tragedy, gas pipes or gas leaks were not a contributing factor. There does seem to be some suggestion that gas pipes were located in the stairwell but though this strategy is occasionally rejected, it is still routinely accepted. In this instance, the ‘gas pipes in stairwell’ issue is being used to suggest poor management; I’m not sure that’s fair. I may be wrong of course.

The tragedy here is that no fire strategy has ever anticipated such a cataclysmic fire risk from outside the building. There have been plenty of fires in high rise blocks and by and large, the compartmentalisation of the building has always contained the fire, usually in the room it started but almost always within the flat where it started. This is and always has been basic idea that has advised the design process since we started building upwards. On this occasion though, the fire seems to have ripped up the void behind the external cladding panels fed by a ferocious and ever accelerating stack effect. Regular cavity barriers are designed to stop such a spread and much attention will focus on this aspect of the recent installation. The flames seem to have entered the flats, bow-torch hot through windows that immediately cracked and disintegrated under the heat. Since the flats had ribbon windows, every room - on every floor almost - seemed to catch fire simultaneously. Those who stayed in their compartmentalised flats - as we've all been taught to - didn't stand a chance, poor bastards.

My heart goes out to them.


 Profile  
 
 
Post #471901  Posted: Thu Jun 15, 2017 3:57 pm 
Offline
User avatar

Joined: Thu Jan 31, 2008 1:31 pm
Posts: 8152
Location: London

TOP GUN wrote:
lomekian wrote:

While we can't pretend to have any certainty about this tragedy and its causes (apart from the thought that tower blocks of that size as appropriate living conditions in the 21st century in a nation as rich as the UK is insane, given the thousands that die every year in similar properties globaly purely as a result of the nature of those properties), even taking into the prior concerns into consideration, the fillibustering of the fire and safety bill by a group of private landlords on the blue side of the house was one of a number of truly disgusting similar acts by the current conservative administration. They really do make you pine for the days for John Major and his cabinet, when there was still a conscience within the party and fillibustering for private gain wasn't a seasonal event.

If the majority of the population of this country were furnished with the facts about this particular conservative administration and its record on a whole range of things over the last few years, a significant number of the MPs in question would be dragged from their offices by the multitude.

I find it astonishing. Given the slog it takes to get there, one can only assume that most politicians enter politics with the desire to improve things from whatever standpoint they come from, but the utter moral bankruptcy of a large number of current Tory mp's sometimes makes me want to vomit. There are some good ones on the blue side of the house, but of late they have been shouted down by the really nasty bastards that seem to be breeding over there. Its amazing how many of them are also awful orators, terrible improvisers and in a few cases, are thick as the proverbial short planks.


So true Lom, look at Phillip Davies as an example and his voting record


Yeah, he's a right nasty scumbag. The kind of man that one would like to punch if you saw him in the street. And they always give these types the safe seats..

_________________
"....its up for grabs now.........THOMAS!"


 Profile  
 
 
Post #471902  Posted: Thu Jun 15, 2017 4:03 pm 
Offline
User avatar

Joined: Thu Jan 31, 2008 1:31 pm
Posts: 8152
Location: London

Maybe this will finally get the replacing of tower block stock on the agenda once the rather more urgent conversations about how to make the existing ones safe have taken place and been actioned.

The arguments for mass high rise social housing really aren't very strong in a country with our resources.

_________________
"....its up for grabs now.........THOMAS!"


 Profile  
 
 
Post #471903  Posted: Thu Jun 15, 2017 4:07 pm 
Offline
User avatar

Joined: Thu Jan 31, 2008 1:31 pm
Posts: 8152
Location: London

On a general point, I'd be wary of invoking the presumed will of the departed and missed unless you had a close relationship with that person. That said, TG, I basically agree with you politically, but still think you went a bit OTT with a couple of your posts last night. Lets remember that its the internet, and most of us know very little about each other beyond our posting habits.

_________________
"....its up for grabs now.........THOMAS!"


 Profile  
 
 
Post #471904  Posted: Thu Jun 15, 2017 6:17 pm 
Offline

Joined: Sun Jan 13, 2008 7:31 pm
Posts: 4206
Location: Turnford, Broxbourne, Herts

Thinking about it, some might say bubbling, May's call for a Public Inquiry needs to be given a big boot. She should be reminded how long The Hillsboro Inquiry took and how the result of it proved nothing.

We should all demand an enquiry that takes no longer than 6 months and that those found guilty should be jailed and heavily fined within the year and any accused's assets frozen immediately.

On this point I hope TG agrees with me for a change


 Profile  
 
 
Post #471905  Posted: Thu Jun 15, 2017 8:41 pm 
Offline

Joined: Sun Jan 13, 2008 10:42 am
Posts: 12622
Location: Rotorua New Zealand

lomekian wrote:

Yeah, he's a right nasty scumbag. The kind of man that one would like to punch if you saw him in the street.


Red Alert Bernard ...... I'd be thinking long and hard before engaging in another interminable debate with this guy .

Watching the next home match with a broken nose doesn't have much appeal .


 Profile  
 
 
Post #471906  Posted: Thu Jun 15, 2017 8:45 pm 

bubblechris wrote:
We should all demand an enquiry that takes no longer than 6 months and that those found guilty should be jailed and heavily fined within the year and any accused's assets frozen immediately.

That will surely depend on whether any existing laws were broken. I'm not a lawyer and haven't been able to follow the story too much today, but has that been established yet?


  
 
 
Post #471907  Posted: Thu Jun 15, 2017 9:35 pm 
Offline

Joined: Sun Jan 13, 2008 10:42 am
Posts: 12622
Location: Rotorua New Zealand

dec wrote:
Jesse Lingard is on 100k per week. Theo must feel undervalued.

Stevie Wonder did the negotiating on behalf of the club


 Profile  
 
 
Post #471908  Posted: Thu Jun 15, 2017 9:47 pm 

kiwipete wrote:
lomekian wrote:
Yeah, he's a right nasty scumbag. The kind of man that one would like to punch if you saw him in the street.

Red Alert Bernard ...... I'd be thinking long and hard before engaging in another interminable debate with this guy .

Watching the next home match with a broken nose doesn't have much appeal .

:1laughter:


  
 
 
Post #471909  Posted: Thu Jun 15, 2017 9:51 pm 
Offline
User avatar

Joined: Fri Apr 30, 2010 8:30 pm
Posts: 8102

kiwipete wrote:
dec wrote:
Jesse Lingard is on 100k per week. Theo must feel undervalued.

Stevie Wonder did the negotiating on behalf of the club

Hi Kiwi

Have you watched any of the Lions tourl? Sky are hyping it to death but your club sides have already burst a few bubbles. I reckon the All Blacks will murder them.

_________________
"I just kept going pretty lively. Them killers wasn't too healthy company."


 Profile  
 
 
Post #471910  Posted: Thu Jun 15, 2017 10:14 pm 
Offline

Joined: Sun Jan 13, 2008 10:42 am
Posts: 12622
Location: Rotorua New Zealand

bubblechris wrote:

We should all demand an enquiry that takes no longer than 6 months and that those found guilty should be jailed and heavily fined within the year................... and any accused's assets frozen immediately.

The first bit sounds reasonable to the man in the street but I'd imagine the duck shoving that going to take place over the gas lines , building materials , cause of the fire will take much longer ....... police investigation , fire experts , lawyers , courts involved .
Speed isn't the keynote for any of those doodles .

as for the "Any accused's assets frozen immediately " :laughing7: how off the wall is that ..?

So someone points the finger at the gas fitters , the builders , ceiling contractors , flooring specialists and they all have their assets frozen ...how do their families live for however long the enquiry takes ...?

Fire retardant coated columns , sprinkler systems seems the logical answer but even so filling them with cheap furniture , curtains , clothing plenty of man made fibre , plastic toys then run gas lines throughout the building seems a recipe for disaster .

At least with electric something shorts out it can blow a fuse .... whereas an unchecked chip pan fire , the problem is exacerbated .


 Profile  
 
 
Post #471911  Posted: Thu Jun 15, 2017 10:32 pm 
Offline

Joined: Sun Jan 13, 2008 10:42 am
Posts: 12622
Location: Rotorua New Zealand

dec wrote:
kiwipete wrote:
Stevie Wonder did the negotiating on behalf of the club

Hi Kiwi

Have you watched any of the Lions tourl? Sky are hyping it to death but your club sides have already burst a few bubbles. I reckon the All Blacks will murder them.


Kia Ora Dec .... yeah I watched the Blues and Highlanders games . The Crusaders game coincided with an NRL match so ended up watching that .
Yes , I think I remarked to Welsh John it was going to be a tough ask as shown against the Highlanders who had nine of the first team squad missing on All Black duty and injury .
and yes there is a tendency to think the All Blacks will murder them but I think there are signs there they could compete well . They could just as easily have won the two matches , they lost .
For some godforsaken reason the All Blacks are notoriously slow starters , they give away a couple of early penalties ... who knows

You Irish have shown in Chicago ..... getting amongst them fully committed ; can produce dividends.

They play the Maoris here in Rotorua tomorrow night , the stadium is only about quarter of a mile from my house , so I'm going to put the TV on and open the ranchslider to get the atmosphere .


 Profile  
 
 
Post #471912  Posted: Thu Jun 15, 2017 10:43 pm 
Offline

Joined: Tue Jan 08, 2008 8:02 pm
Posts: 18359

The blood drips from their fingers

https://politicalscrapbook.net/2017/06/ ... abitation/


 Profile  
 
 
Post #471913  Posted: Fri Jun 16, 2017 2:51 am 
Offline
User avatar

Joined: Fri Oct 01, 2010 10:12 am
Posts: 4097
Location: Melbourne

DHD wrote:
As Rich said, sprinklers are required in new buildings over 30m high but they do not have to be retro-fitted in existing high buildings.

Moving on, it’s quite common for gas to be available in high rise blocks both for heating and for cooking. Gas heating is far more sustainable than electric and some ethnic minorities will only cook over an open flame.

The route by which the individual gas pipes get up to the flats differs and there are a number of options, though the common feature is ventilation so as to avoid a potentially dangerous build-up of gas. The simplest method is to run the supply pipes up the side of the building where any leak vents to the open air. Alternatively, they can be run within a pipe or a duct that is ventilated top and bottom. A more contentious method, though legal and often deemed acceptable, is to run the gas pipes in the stairwell; the theory here is that gas is heavier than air so in the event of a leak, the gas will sink to the lowest level and as soon as the escape door is opened, the stairwell is effectively vented. There are variants on this routing method and I have no idea of the precise strategy employed at Grenfell.

From my understanding of the tragedy, gas pipes or gas leaks were not a contributing factor. There does seem to be some suggestion that gas pipes were located in the stairwell but though this strategy is occasionally rejected, it is still routinely accepted. In this instance, the ‘gas pipes in stairwell’ issue is being used to suggest poor management; I’m not sure that’s fair. I may be wrong of course.

The tragedy here is that no fire strategy has ever anticipated such a cataclysmic fire risk from outside the building. There have been plenty of fires in high rise blocks and by and large, the compartmentalisation of the building has always contained the fire, usually in the room it started but almost always within the flat where it started. This is and always has been basic idea that has advised the design process since we started building upwards. On this occasion though, the fire seems to have ripped up the void behind the external cladding panels fed by a ferocious and ever accelerating stack effect. Regular cavity barriers are designed to stop such a spread and much attention will focus on this aspect of the recent installation. The flames seem to have entered the flats, bow-torch hot through windows that immediately cracked and disintegrated under the heat. Since the flats had ribbon windows, every room - on every floor almost - seemed to catch fire simultaneously. Those who stayed in their compartmentalised flats - as we've all been taught to - didn't stand a chance, poor bastards.

My heart goes out to them.


Pretty horrible really. Who knows what caused it.

I heard that Dubai has implemented a fire safety policy that goes something like...No LPG in new buildings, and for existing buildings, phased cut-off of gas. Residents then have to replace their cooktop with an electric one. Certainly not ideal if you don't have the cash to buy a new stove but they give plenty of notice and have implemented something for the greater good.


 Profile  
 
 
Post #471914  Posted: Fri Jun 16, 2017 5:50 am 
Offline

Joined: Sun Jan 13, 2008 7:31 pm
Posts: 4206
Location: Turnford, Broxbourne, Herts

kiwipete wrote:
bubblechris wrote:

We should all demand an enquiry that takes no longer than 6 months and that those found guilty should be jailed and heavily fined within the year................... and any accused's assets frozen immediately.

The first bit sounds reasonable to the man in the street but I'd imagine the duck shoving that going to take place over the gas lines , building materials , cause of the fire will take much longer ....... police investigation , fire experts , lawyers , courts involved .
Speed isn't the keynote for any of those doodles .

as for the "Any accused's assets frozen immediately " :laughing7: how off the wall is that ..?

So someone points the finger at the gas fitters , the builders , ceiling contractors , flooring specialists and they all have their assets frozen ...how do their families live for however long the enquiry takes ...?

Fire retardant coated columns , sprinkler systems seems the logical answer but even so filling them with cheap furniture , curtains , clothing plenty of man made fibre , plastic toys then run gas lines throughout the building seems a recipe for disaster .

At least with electric something shorts out it can blow a fuse .... whereas an unchecked chip pan fire , the problem is exacerbated .


Pete the assets that are frozen are their savings, expensive jewellery, houses, second houses, country homes etc not their day to say living income.

These are professionals we are talking about they should be cable to show immediately what tests were carried out and what tyey were told by experts. You don't just give them 12 million and tell them what to do, they have to earn their money. Experts are employed by the prosecution and a case made out.

Simples, was there a gas certificate, was the cladding tested, were the gaspipes protected i.e. boxed in. All easily proven or disproved. Give them the rope and they'll hang themselves, that's what they deserve.


 Profile  
 
 
Post #471915  Posted: Fri Jun 16, 2017 8:12 am 
Offline
User avatar

Joined: Sun Mar 02, 2008 7:04 pm
Posts: 25758
Location: The North Bank

bubblechris wrote:

Simples, was there a gas certificate, was the cladding tested, were the gaspipes protected i.e. boxed in.


Them not being boxed in was one of the (many) complaints the residents had raised previously.

It came out last night that the cladding used was 5k less for the whole block could have been fireproof. Five thousand pounds in a multi-million refit. Also the cladding wasn't intended to improve the lives of the residents, it was done to improve the view from local private blocks.

There has also been talk about where the death toll is going to end with people seeming to suggest it could easily reach three figures when the building is cleared.

_________________
Oh, to capture just one drop of all the ecstasy that swept that afternoon.


 Profile  
 
 
Post #471916  Posted: Fri Jun 16, 2017 8:18 am 
Offline
User avatar

Joined: Sun Mar 02, 2008 7:04 pm
Posts: 25758
Location: The North Bank

DHD - I wonder if you could tell me how sound these thoughts are.

There was a fire regs expert on R4 yesterday talking about why there wouldn't have been a central alarm system fo the whole block. He said something to the effect of this would have led to more false alarms and that would end up with people disabling the alarms but that there should have been a floor by floor system instead. Does that seem right to you?

_________________
Oh, to capture just one drop of all the ecstasy that swept that afternoon.


 Profile  
 
 
Post #471917  Posted: Fri Jun 16, 2017 8:37 am 
Offline

Joined: Tue Jan 08, 2008 8:02 pm
Posts: 18359

Exiled wrote:
bubblechris wrote:

Simples, was there a gas certificate, was the cladding tested, were the gaspipes protected i.e. boxed in.


Them not being boxed in was one of the (many) complaints the residents had raised previously.

It came out last night that the cladding used was 5k less for the whole block could have been fireproof. Five thousand pounds in a multi-million refit. Also the cladding wasn't intended to improve the lives of the residents, it was done to improve the view from local private blocks.

There has also been talk about where the death toll is going to end with people seeming to suggest it could easily reach three figures when the building is cleared.


The tories are suppressing the way the media is reporting this. Everyone in the local area believes the death toll could reach between 100-150 large. Apparently many in the top 3 floors had no chance. Surely at this stage there is a strong indication of the size of the tragedy.

Lily Allen made the point the way the media are reporting this incident is being micro managed. She might not be wrong

.... and this geezer is spot on.

https://twitter.com/jamzldn/status/875345120941551616


 Profile  
 
 
Post #471918  Posted: Fri Jun 16, 2017 9:01 am 
Offline

Joined: Mon Jan 07, 2008 2:02 pm
Posts: 8161

Exiled wrote:
DHD - I wonder if you could tell me how sound these thoughts are.

There was a fire regs expert on R4 yesterday talking about why there wouldn't have been a central alarm system fo the whole block. He said something to the effect of this would have led to more false alarms and that would end up with people disabling the alarms but that there should have been a floor by floor system instead. Does that seem right to you?


Morning Ex

It does sound right. In multi-tenanted buildings, one of the problems with Fire Alarm systems and all the paraphernalia that come with them - break-glass call points, extinguishers etc - is vandalism and mis-use. It happens. It's also one of the reasons that sprinkler systems aren't fitted everywhere.

Again, a single-floor alarm fits with the overall fire strategy of compartmentation. The theory is -
was - that there should be no reason to evacuate anywhere but the floor or flat where the fire has broken out. Unless it's your room or your flat that's on fire, you're supposed to stay where you are. Clearly, that strategy doesn't deal with what happened at Grenfell where all the rooms on every floor were set ablaze from the outside and almost simultaneously. The effect was similar to an Hiroshima-style atomic device going off - a super-heated fireball outside every window. It isn't obvious what sort of fire strategy could have coped with that.

On your earlier point, I’ve no wish to be pedantic and I’m certainly not making any excuses for the building owners or their management team, but we need a bit of perspective here, please. The prime reason for cladding these buildings is to improve their thermal performance and to replace 40-year-old windows. In doing so, the buildings’ outward appearances must change and it isn’t unreasonable to try to make them look as good as possible. These facelift programmes have been rolled out all over the country to upgrade what’s left of our affordable housing stock, making them easier to heat and cheaper to run. It's not just tall buildings either but involves terraces and bungalows as well. So far, the programme has been perceived as a good thing that enhances Tenants' living conditions.


 Profile  
 
 
Post #471919  Posted: Fri Jun 16, 2017 9:21 am 
Offline
User avatar

Joined: Sun Mar 02, 2008 7:04 pm
Posts: 25758
Location: The North Bank

Thanks for taking the trouble to answer that in detail DHD. Much appreciated.

On the cladding point I guess it comes down to whether choices were made because of appearance or because of effect. The quotes in this would suggest appearance was the main driving factor in the choices made. https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/h ... 89951.html

_________________
Oh, to capture just one drop of all the ecstasy that swept that afternoon.


 Profile  
 
 
Post #471920  Posted: Fri Jun 16, 2017 10:42 am 
Offline
User avatar

Joined: Sun Jan 13, 2008 10:04 am
Posts: 7359
Location: Townsville Australia

The latest transfer news is that Ronaldo is leaving Real - fugitive on the run and we have made an offer for Lacazette. Not sure if any of it is true. 27 days to our first game.

_________________
If this policy does not deliver then I would say we have to change it.
AW 150810


 Profile  
 
Display posts from previous:  Sort by  
     [ 570667 posts ] 
Go to page Previous  1 ... 11795, 11796, 11797, 11798, 11799, 11800, 11801 ... 14267  Next

All times are UTC

Gooners Online - Click to see what Everyones Doing

Colour Key:  Visited Profile    Members Profile      Admin

Get Latest Post

Users browsing this forum: Bing [Bot], gooner7, warrior and 63 guests


Search for:

Go to Top

Powered by php BB © 1993 - 2018