steveintoronto
Superstar
In gist, yes. In practice, 'vanilla subway trains' have massive and heavy bogies that modern 'metros' don't. There's a reason that so many cities are using them, and light weight is one. Overhead catenary also allows (in higher voltage supplies, especially 15 and 25 kVAC) a much lower 'source impedance' for the motors. The easiest analogy for most in understanding this is running a table saw on 120v, and noting the time it takes to accelerate to speed from start, and then rewiring it 240 v. Startup time is a fraction of what it was, roughly 1/4 all other parameters remaining equal. Now scale that accordingly up to 25kV from 600-750 VDC third rail. Although AC and DC won't scale in most scenarios in a linear product against each other, the scale factor of 33.3 (or more) should give you an idea. Reformed DC at best will halve that, so 17+ times squared inversely applied to the 'source impedance'. There's good reason things have moved forward.They are exactly the same trains except they get they power on top as opposed to underneath.
There is always the option of 1500 VDC catenary as is used for Metrolinx LRTs, and is used on some metro systems (IIRC, Montreal's REM is being built this way) and the older Oz city systems and other nations use it still, but it's a legacy of older times.
What Metrolinx has indicated for "RER" is 25 kVAC, the de-facto international standard for modern electrification of trains.
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