Quote:
Originally Posted by milomilo
Could you expand on this?
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At the start, the system wasn't responsive. Even if the train wasn't full, and people were still loading, the doors would start closing at 24 seconds. If the train was still unloading at 24 seconds, the doors would close. Schedule adherence was placed above all else, to the point that those efforts hurt schedule adherence. For customers used to overriding robust bus doors, this caused an Ottawa unique problem. In the end would customers rather have a one train wait at a forced transfer caused by the trains falling behind, or a shutdown caused by a few bad actors trying to override the train's efforts to adhere to schedule? There just wasn't resilience built in.
Imagine instead that the driver was in control for the entire in station stage (or had the option to be), and then solely released the LRT to the automatic control to travel to the next station when the doors were closed. Sure, maybe they would fall behind at busy stations. But the dwell could be less elsewhere.