Richard White
Senior Member
Also.. idiots are possibly running down Bay Lower hence the outage.
TETRA usually refers to secure radio within public service agencies (although given we are in Canada, the term may be used for a similar technology rather than the exact standard) https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terrestrial_Trunked_RadioI am listening to the TTC Radio on Broadcastify right now and they are claiming tetra is down.
Apparently direct communications between trains and transit control are affected.
Anyone know what tetra is and what is going on?
TETRA usually refers to secure radio within public service agencies (although given we are in Canada, the term may be used for a similar technology rather than the exact standard) https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terrestrial_Trunked_Radio
More seriously, what is going on with the track network at present between St Clair and Bloor? (Mostly northbound but also southbound in places) I was standing at St Clair this morning and there is a track level placard “max 15km/h”. Has anyone seen any statements from TTC about why this is suddenly the case?
I did see some ties piled in the open cut between Bloor and Rosedale - given how they were coloured and contoured I wondered if they were composite
If major work is needed on the original open cut section of the Yonge line, I wonder if after the Crosstown LRT opens if it would be worth it to do a 3-4 month total closure from Bloor to Eglinton to allow for 24/7 work. Preferably in the summer when ridership is lower. The Crosstown from Eglinton to Cedervale stations would act as the main detour route to access line 1 north of Eglinton. All day service from Oriole and Old Cummer GO stations, and maybe even rerouting or extending some bus lines to the Spadina side of line 1 could also help. A few transit agencies in the US have done similar projects. This would take a lot of planning and coordination (and there'd be a subfleet of TRs stuck on the Sheppard and north Yonge lines for a time), but it probably would be the least disruptive if this kind of work is unavoidable.
I don't know what the current issues are with the line. (I've got questions out to people in order to get some answers.)@smallspy do you happen to recall what I'm referring to? I think it was track issues near davisville.
I don't know what the current issues are with the line. (I've got questions out to people in order to get some answers.)
The issues north of Davisville have to do with a high water table/underground river through the area. There was some concern about 10 years ago that the TTC was going to need to shut down the line for a couple of months in order to completely rebuild the track through there (likely by removing the track and ballast, and installing a concrete structure to run the rails on).
Since then, the TTC has done a bunch of work through there, and the concern that did exist has dissipated. I suspect in the long term something will need to be done through there - but it seems that whatever issues they were having back then they have been able to resolve, at least on an ongoing basis.
Dan
I thought Ford released a battery-less electric truck.
When the underpass was rebuilt (2007?), it was lowered and the clearances increased. The previous slow order was increased as while the poles were now no longer almost resting along the body, they were still riding at a very low angle. But the main issue isn't necessarily the angle of the pole, but the requirement to have the wires increase in height quickly out of the underpass due to the intersections at either end.A question regarding King Street 504 streetcar operations. When going under the railway overpass between Sudbury Street and Atlantic Avenue, there was a longstanding SLOW order - my understanding was it was due to the risk of the trolly pole coming off the overhead and getting smashed on one of the cross-beams in the bottom of the overpass structure with the associated operational impacts and repair costs. Now, with pantograph operation on the 504, the streetcars still appear to be crawling through the underpass stretch at the same (or similar) SLOW order speed. Anyone know if this is a permanent situation, or just a legacy Standard Operating Procedure that was never updated after conversion to pantograph operations?
If anyone knows, could you please tag me in the response, as I do not normally follow this tread.
Thanks




