T3G
Senior Member
Yes, because they built large ramps, ramps that take up more physical square footage than the platforms on the Crosstown do. Whether rightly or wrongly, this was not the path we decided to take here.So?
People in wheel chairs can still access the C-train.
I think you might have me confused with the people who chose the specifications for this project. I am not saying that LF was the be all, end all, I am merely trying to offer a reasoned alternative explanation to your frankly farcical assertion that LF cars were chosen so that we look more like Europe.Ramp height seems to be the only advantage low floor has over high floor. Name another advantage of low floor.
But as long as we're playing... evacuations are a hell of a lot easier when you don't have to jump down 700 mm into the street.
Care to provide an official source for this assertion?No it's not. The low floor trains have higher maintenance costs. Fixed bogies vs the more conventional bogies on a high floor train.
Longer trams? Longer than what? Surely not a subway train?Yea we spent an extra 3B$ on the underground stations to make them longer to accomodate the longer trams, but at least we saved 10M$ on the concrete used for the outdoor aboveground loading platforms because we lowered those platforms 20cm
One Crosstown car is 30.2 metres long (citation). Two cars coupled together therefore make 60.4 metres. A 4 car Sheppard subway train is 91.44 meters. A 6 car Yonge line train is 137.16 meters.




