cplchanb
Senior Member
Comon, all this what ifs are getting nowhere. As mentioned earlier the colors or lack there of is the least of our concerns right now. They still need to finish the line!But there is nothing to stop it if anyone turns.
Comon, all this what ifs are getting nowhere. As mentioned earlier the colors or lack there of is the least of our concerns right now. They still need to finish the line!But there is nothing to stop it if anyone turns.
These things are ugly as sin but luckily something like seat fabrics and paint jobs can be changed later down the road, so no big deal.
Build this thing asap and later we can swap the seats out for red and blue when they need replacing and repaint a nicer colour when thats needed too.
Comon, all this what ifs are getting nowhere. As mentioned earlier the colors or lack there of is the least of our concerns right now. They still need to finish the line!
Can these actually be "repainted" in the conventional sense? Or is it a plastic component that is ordered to colour spec and replaced.
Picture. I wanna see a picture.I find it funny that the sign for the Eglinton Maintenance and Storage Facility has the MBTA logo on it.
Picture. I wanna see a picture.
This is absolutely not what the staff said at the open houses, nor what the presentation materials stated at them, either. The surface stops would all be operated as if they were part of the streetcar network - if there is no one waiting at the stop, or requests a stop from onboard, the vehicle continues through.
Dan
From the EMSF Open House yesterday:
I always thought sand was pumped in from the top, because, you know, gravity. Didn't expect it to get pumped through a tiny port beside the door.
They fill them with sand at Leslie barns before they go out for service, the older fleet gets filed by the drivers at stations when needed.Judging by the sand you see in the TTC Flexity streetcars sometimes, then they do still manually fill them some times.
Do the TTC cars have such a port?




