ZE86 Posté(e) 1 septembre 2010 Partager Posté(e) 1 septembre 2010 I have wondered about this for quite sometime. A recent trip to europe only made me more aware of it. Why do we, in Montreal, have such large suburban trains? This in comparison to paris for example. here the new bimodal locomotives for the AMT as oposed to this: Pictured above is a Parisian RER train. They run on their own tracks as well as SNCF tracks. They appear to be between a conventional metro and a regular train in size. Meanwhile our AMT trains seem to be regional trains. I wondered why are OUR suburban trains so large and cumbersome, requiring locomotives and what not, while elsewhere they are light and quick. It certainly is not a distance issue, as the parisian RERs run MUCH farther distances than our AMT trains. It does not seem to be a cost issue either. And while i am aware that not all AMT lines are electrified, they very well should be. the whole point of public transport (as i see it) is to move people in a way that reduces congestion and pollution. I use the paris example, but other cities as copenhaggen or london have similar suburban trains to those in paris. Citer Lien vers le commentaire Partager sur d’autres sites More sharing options...
cprail Posté(e) 1 septembre 2010 Partager Posté(e) 1 septembre 2010 Transport Canada and North American laws on rail transport in general restricts the trains that can be used here primarily by their weight. Only very heavy trains are allowed to be used if the track is or might be used by any other kind of train (other passenger trains or, particularly, freight trains). As an example, Ottawa's O-train are actually ex-Deutsch Bahn Talent trains. In order to be used in Canada, the entire train line had to be shut down to any other type of traffic. Both ends are protected by derails. Citer Lien vers le commentaire Partager sur d’autres sites More sharing options...
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