An Fplo is not a timetable. All Fplo, train schedules shows the time it takes to get from one place to another, as well as stopping and starting times. Train schedules are for the precise organizations of rolling stock to avoid crashes, efficient running of the railway. Time tables in comparison are for passengers. The time period from Malkinia to Treblinka is 7 minutes. People who do these plans do not do guestimates like they might do in Scotland with the Hogwarts express. Fplo are not timetables, but a plan to fit in with normal rolling stock schedules. Having used steam trains as normal travel, a very similar distance with about 20 carriages, some passenger, some coal wagons took about 20 -25 minutes. If those witnesses mentioned are correct they must be discussing different trains with different organizational qualities with the railway. They are not the Fplo.Nessie wrote: ↑Sun Nov 17, 2024 10:45 am That the times in the timetables do not appear to fit the witness descriptions, can be explained by those timetables being nominal, estimations, that were created to organise the transports, that then did not necessarily run to time. Anyone who has ever used a train, knows that they often do not run to the timetables!
Translated from Wiki after a search of Fahrplanordnung;Nazgul wrote: ↑Sun Nov 17, 2024 10:57 amAn Fplo is not a timetable.Nessie wrote: ↑Sun Nov 17, 2024 10:45 am That the times in the timetables do not appear to fit the witness descriptions, can be explained by those timetables being nominal, estimations, that were created to organise the transports, that then did not necessarily run to time. Anyone who has ever used a train, knows that they often do not run to the timetables!
Multiple witnesses refer to Treblinka, corroborated by all the Fahrplanordnungs that also refer to Treblinka. Mass transports regularly arrived at a camp at Treblinka. The descriptions match TII, the AR camp, which was built to received prisoners as the ghettos were being closed down. All the claims that TII did not received mass transports are debunked by the evidence from multiple sources.This is an Fplo that shows the time it takes to get from one place to another. The time period from Malkinia to Treblinka is 7 minutes. People who do these plans do not do guestimates like they might do in Scotland with the Hogwarts express. Fplo are not timetables, but a plan to fit in with normal rolling stock schedules. Having used steam trains as normal travel, a very similar distance with about 20 carriages, some passenger, some coal wagons took about 20 -25 minutes. They have to be different trains with different organizational qualities with the railway.
I am not disagreeing with you in this thread your claims of mass arrivals, but these are not, cannot be the Fplo train schedules which took people to jewish labour camps.
Fahrplananordnung, note the spelling difference.
Special trains were travelling all the time, they had to support all networks and activities for the war effort. The extensive labour and konzentrationslager camps had trains going to them, all using Fplo.Multiple witnesses refer to Treblinka, corroborated by all the Fahrplanordnungs that also refer to Treblinka.
.Mass transports regularly arrived at a camp at Treblinka. The descriptions match TII, the AR camp, which was built to received prisoners as the ghettos were being closed down. All the claims that TII did not received mass transports are debunked by the evidence from multiple sources
I would have little doubt that 14f13 did occur at the Judenlagers near TI. Only trained and presumably registered men were allow to carry this out. This is no different to the Sobibor reports. A single event, but nothing to the suggestion of Jewish extermination. One one hand these people perished, but as you said in a post above the SS gave Wiernik and his fellow travellers water.Wili Mentz, SS staff at TII, who had previously worked on the T4 euthanasia project;
http://www.holocaustresearchproject.org ... speak.html
"When I came to Treblinka the camp commandant was a doctor named Eberl. He was very ambitious. It was said that he ordered more transports that could be “processed” in the camp.
That meant that trains had to wait outside the camp because the occupants of the previous transport had not yet all been killed. At the time it was very hot and as a result of the long wait inside the transport trains in the intense heat many people died."
"Following the arrival of a transport, six to eight cars would be shunted into the camp, coming to a halt at the platform there."
There have been many successful prosecutions due to timing differences, especially going to a place to commit a murder and get back again. I will say it again. A steam train with 60 carriages full of people cannot go 7.5 km from rest to stopping in 7min. This fact is evidential and would be accepted by a court.Your quibbling over your inability to match the times on the Fplos with the witness descriptions are not evidential. They prove nothing. It is obvious that you are merely trying to find reasons to doubt the evidence that does not suit your desired belief.
You then go on to quote;
Which means that entry was likely made in error.A steam train with 60 carriages cannot travel 7.5 km in 7 minutes.
The witnesses are corroborated by multiple documents recording mass arrivals at TII. You have no witnesses at all, who worked inside TII, or lived nearby, who say that camp was not receiving mass transports.All you have are witnesses. You rely on these witnesses...
Every single German member of staff who worked at TII, came from T4. What you think happened, is unimportant. It is what is evidenced to have happened that is important.I would have little doubt that 14f13 did occur at the Judenlagers near TI
All the prosecution needs to do is point out that 7 minutes is an error on the document. That error will not cause the entirety of the claim to collapse. The multiple witnesses, local Poles, Jews and Nazis all giving evidence of mass arrivals at the camp, along with the transport records and other documents, prove what happened.There have been many successful prosecutions due to timing differences, especially going to a place to commit a murder and get back again. I will say it again. A steam train with 60 carriages full of people cannot go 7.5 km from rest to stopping in 7min. This fact is evidential and would be accepted by a court.
I disagree with your interpretation of AR. I have said many times, that Fplo may have been used for (((AR))) but they were also used for transportation to labour camps. Fplo are not normal passenger timetables but are calculated to show the exact travel time from place to place and expected arriving and departing times. This is the only way that the network can stay in sync, like an airport control tower. The Fplo control all the other trains, everything has to work in sync. They know it takes it exactly 7 mins for the engine with whatever carriages to get from Malkinia to Treblinka, wherever it is. It is exact timing then now like it is for aircraft to get from the US to China, with slight leeway.
No, the next entry also specifies 7 minutes. 9.00 -9.07. Fplo 567 dated 6 May,43 gives 8 minutes. This is not an error, but systematic.Which means that entry was likely made in error.
The Dutch Survivors at Sobibor, actual witnesses only describe 14f13. Shooting of the decrepit. A few believed the rumours and had the opinion they were gassed. Most mention shooting of invalids.Every single German member of staff who worked at TII, came from T4. What you think happened, is unimportant. It is what is evidenced to have happened that is important.
There is no error in the document. You cannot change facts to hold a cherished belief. Sorry Nessie but you are stuffed on this one.All the prosecution needs to do is point out that 7 minutes is an error on the document. That error will not cause the entirety of the claim to collapse. The multiple witnesses, local Poles, Jews and Nazis all giving evidence of mass arrivals at the camp, along with the transport records and other documents, prove what happened.
There is no disagreement with interpretation. Every single witness who worked at TII, or was on a transport, or worked on the local railways, reported mass arrivals. There are multiple documents reporting mass arrivals. There is only one way to interpret such documents.
Why do you think they are going to be 100% accurate and reliable? It is quite normal for trains to not run to time.I have said many times, that Fplo may have been used for (((AR))) but they were also used for transportation to labour camps. Fplo are not normal passenger timetables but are calculated to show the exact travel time from place to place and expected arriving and departing times.
Please link to documents so they can be checked. I have searched for a Fplo 567 and found this;This is the only way that the network can stay in sync, like an airport control tower. The Fplo control all the other trains, everything has to work in sync. They know it takes it exactly 7 mins for the engine with whatever carriages to get from Malkinia to Treblinka, wherever it is. It is exact timing then now like it is for aircraft to get from the US to China, with slight leeway.
A steam train with 60 carriages cannot travel 7.5 km in 7 minutes.
No, the next entry also specifies 7 minutes. 9.00 -9.07. Fplo 567 dated 6 May,43 gives 8 minutes. This is not an error, but systematic.Which means that entry was likely made in error.
That is evidence the camps were used to kill people. It is also evidence of mass arrivals, which you deny.Every single German member of staff who worked at TII, came from T4. What you think happened, is unimportant. It is what is evidenced to have happened that is important.I would have little doubt that 14f13 did occur at the Judenlagers near TIThe Dutch Survivors at Sobibor, actual witnesses only describe 14f13. Shooting of the decrepit. A few believed the rumours and had the opinion they were gassed. Most mention shooting of invalids.
If it is not a typo error on the original, it can still be an error of interpretation, as to what exactly the times are referring to. Minor details like a time in a timetable that you insisted is not a timetable, whilst quoting it is a timetable, do not bring all the evidence of mass arrivals down. You are the one with the cherished belief that not only can you not evidence, you produce evidence to the contrary!There have been many successful prosecutions due to timing differences, especially going to a place to commit a murder and get back again. I will say it again. A steam train with 60 carriages full of people cannot go 7.5 km from rest to stopping in 7min. This fact is evidential and would be accepted by a court.
There is no error in the document. You cannot change facts to hold a cherished belief. Sorry Nessie but you are stuffed on this one.All the prosecution needs to do is point out that 7 minutes is an error on the document. That error will not cause the entirety of the claim to collapse. The multiple witnesses, local Poles, Jews and Nazis all giving evidence of mass arrivals at the camp, along with the transport records and other documents, prove what happened.
Look carefully, Malkinia was left in the special plan (sonderplan) at 6.20, the arrival at the destination was 6.28.
As I pointed out to PR, the train likely stopped at Treblinka station not T-II. This is going by the witness testimonies which said trains stopped at the station and then were taken in piecemeal fashion to the camp. I believe Nessie is mistaken in his assertions about the fplo documents.Nazgul wrote: ↑Sun Nov 17, 2024 10:35 pmLook carefully, Malkinia was left in the special plan (sonderplan) at 6.20, the arrival at the destination was 6.28.
You failing to distinguish between a time table to enable people to wait at a station for a train to catch and a scheduling order is entirely your affair. A steam train cannot go 7.5 km with 60 wagons and 6 000 people in 7 or 8 minutes from stationary and then stop.
Thanks for your reply bombsaway. The road from Malkinia followed the old railway. The Treblinka station was adjacent to the Treblinka settlement. The distance from Malkinia boundary to Treblinka settlement by road is 4.6 km (2.8 miles) via DW627, the station is about 0.8km from the boundary. A car would take 5 minutes to drive that distance. As mentioned a steam train fully laden could not do that trip in 7 minutes, perhaps 15 - 20, Not only do trains take a long time to get to speed, they take a long distance to slow down to come to a halt. I believe a single steam engine with a few carriages could traverse that small distance in the time period specified.bombsaway wrote: ↑Mon Nov 18, 2024 2:44 am
As I pointed out to PR, the train likely stopped at Treblinka station not T-II. This is going by the witness testimonies which said trains stopped at the station and then were taken in piecemeal fashion to the camp. I believe Nessie is mistaken in his assertions about the fplo documents.
It seems like it's about 2 miles
So let me ask you, what was the Treblinka stop, if not that station?
I asked the AI a fair question I think that you could replicate (Claude Sonnet)Nazgul wrote: ↑Mon Nov 18, 2024 5:18 am
Thanks for your reply bombsaway. The road from Malkinia followed the old railway. The Treblinka station was adjacent to the Treblinka settlement. The distance from Malkinia boundary to Treblinka settlement by road is 4.6 km (2.8 miles) via DW627, the station is about 0.8km from the boundary. A car would take 5 minutes to drive that distance. As mentioned a steam train fully laden could not do that trip in 7 minutes, perhaps 15 - 20,
So basically your estimate is completely unconvincing to me and I think your whole case is deeply questionable since it seemed to hinge on this fact.Let me break this down step by step, considering the technology and conditions of 1940s rail transport.
1940s Train Journey Speed ProfileClick to open image
Let me break down the calculation for this journey:
Key Assumptions:
1940s steam locomotive with passenger cars
Heavy load (6,000 passengers plus luggage)
Level track with standard gauge
Good weather conditions
Typical station approach/departure precautions
Calculation:
Acceleration Phase:
Typical acceleration rate: 0.5-0.7 mph/s for loaded passenger trains
Using conservative 0.5 mph/s due to heavy load
Time to reach cruising speed of 40 mph: ~80 seconds
Distance covered during acceleration: ~0.4 miles
Cruising Phase:
Cruising speed: 40 mph (conservative for 1940s passenger service)
Distance to cover at cruise: ~2.0 miles
Time at cruise speed: ~180 seconds
Deceleration Phase:
Typical deceleration rate: 0.8-1.0 mph/s
Using 0.8 mph/s for passenger comfort
Time to decelerate from 40 mph to stop: ~50 seconds
Distance covered during deceleration: ~0.4 miles
Total journey profile:
Minimum time: ~310 seconds (5 minutes 10 seconds)
Maximum time: ~360 seconds (6 minutes)
The range accounts for variables such as:
Track conditions
Weather
Exact loading conditions
Signal status
Station approach procedures
Driver behavior
Engineering constraints:
Rail adhesion limits
Passenger comfort
Braking system capabilities
Power output of 1940s steam locomotives
Track geometry
I've created a speed profile diagram showing the acceleration, cruise, and deceleration phases. The range of 5:10 to 6:00 minutes represents a realistic window for this journey under normal operating conditions in the 1940s.
Since this material was published by Germar the location and geometry of the camp have been altered to fit the current narrative. link“[Treblinka] was situated in a sparsely populated area near Malkinia,
a railway station on the main Warsaw-Białystok line; the camp’s precise
location was 2.5 miles (4 km) north west of the village and railway stop of
Treblinka. The site selected was heavily wooded and well hidden from
view.
The camp was laid out in a rectangle 1,312 feet wide by 1,968 feet long
(400 x 600 m),
I think you have a limitation. The speed limit is irrelevant because a 5 km trip at 90 kmph would take less than 3.5 minutes. So in that case the train is twice as slow. Your arguments here aren't remotely convincing.Nazgul wrote: ↑Mon Nov 18, 2024 8:11 am This distance from Malkinia train station to Treblinka village is 6 min (5.0 km) via DW627 by car. The train tracks run alongside the road. While the speed limit in Poland on non urban roads is 90km/h it is delusional to somehow think a steam train with 60 carriages, 6000 people can do the trip in the same time as a modern car. AI obviously has limitation.
The error is yours.
The travel information can be found by using google. Those roads are not US Highways. When trains leave railway stations they have to go very slow for some distance. The factor to take into account is that the rail Junction to Siedlce via Treblinka is some 800 m from the station. The train would have to go very slow until then as it goes through the points heading towards Siedlce, making a gradual left hand turn. Only then can it accelerate to a crusing speed.Show me on the map where you think the fplos Treblinka stop was please.
You can see in the aerial photo above the locatin of the Treblinka station.Show me on the map where you think the fplos Treblinka stop was please.