Aplus23
Active Member
I did notice that, accelerating on the green very nicelyThe ones I saw today seemed to be keeping up with or passing traffic on takeoff too.
I did notice that, accelerating on the green very nicelyThe ones I saw today seemed to be keeping up with or passing traffic on takeoff too.
There is no reason for it to be the Citadis.Will the expected new order for the west extension be for more Flexities or for the Citadis models found on other LRT projects?
In the 1950's, the TTC had different models of PCCs, Peter WItts, and very old wooden TCR streetcars. Should be able to mix and match the Flexities and the Citadis light rail vehicles. Just as long as they can fit the platforms.There is no reason for it to be the Citadis.
They are dimensionally compatible, but I thought the ones they have ordered so far are using a different signalling system that's incompatible.In the 1950's, the TTC had different models of PCCs, Peter WItts, and very old wooden TCR streetcars. Should be able to mix and match the Flexities and the Citadis light rail vehicles. Just as long as they can fit the platforms.
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My understanding is that the Flexity's days are numbered.Will the expected new order for the west extension be for more Flexities or for the Citadis models found on other LRT projects?
They seem to be building Flexities for existing contracts or orders, but new orders seem to be designated Citadis. For example Toronto and Berlin are still getting Flexities, but new orders like Philadelphia and Quebec are getting Citadis.I think it depends on Alstoms long term plans, they have two different tram models that are now basically competitors. I figure long term they'll end both families in favor of a new one that combines.tech from both
Two of the (Line 6-style) Citadises may be longer than 3 Flexitys - but the front and rear doors are set further away from the cap on the Citadis. I doubt it would make much difference.I thought the issue with running both Citadis and Flexity on line 5 was that the Citadis is significantly longer than Flexity, meaning that 3-cars of Flexity fully utilizes the platform while 2 cars of Citadis would not.
The platforms are.90m right? That's the same length as the confederation line's platforms above ground. The noses of the train extend beyond the above ground platforms in Ottawa, it's just lined up so that all the doors are on the platform.Two of the (Line 6-style) Citadises may be longer than 3 Flexitys - but the front and rear doors are set further away from the cap on the Citadis. I doubt it would make much difference.
I think for operational reasons they'd stick to the same car length - and likely the same model give the maintenance complexities and maintenance contacts.