A 6264
Active Member
Edit: I have been corrected; the collision occurred on Thursday, 5 days ago.
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I'm not sure what you are reading, but the Star article says the accident happened on Thursday. Which jives with the previous report from Smallspy, who says that the testing has been stopped since that day.HOLD ON, HOLD ON! According to the news, the collision happened "Tuesday" which I presume means today, not last week. But we have been noticing testing was stopped all weekend, plus Monday. So the collision is NOT what caused testing to stop. Something else happened, that we don't know about!
Sure, just tell that to Mike Harris.Just build a real, heavy rail SUBWAY under Eglinton Avenue in Toronto. Forget this tram train trouble it is not worth it and will never work as originally imagined.
You are correct! I read a different article which said the Star published their article on Tuesday (today), and misread it. My apologies!I'm not sure what you are reading, but the Star article says the accident happened on Thursday. Which jives with the previous report from Smallspy, who says that the testing has been stopped since that day.
We tried but the province cancelled it and buried the work that had been started.Just build a real, heavy rail SUBWAY under Eglinton Avenue in Toronto. Forget this tram train trouble it is not worth it and will never work as originally imagined.
That doesn't even begin to make sense. If we could tunnel for an LRT under Eglinton we could have tunneled for a proper subway.We tried but the province cancelled it and buried the work that had been started.
So it was either LRT or nothing
This is not a "LRT" problem but a "subway" problem. This issue has something to do with the CBTC signaling problem which is used on many subways lines around the world.That doesn't even begin to make sense. If we could tunnel for an LRT under Eglinton we could have tunneled for a proper subway.
We could have restarted construction on the Eglinton subway had David Miller not been peddling his "Transit City" garbage.
And yes, Mike Harris was wrong to cancel the Eglinton West line.
An Eglinton subway would never have made it past Don Mills, even in this round of transit building, and most likely not past Yonge. There was also no movement for anything on Eglinton until Transit City.That doesn't even begin to make sense. If we could tunnel for an LRT under Eglinton we could have tunneled for a proper subway.
We could have restarted construction on the Eglinton subway had David Miller not been peddling his "Transit City" garbage.
And yes, Mike Harris was wrong to cancel the Eglinton West line.
it wasn't Mike Harris that Kill Eglinton, it was the city that did It.That doesn't even begin to make sense. If we could tunnel for an LRT under Eglinton we could have tunneled for a proper subway.
We could have restarted construction on the Eglinton subway had David Miller not been peddling his "Transit City" garbage.
And yes, Mike Harris was wrong to cancel the Eglinton West line.
From what smallspy describes the problem, it doesn't sound like a hardware issue. Through simple train detection (axels shorting the rails) you can easily detect a train is there without any fancy sensor. A train would not start moving on its own unless it has proper communication with the master control computer. Trains would not collide if it knows another train is already there AND blocks are properly mapped.I'm surprised that in 2025 they haven't commoditized ATO software and the various parts that interact with it. Shouldn't it be a bunch of standard components (actuators, sensors, control circuits) you plug into a standard system and then define system speed and timing limits for? Two trains on tracks (no ability to steer, two dimensional plane, limited intersections and switches) can't be kept from colliding? I don't get it.
If the collision was in the yard, wouldn't those trains be under local control, with the operator having to manually drive their vehicle into another one? Perhaps the operator hadn't noticed a track switch setting?Since trains have collided, that usually means the blocks are not mapped correctly. Maybe the master control thought the train was further away or on a different track cause SOMEONE programmed it incorrectly. What he was saying sound like they need to manually check that each block is actually mapped to the trackage it describes. If they need to do this for every foot of the 19 km line, it will take some time.
No, there are sections of the yard where trains drive themselves.If the collision was in the yard, wouldn't those trains be under local control, with the operator having to manually drive their vehicle into another one? Perhaps the operator hadn't noticed a track switch setting?




