Seeing your photos there of the Yamanote line, I would be interested in your thoughts on the speeds at which the trains enter and leave the platforms. For me it always felt very fast, and if tried in Australia it might lead to some painful lessons for those who don't wait behind the line.
I have noticed that here in Tokyo, Chicago & New York that the drivers seem to hit the arrival end of the platform harder than I normally would in Sydney. That said, those platforms are longer than the platforms I stop at so they have a little more room to play with. I haven't done the maths in terms of power/weight ratios & platform lengths. I've also never driven any of the other trains but base it on the views like those on the photos from earlier.
Compared to those systems, my statiom approaches seem so slow. I'm aiming (depending on the set, load & location) to be doing 45 - 55kph at the arrival end of my platforms. In training on the newest train, I did hit a platform arriving at 80kph but the stop wasn't pretty & felt similar to the other system stops I mentioned.
Because of what I'm used to & passenger comfort, it seems to be way quicker on the other networks.
Either way, it's not going to be pretty should the worst happen.
I don't have a big a problem with the departure speeds.
That said, the way the Chicago system works is interesting because the operator does everything much like Melbourne does. But in Melbourne, the driver doesn't need to leave the seat to operate the doors.
In Chicago, the driver operates from the right hand side. But when the doors open on the left, they need to leave the seat to operate the doors.