nfitz
Superstar
Fair enough, some stops should be eliminated, and it should be speeded up.But lines like the SELRT running at around 20 km/h ...
But even the slowest segment is faster than 20 km/hr.
Fair enough, some stops should be eliminated, and it should be speeded up.But lines like the SELRT running at around 20 km/h ...
I don't understand the mindset behind such comments. If BRT (Bus Rapid Transit) that stops at traffic lights is rapid transit, then LRT that does exactly the same thing, at the same speeds is rapid transit.Transit City is not rapid transit.
I don't understand the mindset behind such comments. If BRT (Bus Rapid Transit) that stops at traffic lights is rapid transit, then LRT that does exactly the same thing, at the same speeds is rapid transit.
I don't understand the mindset behind such comments. If BRT (Bus Rapid Transit) that stops at traffic lights is rapid transit, then LRT that does exactly the same thing, at the same speeds is rapid transit.
SELRT will be about twice as fast as Spadina. It's not comparable. And it will be significantly faster than St. Clair.Calling SELRT "rapid transit" is akin to calling St. Clair or Spadina "rapit transit"
SELRT will be about twice as fast as Spadina. It's not comparable. And it will be significantly faster than St. Clair.
Except, of course, cars on expressways don't stop at exits.
Is an expressway, or a suburban arterial with traffic lights every 500 m, "comparable" to a downtown street with lights every 100 m?
The idea behind TC is that once you have the base network in place with rolling stock and carhouses, network expansion becomes easier.
SELRT will be about twice as fast as Spadina. It's not comparable. And it will be significantly faster than St. Clair.
But the world operates in less than ideal conditions such that theoretical capacities can rarely ever (never) be attained. A lane of road (or a line of rail) that has less chances for stopping will obviously allow the vehicles to travel at a higher average speed and thus attain closer to the theoretical maximum capacity. An expressway and a downtown street is "comparable" in the same way that an at-grade light rail can have nearly the same capacity as a fully grade-separated subway in ideal conditions (with similar per-train capacity and headway, which aren't that difficult; not having to stop at any red lights either due to transit priority signalling or luck; and stopping briefly or not at all at stations). Obviously that's not going to happen, or else we wouldn't need this whole debate. Both are meaningless comparisons.Actually, they are. Lanes on each of those types of streets have the same theoretical capacity.
There are imperfect analogies. Then there are bad analogies.And it was an analogy, it doesn't have to be perfectly accurate. I was simply trying to say that just because one route has wider stop spacing than another route, despite having the same basic configuration, it does not make them uncomparable.
I don't understand the mindset behind such comments. If BRT (Bus Rapid Transit) that stops at traffic lights is rapid transit, then LRT that does exactly the same thing, at the same speeds is rapid transit.