thettctransitfanatic
Senior Member
Given it was the first one delivered, I'd hope it would be preserved for the TTC, joining 2766 (Peter Witt) and 4500/4549 (PCC).
I agree, and TTC maintains it pretty well, so they *should* preserve it.
Given it was the first one delivered, I'd hope it would be preserved for the TTC, joining 2766 (Peter Witt) and 4500/4549 (PCC).
It has been reported repeatedly that TTC is sensitive to preservation concerns and intends to make one or more cars available. Personally I don't care to debate which cars get preserved. One might want to examine the body condition before landing on a specific unit, no matter what the relative merit of the units available.
But a more general question that I don't know the answer to.... how does TTC dispose of its vehicles? Is there a periodic tender? Presumably scrap dealers make offers and they go to the highest bidder? Is this a standing bid for all verhicles retired over a period of time, or unit by unit?
Is there a known typical scrap price that applies to CLRV and ALRV retirees? If someone had the cash and cared to go shopping, perhaps for a museum donation, or even (as happened with the PCC's) to procure a chicken coop - will TTC assist?
(Does TTC give Air Miles?)
- Paul
But a more general question that I don't know the answer to.... how does TTC dispose of its vehicles? Is there a periodic tender? Presumably scrap dealers make offers and they go to the highest bidder? Is this a standing bid for all verhicles retired over a period of time, or unit by unit?
Is there a known typical scrap price that applies to CLRV and ALRV retirees? If someone had the cash and cared to go shopping, perhaps for a museum donation, or even (as happened with the PCC's) to procure a chicken coop - will TTC assist?
Lets screw Toronto, TTC, the public and do some Union Busting
‘No secrets’ in subway upload, says transportation minister, but much of special adviser’s info to remain confidential
There are some parts of the union contracts which do not make sense when looking at a high-frequency transit line. These need to be changed to reflect the fact that this is high frequency and not a fixed bus schedule. Items such are variable length shifts (your shift ends when the train gets back to the end of the line) should absolutely be discussed.
But the TTC has created a state of disrepair and dirty stations. They have tinkered on the sides but there is no leadership sitting at Davisville that IMO has the skill set to bring it to an adequate level of service. I don't care if it is the province or the city that is running the subway as long as it is clean, the maintenance is better and costs are minimized.
I have traveled all over the world and many cities have integrated systems with multiple entities running various services and it is integrated. Those that see it as the end of the world can look at Hong Kong, London, Berlin, etc as good examples of where this works.
Please just give me a clean station to wait in!!!!
They have already said it is WAY easier to clean Line 1 stations over Line 2 ones, because stations like Keele, High Park, Warden, Victoria Park have the outside air blowing in.
So they know which stations on line 2 are dirty...but they don't then deploy cleaners to them? I have seen surfaces at some stations that have not been cleaned for months. Zero pride of ownership by management and staff..
The TTC knows it is a problem but them does nothing to rectify the situation. Exactly why we need a change! Again either a change of TTC leadership or a change of ownership...any change.
Yep, Line 2 stations are definitely the filithest, the worst being my local station, Dundas West. The trash that people leave after eating McDonalds is a big contributor there.
Old Mill is similar. There is an issue with braking at the station which leaves the station coated in black brake dust.
It may be that cleaning these stations is an exercise in fertility so they deploy their staff elsewhere.
In all credit to Ronald, he keeps his nose pretty clean there. I'm just up the street. What's filthy about DW is the years of grime, filth from the street, construction and lack of overall cleaning over the years. The station hasn't had a facelift since it was built over fifty years ago. Add the grinding wheels from streetcars and the multitude of dirty diesel buses, not to mention the relentless crush of traffic on Dundas and Bloor, and you get what you get. Add the dirty smokers standing out front flicking their butts wherever. Ronald actually keeps his part reasonably clean.Yep, Line 2 stations are definitely the filithest, the worst being my local station, Dundas West. The trash that people leave after eating McDonalds is a big contributor there.
"Fertility"? Depending on spell check can cause you a world of pain. I find the 'futility' of using them a dirty business, unless the filth is breeding. Runnymede is also over fifty years old. It's pretty grimy from years of accumulation. That being said, like Jane, it's still in good shape functionally, save for the elevators needing to be added.Old Mill is similar. There is an issue with braking at the station which leaves the station coated in black brake dust.
It may be that cleaning these stations is an exercise in fertility so they deploy their staff elsewhere.
In all credit to Ronald, he keeps his nose pretty clean there. I'm just up the street. What's filthy about DW is the years of grime, filth from the street, construction and lack of overall cleaning over the years. The station hasn't had a facelift since it was built over fifty years ago. Add the grinding wheels from streetcars and the multitude of dirty diesel buses, not to mention the relentless crush of traffic on Dundas and Bloor, and you get what you get. Add the dirty smokers standing out front flicking their butts wherever. Ronald actually keeps his part reasonably clean.
"Fertility"? Spell check can cause you a world of pain. I find the 'futility' of using them a dirty business, unless the filth is breeding. Runnymede is also over fifty years old. It's pretty grimy from years of accumulation. That being said, like Jane, it's still in good shape functionally, save for the elevators needing to be added.
I thought they'd addressed that, but perhaps not. Since they'd be hard-pressed to install catch-basins on the drains and vacuum them later, they should have vacuum pump tanker cars behind the washers:The Ministry stated that it had to halt since all that crud was running into the drains.