Another problem: current TTC train cars have four doors on each side.
That diagram is only a generic illustration.
It is still fully applicable.
The exact door I exit is randomly wide open versus in front of a wall.
The train position is different every time. This is the seventh door (third door on second coach from east) from east on the westwards-direction train, the one I ride from Yonge-Bloor to Union, I consistently stand at this very same door, every day.
Sometimes my door open to wide space.
And sometimes the doors open to a wall.
The berthing position is sometimes random.
The berth shifts by up to a few meters sometimes already today!
One commute. It is a meter to the left, the next evening commute, it is a meter to the right, and the third evening it is spot on. It is sometimes random.
Go to Union TTC platform and watch several consecutive arriving TTC trains. They stop in slightly different positions every time. And some doors are near ends of walls. Which means different numbers of doors are constricted every time with platform crowd + door crowd. And clearout-speed noticeably varies based on berth alignment. (This affects Coach #2 from east, for westwards-direction trains at least)
The Union platforms are long enough to give plenty of berth mispositioning error. It is built into all platform designs to have jiggle room. My proposal simply takes advantage of this existing jiggle room.
This means the same door(s) are randomly blocked by a narrow passageway, and sometimes not. With the precision of ATC, the train can stop at a precise berth with more optimal.
Currently, I commute everyday TTC+GO. On train, I stand in front of exaxf same door on train. My exact same door at exact same time, 5:10pm sometimes empties 3x slower because of a berth positioning.
As commuter, sir, Every day, I have personally witnessed this over 200 times in my routine that it co-relates to berth positioning. It has lots of crowd-cascade effects that interferes several doors adjacent left and right.
(I also noticed some other doors have the same issue too)
Someone at TTC needs to visit Union and measure the walls, do some math calculations on alignments and/or test alignme ts and define a more precise stopping position. Simple Geometry 101. Applicable whether vehicles have twonor three or four or five doors.
The name of the geometry 101 game is to find the exact berth positioning that has fewest doors opening into a tight area.
One could then discover that an ideal berth positioning could potentiall clear Union TTC platforms 5 seconds faster. For free! Homer simpson no brainer to have TTC at least doublecheck new optimal target berth positioning in this jiggleroom. Not insignificant at peak at tightest headways in ATC-tightened era.
This could be done by anybody as a guerilla study, maybe visit Union TTC after midnight with a measuring tape, and do it for TTC, or write an article.
Ideally, TTC should be doing this, to doublecheck for a freebie optimization opportunity. But fun math/geometry exercise. Takers?