From the
RAIB▸ website - details of another incident:
Investigation into an incident at Warren Street station, Victoria Line, London Underground, 11 July 2011
At 17:29 hrs on 11 July, a northbound Victoria Line train departed from Warren Street station with the train doors open on the platform side. The driver was alerted by shouts from passengers and stopped the train with the leading car part way into the tunnel, by which time the doors had closed. There were no injuries.
The train consisted of new stock recently introduced into service on the Victoria Line. Unlike the previous trains on the line, the doors of the new trains are fitted with a ^sensitive edge^ to detect small objects such as clothing or bag straps that may become trapped when the doors close. If this occurs, the driver receives an immediate emergency brake application and a sensitive edge warning light. The driver should then reopen and close the train doors so that the trapped object can be released. If this fails to occur, the driver can override the sensitive edge activation, after checking that nothing is trapped on the outside of the train, and depart from the station.
The RAIB^s preliminary examination has found that a sensitive edge activation occurred at the previous station, Oxford Circus, which the driver departed from by overriding the sensitive edge activation. The activation did not clear when the train arrived at Warren Street station because the platform was on the other side of the train, so the doors used at Oxford Circus were not opened. In order to depart from Warren Street station, the driver isolated safety systems which allowed the train to move with the doors open. Once the train reached 8 km/h (5 mph) the doors closed automatically, as designed.
The investigation will include an examination of the sequence of events leading up to the incident, the driver^s training and competence, and the implementation of sensitive edge doors on the new Victoria Line trains (including the associated control system).
The RAIB^s investigation is independent of any investigations by the safety authority (the Office of Rail Regulation).
The RAIB will publish a report, including any recommendations to improve safety, at the conclusion of its investigation. This report will be available on the RAIB website.