As I said, bus drivers are speed demons. It is fairly regular occurrence for them to drive over the speed limit and weave through traffic quite aggressively, and for reasons unknown to anyone but the top minds of the TTC, there has been no safety crackdown on this mode of transport. So obviously they'll be able to make the journey even faster. The question is, is that behaviour we should want replicated on the Finch line?
And for anyone who doesn't believe me, I just went on TransSee, opened the trip history for a random group of vehicles, and looked at the most recent trip. How does one go from being a minute ahead of schedule to 6+ minutes ahead of schedule, if normal operational protocol is being followed?
View attachment 701664
View attachment 701665
View attachment 701666
View attachment 701667
View attachment 701668
View attachment 701669
View attachment 701670
View attachment 701672
At some point, this becomes not only a discourse about LRT speeds, but about the TTC's ability to manage their employees more generally. A fat load of good a bus running faster than the scheduled time does you, if the frequencies are low and you go to the bus stop at the scheduled time like some sort of chump, and find your bus zoomed by 5-10 minutes ago. There was a TTC employee on the CPTDB who openly bragged on the forum a couple of years back about how they managed to run hot on the 123 on every trip and squeeze as much break times out of the trip as possible. It's simply not fair to compare LRT speeds to such buses, the only valid comparison is to the buses that actually followed the printed schedule.