The display system is a two line red LED array system with 26 characters on each line. The upper line displays fixed text while the lower one is usually scrolling its text at various speeds. One of the displays at the southbound platform here in Kista, for example, is very fast and scrolls at uneven speeds. Also, every time some information is updated, which might occur three times a minute, the display must restart its scrolling instead of just updating the most often counted down minute forecast. This looks quite ugly and is a design flaw in the system.
The signalling system for the
Green line was installed during March and
April 1999. One year later, April 2000, the display system was
being being tested, not with real data but with a test string on row two.
The displays often carried the text "SL provar skyltsystemet" (SL
is testing the display system). On rare occasions, time estimates (mode 1 as
described below) were spotted. Not real ones, though.
After a very long testing time, the system finally became operational.
Update note April 2000: The old signalling system was finally
replaced in March and April 1999, with traffic discontinued during the
Easter. The SEK 280 million Siemens signalling system is, however,
still not delivering, not even a year after launch at a project cost now estimated
to be well above SEK 450 million. No wonder the other bids for the signalling
systems were all at or
above SEK 400 million. The story continues...
If the traffic comes to a complete halt, the display never shows this.
There are no messages saying the traffic is halted
and no information on its duration - this is handled exclusively
through the speaker system. If you are lucky, the speaker system is
operational. If you are not so lucky, you are left staring at a shut
down display system when you need it the most. Almost anyone can read
a timetable to find out the scheduled ETA of the next train. Many
commuters learn their trains' respective departure times by heart,
but no-one can forecast delays or havocs.
Disclaimer: This is of course not the official
standpoint of either SL or DSV. In fact, it's not a standpoint at all.
Display Mode 1
There are two main operational modes of the
display. In mode 1, there is no train at the station. The upper line
displays the ETA (estimated time until arrival) for the next
train, and the lower line scrolls the ETA for the 2nd and 3rd
(sometimes only the 2nd) closest trains on track or scheduled. The
mode 1 format is
nn end_station mm min#
where 'nn' is the line number, e.g. 11 for Akalla - Kungsträdgården,
'end_station' is the end station for the particular train in that
direction (which is not necessary the end of the track), and 'mm' is
the number of minutes ETA. (Actually, if ETA > 30 then the time in
format HH:MM is displayed instead.) The # is a character that
explains the source of the ETA estimate. This is a major bug in the
system. If # is a dot, then the ETA is fetched from the scheduled
timetable, and then "3 min." means 3-4 minutes. If # is a space, then
the ETA is calculated based on sensors up the track, and now "3 min "
means 2-3 minutes!!! The latter is because someone discovered that it
is unwise to display "0 min " for a train with ETA 0-1 minute, but
that person did not adjust the definition for timetable calculated
ETAs. The result is that all running trains look one minute late even
if they are on time! There is a third option, when # is an apostrophe.
The meaning of this is unclear, but seems to have to do with guesswork
or approximations of the timetable.
If the system loses track of the next train, it will display stars '*'
to notify of its confusion. It starts with an array of three (sometimes four,
occasionally five)
stars shown where the minutes should be.
It seems each star combination is shown for about 30 seconds, with the
exception of the single star which stays for up to 45 seconds.
There is a countdown through
three-two-one star, during which time period the train hopefully either
is detected up the track (and then the new ETA is shown) or arrives at
the station (then mode 2 below is displayed).
Unfortunately, often none
of these two things occur. Then the confused system does one of two
things. Either (i) it guesses that the train vanished from earth,
promoting the second train to be the 'next' even if that one has not
yet started, or (ii) it shuts down the display, leaving everyone in
mystery. Case (i) is often combined with shutting down line two of the
display (actually mode 1B), giving as little information as possible.
Needless to say, the display shuts down frequently, for reasons
unclear to most viewers and maybe to the designers as well.
Display Mode 2
When a train arrives at a station, the display
enters mode 2. For some stations, this is done more than 30 sec's
before the train arrives, and for others long after the train is
visibly and audibly detected by those waiting for it. The format of
mode 2 is
nn end_station mvagnar
where 'nn' is again the line number, e.g. 10 for Hjulsta -
Kungsträdgården, 'end_station' is the end station for the
particular train in that direction (which is not necessary the end of
the track), and 'm' is this time the number of cars in the train
set, usually 4, 6, or 8. Notice that for some obscure reason,
there is no space between the number and the word 'vagnar'. At first,
this seems like an effort to squeeze longer end station names onto the
26-character line, (remember that line one does not scroll). But
instead there are two spaces between train number and end station, and
besides, some end station names, like Hässelby Strand, are
shorted anyway, so this seems only to be a clueless layout.
Sometimes, 'kort tåg' ('short train') is shown instead of '6vagnar'.
There is no hint to what the difference might indicate and besides,
who defines what a short train is anyway?
Sometimes, the display starts showing the completely wrong
information. A train number 11 to Akalla arriving at a station might
be shown as '10 Hjulsta 6vagnar',
causing those on their way to Akalla
to skip the train and those not on their way there to take it instead.
Big surprise if you are short on time. Sometimes the right number
but wrong direction is shown, which is a bit more harmless, at least
if you are an accomplished commuter.
Display Modes 3, 4, ...
As an exception to the rule, the message 'INGEN
PÅSTIGNING' (no admittance) is for some reason shown on line two
instead with line one shut down and in caps unlike other messages.
Maybe to create a surprise effect to wake sleepy commuters up.
There are actually more display modes, but those seem not to be directed
to passengers of SL. For example, the message 'MSG # 913' on line one
with a shut down line two is not very intelligible to the average viewer
and maybe not to SL personnel either.
For the Green line, which is the oldest and longest - and thus the
one with most delays and in most need of delay information - mode 1 is
not in operation. The only thing the displays do is showing the end
station and currently not even the number of cars in the train set
when the train arrives. This is due to the now infamous signalling
system, due to be replaced in its entirety in 1998 but severely
delayed because of enormous problems encountered during
installations. The computer system (Siemens) appears to have contained
serious design flaws. The end result has been many more hours of
waiting for trains to arrive.
Congestions
Astonishingly, the display system seems not to
be able to handle congestions in the traffic at all. Even if a
delay is announced through the old speaker system (and you are lucky
enough to be on a station where the speakers are not broken), the display
system keeps guessing that a lot of trains still run on time according
to the timetable. Then, suddenly, the train disappears from the
display and the next one is promoted to closest ETA train, not
reflecting much of reality.
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