Allandale25
Senior Member
^ Who needs a personal trainer or a gym membership when UT needs its fix of transit and train pics? 
id take that with a heavy grain of salt. they laid down many sections of track on the stoufville line and then they abandoned them indefinitely. its still sitting there not fully connected.Going to be fun to watch them tie in this new 4th track where it meets the Barrie Line in the south. Some interesting construction picture opportunities. cc @crs1026
Also refer to how long they piled ballast for the second track through Guelph, and installed track at Guelph Platform 2 without tamping.id take that with a heavy grain of salt. they laid down many sections of track on the stoufville line and then they abandoned them indefinitely. its still sitting there not fully connected.
Every single one except capital cost (and even that is debatable given the lifespan of a concrete tie vs wood).So i am assuming the concrete ties are better for various reasons, what are those reasons?
So durabilityEvery single one except capital cost (and even that is debatable given the lifespan of a concrete tie vs wood).
Smoother, stabler (with regular trackbed maintenance, which we don't generally have), quieter, longer-lasting, able to hold higher speeds, etc.So durability
Longevity
Stuff like that...
Is it a quicker install? smoother ride? Quieter?
Not quite.Every single one except capital cost (and even that is debatable given the lifespan of a concrete tie vs wood).
Producing concrete ties also emits a lot of carbon dioxide. Remember when Canadians still cared about that?
so what happened on the stoufville line from this weekend's shutdown? any meaningful progress on the line?
i did see the yellow track machinery has moved north of milliken. i was hoping theyd make the connection to the station since they already have premade sections just ready to go for months.I didn’t see any new track laid this morning. I’m unsure if it’s a cognitive bias where I’m looking for changes that didn’t actually occur, but ballast north of Milliken station is a different colour (light vs. dark grey). Perhaps there was some preparatory work done ahead of the November construction closure.
The advertisement Metrolinx released on Facebook and YouTube stated they were “fixing and repairing” track this weekend, but I don’t want to overweight the script of an advert from the communications team.
I believe the weekend was to perform maintenance on the newly activated western track between Kennedy and Agincourt. The track and ballast appears “dusty” suggesting there was work done to it before it’s brought into service. Also, there was two pieces of small equipment left on the “shoulder” of the rail corridor.
The railroad equipment that was formerly stored on the western track at Lawrence SRT station is no longer there.
Other updates
Finch-Kennedy Grade Separation
Piling is about to begin.
LSE Corridor
It may be cognitive bias, but the t-wall construction to rebuild the berm seems to be progressing at a quicker pace than last year.
However, I don’t see how the third (or fourth) tracks will fit between USRC and LSE corridor until East Harbour is complete. If additional tracks aren’t operational until the Queen/Dundas/Logan bridges is there capacity to increase service on the LSE and Stouffville lines?
I just passed the equipment on my commute home. I wrote my reply too early!i did see the yellow track machinery has moved north of milliken. i was hoping theyd make the connection to the station since they already have premade sections just ready to go for months.




