APTA-2048
Senior Member
They probably will, but it might be noticeable. Like when they removed the tables.Wonder will they patch the holes? I try to sit at the first seat at the top floor to avoid the stupid barriers
They probably will, but it might be noticeable. Like when they removed the tables.Wonder will they patch the holes? I try to sit at the first seat at the top floor to avoid the stupid barriers
Metrolinx is not removing these barriers because they are known to be a visionary and they know that there could be another pandemic 50 years later. They are already prepared for that pandemic.Yes. Apparently it’s a lot of work to remove. So they’ll stay until other work comes up that necessitates the car being removed from service for an extended period of time.
What's odd is that it seems now the Barrie Weekend Train trips are alternating between 10 and 12 cars respectively.Increasing the trains from 6 car to 10 car at least would help tremendously. Hopefully this gets more demand to warrant for a full Kitchener trip. Even if its just every 3 hours like the Allandale trips on the Barrie line, that could help a lot more than what is happening right now.
This could be removed in less than 30 seconds.Yes. Apparently it’s a lot of work to remove. So they’ll stay until other work comes up that necessitates the car being removed from service for an extended period of time.
We need more weekend service overall. The amount of bikes I have seen on jointed up on just one side alone per train car has become ridiculous.
Increasing the trains from 6 car to 10 car at least would help tremendously.
So, self-contradictory. Thirty seconds x thousands of barriers = a lot of work.This could be removed in less than 30 seconds.
They are just locked together with screws through the chairs.
I would do it right now if I had a drill.
It is only a lot of work in the sense that there are thousands of these.
View attachment 474890
Maybe the plan is to do both? The way I interpreted the explanation from Metrolinx was that it’s wasn’t so much a matter of funds, but minimizing the time a car is out of service.Didn't Metrolinx just close a tender for repainting a few hundred BiLevels? Instead of throwing away dollars like that, they could instead use those funds to pay someone to remove the plastic barriers from the entire fleet (not just the cars that are being repainted; because removing screws costs much less than painting a giant rail car does) and materially improve passenger comfort in a way a new livery never will.
I would assume (hope) that the cars that are being repainted will lose the barriers, but the tender only calls for a couple of hundred cars to be done. What I meant is that instead of paying for paints and materials for a couple of hundred cars, it would surely be better to use that money to instead remove the barriers from the whole fleet and leave the paint as-is, since the only costs there would be labour and tools.Maybe the plan is to do both? The way I interpreted the explanation from Metrolinx was that it’s wasn’t so much a matter of funds, but minimizing the time a car is out of service.
So, self-contradictory. Thirty seconds x thousands of barriers = a lot of work.
I see no bit head on the pins into the armrest so they might be bolted from underneath.
Seeing as trainsets need to be out-of-service (or broken up) for the removal, maybe holes filled, any burred edges finished, etc. perhaps MX could spend a pile 'o' dough on overtime to do it overnight at the various yards. I'm sure the overnight crews are just drinking coffee anyway. /s
The one next to me on the train yesterday, had a broken rivet, and was coming loose. I'd think they'll be gone sooner than later once failures become common.Metrolinx is not removing these barriers because they are known to be a visionary and they know that there could be another pandemic 50 years later. They are already prepared for that pandemic.
And possibly contract termination costs, depending on the terms.since the only costs there would be labour and tools.
The problem is not necessarily that there are thousands of them, the problem is that thousands of them are spread over hundreds of train car, which cannot be out of service at once, or probably even in a convenient order. So it will take a lot of shifts to remove them all.So, self-contradictory. Thirty seconds x thousands of barriers = a lot of work.
I see no bit head on the pins into the armrest so they might be bolted from underneath.