RedRocket191
Senior Member
It was an inside joke. I'm sorry
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Presto isn't to be fully rolled out by TTC until 2017 or so. Cancellation of the streetcar order has delayed the streetcar roll-out until 2010-2012 or so ... but I'm not sure this cancellation process is very good in the interim ...
Could always go back to the old system. Put conductors back on the vehicles, and use the current POP system. If you need proof of payment, you go straight to the conductor and pay them. The union would love it!
I was only kidding - but wow, did Toronto only get rid of conductors in 1989? I'd have thought it would have atleast been the 1940s or 1950s!Lets wake up and remember that it is 2009 not 1989.
Does it make any sense for the province to buy (at fmv) the old streetcars from the TTC, have a company (Bormbardier?) refurb/rehab/upgrade the streetcars and then sell them to other municipalities that are considering streetcars.
Not a bad idea, but unfortunately the CLRVs are not accessible and that pretty much puts the kibosh on any plan to use them after the fleet has been replaced with the new streetcars
Yes, it's impossible, or at least extremely impractical.
The cost of refitting the CLRV/ALRV fleet for accessibility is prohibitive. The biggest issue, I think, is that the floors are a few feet above the ground. It makes more sense to purchase a completely new fleet of low-floor vehicles than to upgrade these aging machines that are already at the end of their projected lifespans.
If you've ever been to the TTC Harvey Shop during Doors Open, you'll understand how expensive it is to just to maintain these beasts. Refit is out of the question.
The raised platform idea is possible, and it would probably be significantly cheaper to update all streetcar platforms across the city than to purchase a whole new fleet of streetcars.
The fact remains, however, that these vehicles are aging. The poor Harvey Shop would eventually become overwhelmed with the task of maintaining scores of aging and worn-down streetcars with all custom hand-made parts (this is what they do there). It's also expensive, because it requires more and more hours of labour the older the streetcars get, plus you're employing specifically skilled labour for the task.
At least I now know I am not a complete idiot.
I was not suggesting that the TTC should do this rather than the new fleet. With the amount of ridership/use the vehicles get I would imagine that new makes a ton of sense.
I was just thinking that rather than scrap these they could be refitted to introduce streetcar service into new areas as opposed to buses...then you could specifically design the stops/stations to match these vehicles.