smallspy
Senior Member
This has nothing to do with following through with the exception fallacy, and everything to do with real life observations and the state of the railway.Yes below 50-60 km/h there is virtually no acceleration difference. You are totally right about that. But the top end speed matters. Are we seriously "ummm actually"ing whether or not EMUs are faster in general than DMUs to accelerate to 100 km/h? The fallacy of exception much? If operating top speeds are above 140 km/h (as is on UP and GO), then the vast majority of EMUs are faster than DMUs, all other factors being equal.
The only hope of reducing travel times on the UP Express if two more stations are added is with EMUs; and maybe not just any old EMUs, maybe we need express metro rolling stock and other improvements:
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Exception, The Fallacy of
[glossary_exclude]The argument that a principle is contradicted (not merely qualified) by exceptions. The possibility of understanding an issue can be blocked by an instance in which it does not apply. Example: “Too many exams make children depressed and demoralised.” “Not at all—ourleanlogic.online
To consider:
- The line has a speed limit of 75mph for much of it, with lower speed limits in many places and for much of its distance. (Weston Tunnel, West Toronto Tunnel, Pearson Sub, crossovers at the Wice Plant, south of Queen Street, etc.)
- There are going to be many stops (what are we up to now, Bloor, St. Clair, Eglinton, Weston and Woodbine Racetrack?), which means that a LOT of the run is going to be spent accelerating or decelerating.
- Because of the above, the amount of time spent above the 35 or 40mph crossover point in which electric power is superior is limited.
Will an EMU operate over the line quicker? Yes.
Will it do so substantially quicker? It might save a minute or two or three end-to-end, but it's not going to match the schedule when there were only 2 stops.
To be clear, I am not arguing against EMUs - they are the superior choice and especially when it comes to stop-intensive commuter services. But there is a lot of rose-coloured glass wearing in terms of what their abilities are. We need to be realistic about things. The equipment currently used by the UPX is pretty good - EMUs are going to make it better, but they're not going to wave away all of the deficiencies in the line or how it is operated.
Dan




