AlvinofDiaspar
Moderator
Not to press the point, but yeah who else is there?
It really is just Bombardier or Siemens.
Then perhaps Siemens it should be?
AoD
Not to press the point, but yeah who else is there?
It really is just Bombardier or Siemens.
Not to press the point, but yeah who else is there?
It really is just Bombardier or Siemens.
Maybe there's a better way to manage the tender/RFQ process at the outset of such a project, but I'm skeptical that there's really a more cost- and/or time-efficient way to approach projects this far down the line (thinking of Eglinton LRT and new streetcars, specifically)—I think we go to battle with the supplier army we have, at this point.
Said supplier just screwed their customer over for the last four years with nonsense about accelerated schedules when it was all a blantant lie - to think that they are reliable or worthy at this point is probably patently unwise - and rest assured, I wouldn't trust them not to cut and run if they couldn't make a profit out of it by the end of it all.
AoD
But not under this ownership, and not with outsourcing to Mexico. You can't refer to decades of factory performance when the new owners have only been there since 1992.I don't know why everyone seems to think we were "blinded" by a low-ball bid from Bombardier, and that we should have known they'd screw it up. They've been mostly painlessly producing our transit vehicles at that factory for decades, how could we have possibly had anything but similar expectations, even with the lowest price bid?
But not under this ownership, and not with outsourcing to Mexico. You can't refer to decades of factory performance when the new owners have only been there since 1992.
AIUI, with the exception of the TR subways (delivered 2 years late) and <20 Flexity streetcars, Bombardier hasn't made anything for the TTC.
that's why the TTC should have cancelled a long tiem ago with all these delays and Metrolinx seeing that should have done the same. A resident brought it up at a community meeting about the LRT for crosstown and the issues with the TTC and Bombardier and it was dismissed - that Metrolinx had a handle on itGood question though, as always, the cancelling of contracts needs to take into account the implications that may have on overall timeline—it's always possible that cancellation winds up delaying the process even more than Bombardier's tardiness would/will.
Then perhaps Siemens it should be?
AoD
Given that the big piece of this week's announcement was replacing the Mexican frame assembly with Canadian, doesn't that mean at least there's a chance of decent performance in the future? The process of using both La Pocatière and Thunder Bay worked well enough for Bombardier for the T1 and TR cars.But not under this ownership, and not with outsourcing to Mexico. You can't refer to decades of factory performance when the new owners have only been there since 1992.
Where do you get 2 years late from? The original 39 trainsets were to be delivered by end of 2012. Trainset 39 arrived in July 2013. That's 6 months, not 2 years. Since that initial ramp-up, deliveries have been regular - and TTC has delayed the schedule themselves, with modifications and further additions (knowing there was no urgency after the first 60 sets were delivered).AIUI, with the exception of the TR subways (delivered 2 years late),
Other than every subway car TTC operates?Bombardier hasn't made anything for the TTC.
and why agree to paying 25% to cancel? stupidityThat can get expensive.
http://business.financialpost.com/n...eful-tube-project-nothing-short-of-a-disaster
To paraphrase from above....
In 2011 Bombardier’s transportation division awarded a contract to London UK's signalling system. Bombardier's bid said would complete it by 2018 for 354 million pounds. Once Bombardier's screw ups were apparent, the was cancelled in 2013, costing the city 85 million pounds, or 25% of the contract cost. The contract was then awarded to Thales SA, but will five years late and cost 886 million pounds more than originally planned!
The moral of the story? Don't be blinded by a low ball bid from Bombardier, instead choose the better supplier at the onset, thus avoiding most delays and cost overruns, and pay a fair price at the beginning.
Well said, I missed that one.Just a slight quibble - T1 were also by BBD.
AoD
And yet there aren't major delays with either the TR or the GO cars assembled in Thunder Bay, with parts from Quebec. Surely, it's not a Thunder Bay issue, but a Mexico issue?As the order was placed before/during the 1992 changeover, perhaps Bombardier's culture of failure hadn't set in yet?
And yet there aren't major delays with either the TR or the GO cars assembled in Thunder Bay, with parts from Quebec. Surely, it's not a Thunder Bay issue, but a Mexico issue?
Eglinton Station bus terminal this afternoon




