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Via a CityNews reporter covering today's Metrolinx board meeting where Crosstown LRT was discussed (thread):

- "Physical construction is complete"
- System integration testing is 84 per cent, a year ago it was below 10
- 5/46 certificates on the design and work received, "many" in development
- 36/40 occupancy certificates received
- "Stress test" done at the end of July, 75 per cent of the fleet ran in 28 different formations over four days straight
- Tests "weren't perfect" but went "exceptionally well," "lots of learning, things to fix"
- Led to the beginning of LRT operator training in mid-August
- "Infrastructure readiness was always the issue under dispute that had to be fixed, particularly the signalling and train control system"
- 8th version of signalling software system issued to "improve the operationality as well as the safety and punctuality of the system"
- Latest software needed for revenue service demonstration "later in the year"
- Opening date will be announced three months ahead of first customer service date (repeated in recent months)
- No date provided now (based on the above, opening likely won't happen before 2025)
- Emergency services milestone test held earlier in September, train stopped outside Laird station in the tunnel, simulated an evacuation of riders, up to 16 procedures tested, called it "really successful"
- "This is steady as she goes"

Another executive spoke on training:
- At the end of July, all 29 trainers finished the "train the trainer" program
- "Full swing" of training for 95 TTC operators, divided into three cohorts
- "Deep into training" of the first cohort, will follow with other two cohorts

Video here @ 24:50 mark. 2nd executive at 34 min mark

"
 
Wifi is just not intended for public use. the IEEE.802.11 protocol was intended for small office and home environments. It was an extension of the ethernet Local Area Network system. It modified the cordless phone radio frequencies to wirelessly transmit over short distances. There have been upgrades over the years but they are all a bandaid solution and the technology was never meant for public access like in the TTC subways. The protocol was not designed for long range or having many devices connect and disconnect with it. Its riddled with security flaws. The range is only 100 feet or so from each access point, you need so much infrastructure just to cover a small area. The systems become quickly out of date and then it is prohibitively expensive to upgrade because again, you need so much infrastructure to get it to work.

We have a communications system designed for this task. Its called 5G. Yes, you need a subscription to access it. If you are concerned about people living below poverty line having access, it would be far better use of money to take that 17 million dollars and give every poor person a free data sim card than build out a public wifi network.
 
I have never understood why anyone would willingly use a public wifi network anyway. Hardly seems worth the risk. Read a book!

In all my years of taking the subway I rarely found the wifi to work. Maybe if there was a service delay and I was on a platform. But on train? Useless.

Why are we obsessed with perfection in the wifi/5G/whatever comms when the subway's PA system is so terrible? And the next train displays so tiny?

I'm not proposing to stand in the way of progress, but maybe a prerequisite condition ought to be functionality to broadcast all subway service announcements and status to a phone app? And enough capability in the control center to actually transmit timely reporting? An overlay of the traffic control screen so we can see where the backed up trains are?

- Paul
(Missing my old Blackberry with its joystick button - for years my subway amusement was Brick Breaker. At least that worked down there.)
 
Other than it being 300 metres (or more depending where the bus stops) from the subway station.
piu
They should extend the subway another stop, to get to the GO terminal. :)
They should have put in one of those airport style people movers! But I reckon it would take 3 years to commission.:rolleyes:
 
One of the biggest outstanding issues with opening the Crosstown is or was software defects in the signalling and train control system. Could there be problems with "talking" via WiFi or cellular or whatever communication links they are using? Must be something us "folks" don't need to know.
 
Via a CityNews reporter covering today's Metrolinx board meeting where Crosstown LRT was discussed (thread):

- "Physical construction is complete"
- System integration testing is 84 per cent, a year ago it was below 10
- 5/46 certificates on the design and work received, "many" in development
- 36/40 occupancy certificates received
- "Stress test" done at the end of July, 75 per cent of the fleet ran in 28 different formations over four days straight
- Tests "weren't perfect" but went "exceptionally well," "lots of learning, things to fix"
- Led to the beginning of LRT operator training in mid-August
- "Infrastructure readiness was always the issue under dispute that had to be fixed, particularly the signalling and train control system"
- 8th version of signalling software system issued to "improve the operationality as well as the safety and punctuality of the system"
- Latest software needed for revenue service demonstration "later in the year"
- Opening date will be announced three months ahead of first customer service date (repeated in recent months)
- No date provided now (based on the above, opening likely won't happen before 2025)
- Emergency services milestone test held earlier in September, train stopped outside Laird station in the tunnel, simulated an evacuation of riders, up to 16 procedures tested, called it "really successful"
- "This is steady as she goes"

Another executive spoke on training:
- At the end of July, all 29 trainers finished the "train the trainer" program
- "Full swing" of training for 95 TTC operators, divided into three cohorts
- "Deep into training" of the first cohort, will follow with other two cohorts
So in what month do you believe the new Line 5 will open?
 
After school finishes July 2025. Demand will be lower at this time to allow for eglinton to start while not as much frequency is needed and with good weather. Opening it in Winter will be a huge mistake.
I don't think opening in the winter weather will be the issue - given it will be the 4th winter they've been operating these cars on Eglinton already! And the almost identical cars used in Waterloo have had no issues with winter operations. And what is winter these days ... the grass was still green until about mid-February this year, and started turning green again a couple of weeks later. A lot of annuals in my garden simply kept growing in March instead of dying back or reseeding.

But I doubt they'll be ready until Spring anyhow, between the training and trial running. My money is on May 11, 2025. For both lines. We should have a pool! Winner doesn't have to see the ads. :)
 
It was always effing terrible.

In the past I've run personal tests, turned off my mobile data and tried just using the TCONNECT along the Line 2 from Yonge station to Kipling. It's not worth it. I can't verify but it always seemed like access points were only ever installed centrally on the platform, and quality drops off precipitously the closer you get to the tunnels (though that could be signal reflection bouncing off all the concrete causing SNR problems).

Many times it seemed the greater network didn't share sessions, or it dropped user sessions far too quickly, so moving between one and say three stations over would lose your session and you'd have to "log in" again. In my own TCONNECT testing *on the train*, reconnection when arriving into the station would take forever, and it would be lost instantly the second the train moved into the tunnel. Realistically, it was only about 10 seconds of barely usable time at each station. Yes, I get being in a massive metal tube didn't help, but it's one way people attempt to use the system.

Reception always appeared non-existent or absolutely terrible within the concourse areas of stations as well. So, suffice it to say, unless you were standing at the centre of the platform waiting for a train, it almost never made sense.

I have to imagine the $17m that would've been used would also have worked to improve the on-platform reception by adding additional access points. But long enough wait times warranting the need for shoddy wifi also brings light to the increased wait times that seem to be happening along the subway system in general.

Use that money and get more vehicles on the tracks. I'm tired of seeing "8 min" on sign while standing at a downtown subway platform at 3:45pm on a weekday.
 
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Fairbank station crews have moved their fencing surrounding the open space west of the station building at some point in the last week or so.

People are enjoying the space. I counted about 12 just last night outside of those using the planter to sit and wait for a northbound bus.

IMG_20240916_192259696_HDR.jpgIMG_20240916_192321249_HDR.jpgIMG_20240916_192438230_HDR.jpgIMG_20240916_192343696.jpg
 
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