rbt
Senior Member
The problem remains that there are authorities who see light rail vehicles as only a single vehicle, and ignore the number of passengers onboard the said vehicle.
I'm hopeful that the new GTA model (other cities will get one too) will help solve this. The old/current model was too simple and only dealt with large objects; it was horrible for people flow or even capacity limits (it would happily give Danforth numbers that cause Yonge to carry 50k pphpd, well beyond capacity).
The new mechanism is effectively particle flow which is enough to deal with people, capacity limits, and relatively fine-scale obstructions like lane narrowing or cyclists. It'll take a bit of time but traffic engineers will eventually get their hands on this and be able to do a better job at configuring for moving people.
Metrolinx is getting it first but it ought to trickle down to the more general traffic engineers eventually. Without this type of granularity in the tools they're stuck with guess, measure effects, tune again, and repeat; continued funding cuts in these departments would never allow for that.
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