Quote:
Originally Posted by Metro-One
No, that one is interesting, I mean the global news garbage reporting video.
At least so far this missinformation has not infected those higher up who actually decide and build our rail projects (outside of Surrey at least).
The Canada Line became automated and grade separated (despite a fight for it to be at grade LRT).
The Evergreen Line is being built as a skytrain extension (despite the LRT plan put in place several years ago).
And the City of Vancouver is already doing drill hole for their SUBWAY extension of skytrain. (This is one of the few things that I strongly agree with the city of Vancouver on).
Seems only Surrey has been bitten by the LRT bug.
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In doing the research for the video(s) on the previous page regarding Global News, I noticed a pattern.
If you want to frame TRANSLINK in a bad light, always bring on Jordon Bateman, because he will make up a story to fit the narrative.
But to frame the "Skytrain" in a bad light you have to scratch much harder, because no transportation engineer is going to find anything bad to say about the Skytrain that doesn't frame the other options in worse light.
This is just re-statement from what I put in the second half of my video on the previous page but:
1) Bombardier
a) Makes only one train? False. They make 5 rail turn-key rail systems
- Movia Metro (aka Subway)
- Innovia Metro (aka Skytrain)
- Innovia Monorail
- Innovia Automated People Mover (APM)
- Flexity LRT
(and they also make other rail systems and airplanes, but this isn't a Bombardier marketing video)
b) Only Vancouver and Toronto use it? False.
Bombardier's own website lists 6 reference projects
The fact that Vancouver is on that list and the Scarborough RT isn't deflates the "obsolete" argument.
c) Only Bombardier can build the Skytrain cars? False
Changchun RVC produced the Innovia Metro (LIM model) cars for Beijing Airport Express.
2. The Age of the Skytrain
a) is somehow a problem? NOPE. The Metropolitan Railway opened in 1863. What does it run? Bombardier Movia rolling stock as of 2012. The Northern Line opened in 1890 runs Seltrac Automatic Train operation. The Jubilee line opened in 1979 ALSO runs Seltrac Automatic Train operation.
b) Is upgradeable?
The Mark I, II and III are three separate generations that run on the same LIM tracks and same Seltrac software. (Omitting the fact that that Bombardier doesn't own Seltrac and offers it's own solution)
3. The technology is somehow obsolete?
a) Linear Induction motors (LIM) - Are used by more than the Bombardier Innovia Metro. They are used by Maglev's (3 in operation, 5 being built) and in the proposed Hyperloop. Let alone all the Asian subways. Guangzhou Metro line 4/5/6 have 260km of LIM rail (number was cribbed from Daryl's page)
b) Automated Train Operation - Thales, Bombardier, Siemens and Alstrom all make their own ATO products. There are 70 Automated-capable lines around the world (I put "capable" because I don't have the time to verify every line, and went with Wikipedia's list and if they are Unattended.) Seltrac itself is used on 50 lines (but which lines are run driverless, automatic or just ATP again requires verification.) The point being that is a technology that was invented for the skytrain that is revolutionizing ALL forms of rail transport, not just the Skytrain.
c) Guideways, Standard Gauge, and third-rail power.
- Guideways are used by BRT, LRT, Elevated Subways and Monorails
- The LIM in combination with Third-rail power allows for smaller (and thus cheaper) tunnels.
- The TTC is really the odd-man out, with both their Subway and Streetcars (Light Rail) running Toronto-gauge (some of the new lines are Standard gauge)
4. Alternatives are more expensive.
- Restate LIM benefits with tunnels (LIM subway 4.3meters loading gauge, Rotary subway 5.7m loading gauge, LRT, 6 meter loading gauge)
(I combined a diagram from Daryl's website with one I found on a light rail engineering page that had clear measurements)
- Grade-separation vs at-grade
The human cost of at-grade is not considered when light rail lines are proposed by Urban Planners. Urban Designers like Patrick Condon don't like rapid-transit because it encourages people to live away from where they work. In included a video from a Calgary C-train collision where the RCMP talk about the human cost. (Here's a different edit of the same C-train accident news video
http://globalnews.ca/video/2294082/calga...y-awareness-after-2-fatalities-in-2-days )
- Automated vs Driver-operated
I go back to the Bombardier page with the 5 different trains. This is all stuff that SSP knows.
- Third Rail Power vs Overhead Catenary
Again, SSP knows this already. It's a space/engineering choice. Both can be critically damaged with bad designs or ignoring maintenance.
- Light rail accidents and delays are frequent
(Video from Seconds from disaster from the Houston LRT)
(Video from Seattle)
(Video from Portland Trimet Accident meeting in 2010 where a LRT driver mentions "hundreds of accidents" and the two he's been in were left-hand turn accidents)
- Subways are fast, frequent and nearly accident free
(Video from 1995 TTC accident)
(Video from "F" train accident in NYC 2014)
(Photo from MTA Commuter rail fireball in 2015)
- Bombardier Innovia elsewhere
Brake fire on Kuala Lumpur Kelana Jaya line. No injuries. Two incidents in one week. 2015
- Canada Line electrical fire from 2014 (The line being only 5 years old)
No injuries.
- News item from earlier this year with the Breaker trip. No injuries.
Overall, the my video was a rush job to counter the Global News assertion that "only Vancouver" uses it. At some point I may do something more focused, but there's only so much you can put in a video before the person watching it falls asleep from stuff they already know.