afransen
Senior Member
We don't have the surface road capacity.What if we just said forget about transit and let AVs be our transit? Financially, it would make a lot of sense. Save ourselves the money and grief of building the Ontario Line.
We don't have the surface road capacity.What if we just said forget about transit and let AVs be our transit? Financially, it would make a lot of sense. Save ourselves the money and grief of building the Ontario Line.
Devs are expensive, Google, Facebook, Apple, etc print money and they can afford to blow them on devs. Especially specialized devs that are required to maintain server farms and write scalable, low latency networking code. Sure, Lidar is technically unnecessary, however, Lidar makes it way easier.Tesla has shown that LIDAR is unnecessary. lol@ 'expensive software developers'. Go tell Google, Facebook, Apple, etc. that they are doomed: too many devs required.
The problem with transit is that it costs way too damn much. Maybe because everything is bespoke, maybe because of the ossified planning process around developing and building them. When Toronto is building subways that cost $6,000/cm, we should think there is a problem. Even just do the math of amortizing how much a subway line costs over the expected 30 year ridership and think about what the capital cost per ride is. Ontario Line is expected to carry 388k passengers/day x 365 days/year x 30 years = 4.3B rides over 30 years. For a capital cost expected to be around $10B. That's around $2.5 capital cost per ride. Never mind operating cost. Probably around $0.25-$0.30 per km, depending on average trip distance. If we want transit to be viable and withstand competition for AVs, we need to get cost under control.
You want soulless mega corporations holding our public transit hostage? How much do you think they could overcharge the government? Fun fact, privatizing public transit doesn't work. Just ask the UK, where they have renationalized the railways. Public Transit is a service to move people around for cheap.What if we just said forget about transit and let AVs be our transit? Financially, it would make a lot of sense. Save ourselves the money and grief of building the Ontario Line.
Metrolinx should get in touch with Elon Musk for Tesla AVs or Google for Waymo. Honestly, to be implementing fixed route transit, especially low speed and low capacity light rail is severely anachronistic.
The train isn't going to he faster. Factor in door-to-door, not station to station. AV wins hands down every time, especially against slow HFR. HFR is $5 billion for nothing, especially when you account for the fact that AVs will be more comfortable than regular cars since they will have less crash safety requirements as road accidents will be reduced by 90-99%
You don't need low latency communication. The 'driver' for AVs has to be aboard the vehicle. I don't think you have fathomed how much an AV driver is worth. It's trillions. Development cost is not going to be the barrier.Devs are expensive, Google, Facebook, Apple, etc print money and they can afford to blow them on devs. Especially specialized devs that are required to maintain server farms and write scalable, low latency networking code. Sure, Lidar is technically unnecessary, however, Lidar makes it way easier.
And if you want to talk operating costs, how about the operating costs of building gigawatts of new power stations and grid level batteries to power all the AVs? Not to mention the individual costs of operating cars?
Yeah totally. They should just be running autonomous vehicles on Finch. Hmmm they fit about four people. Maybe they should be a bit bigger. There’s going to be a lot of people traveling on Finch. Maybe these vehicles should run in pairs or maybe threes. They definitely should run on electricity. Oh! How about let’s give them their own lane too. Wait a minute.Honestly, to be implementing fixed route transit, especially low speed and low capacity light rail is severely anachronistic
Many of high-capacity transit lines will still be needed. Maybe, AV's can take over the service currently provided by the Blue Night Bus network, the demand at that time is a lot smaller and the door-to-door service is particularly appealing.
Probably best to just subsidize rides, like Innisfil is doing. Running night buses with few passengers is very expensive per passenger. Using pooled minibus service has the potential to at least recover its operating cost, and it can be more demand responsive without compromising service too much.The pricing will be interesting. If priced at transit fare levels, this would not only replace night service transit but kill taxi/Uber also. If priced higher there would be demands to run the bus anyways, as a social service. If the bus is automated, maybe it‘s no big expense to retain.
- Paul
Failure of imagination. You can mock any innovation this way.Yeah totally. They should just be running autonomous vehicles on Finch. Hmmm they fit about four people. Maybe they should be a bit bigger. There’s going to be a lot of people traveling on Finch. Maybe these vehicles should run in pairs or maybe threes. They definitely should run on electricity. Oh! How about let’s give them their own lane too. Wait a minute.
Sorry which part of abandoning public transit for self driving vehicles was innovative? Calling light rail low capacity when calling for a technology that thus far given us vehicles of about six metres long and a capacity of five or so is ridiculous.Failure of imagination. You can mock any innovation this way.
As a vehicle, LRT is high capacity. As a transportation system, it leaves a lot to be desired. It's too costly to form a network, except in exceptionally dense areas like Old Toronto.Sorry which part of abandoning public transit for self driving vehicles was innovative? Calling light rail low capacity when calling for a technology that thus far given us vehicles of about six metres long and a capacity of five or so is ridiculous.
Could you breakdown the cost of an LRT network vs. a fleet or self driving vehicles?As a vehicle, LRT is high capacity. As a transportation system, it leaves a lot to be desired. It's too costly to form a network, except in exceptionally dense areas like Old Toronto.
The pricing will be interesting. If priced at transit fare levels, this would not only replace night service transit but kill taxi/Uber also. If priced higher there would be demands to run the bus anyways, as a social service. If the bus is automated, maybe it‘s no big expense to retain.
- Paul
Hyperloop and AVs are unrelated, let's not conflate.
And this is a point that confuses me (although I admittedly don't breathlessly follow it). Some articles speak of Level 5 - true autonomy - as been self contained, while others speak of constant inter-connectivity between vehicles; 'talking to each other'.Even in China, capital of autonomous experimentation, they are thinking about equipping the roads with sensors to facilitate autonomous driving.
That didn’t really answer the question. What are the numbers for a private fleet of vehicles? It’s 100% funded by users? What are maintenance costs like?That's easy. LRT costs $250m/km, per recent GTA projects like HuLRT or $6B. It is projected to carry 32M passengers per year. About $6.25/passenger over 30 years. AVs will be privately owned fleet vehicles and funded by users using existing ROW (essentially displacing privately owned vehicles personal vehicles).