Steve X
Senior Member
This includes the bus riders on the crossing streets.For WHOM? The transit user or the single-occupant motorist?
This includes the bus riders on the crossing streets.For WHOM? The transit user or the single-occupant motorist?
You haven't answered the question. How does prioritizing an LRT line decrease reliability on said line?This includes the bus riders on the crossing streets.
Currently, Toronto's Transportation Department prioritizes the single-occupant motorist turning left. We'll see if they finally give in to the public transit user, or remain devoted to the almighty automobile gods.You haven't answered the question. How does prioritizing an LRT line decrease reliability on said line?
Very exciting!. Nice moquette, it has some styleHey all, got the chance to ride part of the surface section today, I'll have a video out tomorrow - here are some pics in the meantime. Probably not a lot we haven't seen, but ey . . . more the merrier?
View attachment 344448
I see the "stop request" buttons, but what about the "stop request" pull cords?Hey all, got the chance to ride part of the surface section today, I'll have a video out tomorrow - here are some pics in the meantime. Probably not a lot we haven't seen, but ey . . . more the merrier?
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Very exciting!. Nice moquette, it has some styleunlike the outside of the vehicle okay I'll get off my hobby horse now
I see the "stop request" buttons, but what about the "stop request" pull cords?
Now to get the passengers to use the buttons on the doors to actually open them.I had heard otherwise - the plan to minimize heating and A/C costs was to only stop on demand during off-peak hours (this is a P3 after all)
That's compared to a grade-separated line. Of course, I would have built this section as an elevated line (and used light metro technology) - but the past is in the past. I think we can agree that grade-separation > TSP not-grade-separated > no-TSP no-grade separation.Currently, Toronto's Transportation Department prioritizes the single-occupant motorist turning left. We'll see if they finally give in to the public transit user, or remain devoted to the almighty automobile gods.
Hey all, got the chance to ride part of the surface section today, I'll have a video out tomorrow - here are some pics in the meantime. Probably not a lot we haven't seen, but ey . . . more the merrier?
It was an “official” media event. ML will have the contractual right to hold those when convenient to the contractorNot to nag or anything, but I would've thought Crosslinx wouldn't (or pretend not to) want members of the general public to be in the under-construction stations, let alone inside the vehicles during construction and testing, unless anyone can claim to be reporting at the right time?
I'm just curious is all.
For the transit user of course.For WHOM? The transit user or the single-occupant motorist?
If you're talking about crossing gates then yes of course, but this isn't what Ottawa would've gotten - which is the context of this discussion. We're talking about grade separation vs on street tram style which even with the mightiest TSP you're still adding significant joints of slowdown and unreliability.Railways have had a signal priority from the beginning and it seems to work very well. Trains around the world roll through level crossings including crossings through the middle of intersections without needing to stop. Any inability to make transit signal priority work to the advantage of transit would have less to do with technical capabilities and more to do with the priority of the people setting things up.




