crs1026
Superstar
Actually it does, and substantially, depending on how the particular form of PTC is manifest.
Lots of papers on-line, AAR hosts a number, but this one puts the use of PTC in a larger context, and this is how many advanced nations are now using it:
Lots of good info, but a bit off point. What we have on the Weston line will be good enough for a couple decades more, and it can accept a low-functionality PTC that merely enforces fixed block train spacing. No need to tear apart what was just built. Good is good enough for now. Lusting after fancier technology just to say we have it doesn't help anything, when its capabilities won't be needed.
The optimal use of the track would be to have UPE comingle with RER, using only two tracks. That leaves the other two free for HSR and express GO trains. Personally, I would like to see UPE continue to morph into plain RER as a branching route. The only issue would be how many stops UPE can skip before it catches up with the previous stopping train, or alternatively how many stops UPE can make before it loses its marketability as a fast downtown-Pearson express service. (I'm assuming a more compatible performance spec or a single type of equipment.)
That might explain how Bloor ended up with one very wide platform and one very narrow platform.... the intent being that the narrow platform is the express route and would see much more limited use. However, the alignment of the Liberty station is now at odds with that. No amount of high end PTC will compensate for trains needing to change tracks.
- Paul