We're not talking about Link as being an attractive technology that we should use in this situation... are we? Link took an age to construct and has been done for at least one if not more than one lengthy maintenance full-outages. To my mind it's a rattly half measure which if the Feds didn't have their hand so far into GTAA's pocket might have been a self propelled vehicle instead.
I haven't used the City Centre Airport tunnel yet but for comparison purposes that looks like about 175m vs 500m for a Bay pedestrian tunnel?
I don't like the use of the Link design, and perhaps the whole loop design should be scrapped.
The bottom line, of my intended "comparison", is cable cars covers a huge universe, some with short waits and huge ppphpd.
What seems to be suggested is a high-capacity horizontal looped cable car, not a diagonal back-and-fourth cable car. Even comparing to Link is still bananas-to-apples, but it is more apples-vs-apples than an aerial tram.
In other words:
Why do they call it a funicular?
When it does have more in common with a variety of horizontal cable cars (good and bad). It only invites comparisons with low-capacity long-wait aerial trams and gondolas, when it should be properly compared with other cable cars (both good and bad).
Currently, it looks like:
Looped: Yes
Back-and-fourth: No
Vehicle count: 4
Station count: 4
Diagonal Slope: No
Aerial: No
Vehicle size: Usually larger
Vehicle speed: Usually faster
Capacity per day: Usually larger
Assessment: Traditional looped horizontal cable car technology
Which is a looped level cable car route (with a tiny grade) -- not a common diagonal funicular:
Looped: No
Back-and-fourth: Yes
Vehicle count: 1 or 2
Station count: 2
Diagonal Slope: Yes
Aerial: No
Vehicle size: Usually smaller
Vehicule speed: Usually slower
Capacity per day: Usually smaller
Assessment: Common funicular
We all, simultaneously, should find the fastest, best cable cars (worldwide), and rip that apart, debate more efficiently, and love or hate it.
Sure, 2-station funiculars and gondolas are common substitutes for each other for a mountain, but, rheoretically, where's the mountain?
They are technologically identical (rail based, cable propelled) in many ways but the word "funicular" creates different wild comparisions (to much more unrelated technology) because of semantics.
Heck, throw in elevators too -- unmanned automated vertical rail-based cable-propelled peoplemovers with multiple stations (floors) which is a better (and less silly) comparison than aerial trams in this case. Even many (not all) unmanned cable cars worldwide behave like horizontal elevators!
And, like LRT vs Steeetcars is slowly fuzzying with the Spadina LRT/streetcar, but neither is an aerial ropeway. (The recent pantograph tests checked off another "slowly becoming an LRT" checkbox. And eventually better traffic priority, rapid transit speeds, and level boarding.)
It looks like a duck, quacks like a duck, it is a traditional cable car, not a diagonal funicular, in semantics. We'd all best debate and rip apart accordingly. Literally, addressing to them: Why was the word "funicular" chosen? This is a duck!
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