by BandA
Remember the first Bluebird to go through the brand new Harvard Station towards Alewife? And the ?Ashmont ?Mattapan loop was too tight for even PCC cars? People are always screwing up the clearances one way or another.
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type 7 3704 wrote: ↑Thu Oct 31, 2024 5:03 pm I visited the mockup, and was honestly quite disappointed. There's significantly less interior room on the sections with trucks and seating (compared to Type 7/8/9) since the interior walls are significantly thicker (almost a foot thick). The aisles are narrow, and the seats are significantly shallower as a result. Compared to a CAF Urbos 3 (which these are reportedly derived from), there's simply far less interior room. Not sure what happened here.The whole purpose of the public debut of the mockup was to solicit feedback from the public. Be sure to let them know how you feel about it!
diburning wrote: ↑Fri Nov 01, 2024 5:42 pm The whole purpose of the public debut of the mockup was to solicit feedback from the public. Be sure to let them know how you feel about it!Back in the day a mockup was built well before true metal was bent. This is end of 2024 with the pilot cars in the Spring of 2026.
Suitable for all types of urban environments, the Urbos is offered in three standard widths: 2300mm, 2400mm and 2650mm. If required, it is also possible to provide a bespoke width.Since the design also is available with axles fixed to the car, or on flexible bogies, it's entirely possible that the mockup is showing that, to navigate some part of the system, the MBTA needed a design with flexible bogies to allow them to avoid a narrower width (Wikipedia states the Type 10s are 2600mm wide) while being 100% low floor, and that results in obvious areas of perceived narrowness in the interior design to fit the bogies.
MBTA3247 wrote: ↑Sat Nov 02, 2024 4:24 pm Here's a photo of the interior of the 100% low-floor LRVs in Kansas City, taken from one end of the car. These are 3-section, 2-truck cars. Where the trucks are, you can see that it goes from 2x2 seating to 1x1, with the space where the missing seats would be taken up by the trucks. Worth noting that the seats by the trucks are transverse, not longitudinal, so the aisle isn't being narrowed by the presence of people's legs and feet.I saw a report from somebody who met Phillip Eng when visiting the mock-up and said that he asked about this issue. The response was that they would need to use the configuration pictured in the KC Streetcar image to avoid the narrow aisles and it would mean giving up too many seats.