Quote:
Originally Posted by J.OT13
If that's it, and it's entirely possible, they've over corrected by a mile.
We don't get quite the same crush loads as when the system opened either.
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That being said, they may also not be long enough.
I was at Rideau off-peak on a Saturday when single-car trains were running. Half the platform, expecting a double-car train, had to run to catch up with the single front car. The train was very full, and it took a good 10 seconds for passengers to alight. The people from down-platform waited politely at the first door.
But by time the doors were free to allow people to embark, they closed, leaving most of the passengers on the platform.
To add bitter insult to injury, the 10-minute frequency meant that some of the people who'd already been waiting almost 10 minutes would end up almost 20 minutes between getting to the platform and stepping foot on a train.
The whole situation OC has created is so shocking, it borders on farce.
Worse, it seem to be for vanishingly little actual gain; the 10-minute frequencies mean that the trains are over-full and dwell longer, eating into the supposed savings. The single-car trains are over-full, requiring longer dwells, eating into the savings. In the end, how much is actually being saved as opposed to the theoretical spreadsheet savings? Is service that's 50% worse for 20% less really a savings at all?