Quote:
Originally Posted by Dave2
IIRC the single tracking on the ends of the two branches limits headways to 3 minutes, for a combined 90 seconds north of Bridgeport.
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Changing City
Since they added 12 more train sets in 2020, the current capacity is about 8,000 people per hour per direction. The current operting headways could be shortened to 2 minutes if additional two car trains were acquired, which would take operating capacity to 10,000 pph. After that, the capacity could be increased to 15,000 pph by adding a third car in the centre of the train and using the full 50m design capacity of the stations. As noted, to go beyond that you'd also have to try to increase capacity at either end of the line, which could be expensive.
There are no current development scenarios that anticipate that sort of demand on the system for decades, and as the line only serves Richmond and the airport it seems unlikely that there would be any need to examine if headways could be shortened to under 2 minutes. It might be possible in theory but the lowest currently seems to be 110 seconds at peak on the Tokyo Metro. (Taipei headways on the Brown Line are shorter, but it's a slower, rubber-tyred Metro).
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Other than the fact that Richmond wants the Canada Line to be extended (probably to Steveston, requiring rebuilding the track south of Landsome), the reason I'm asking is that I'm trying to calculate the absolute theoretical maximum capacity the Canada Line could achieve, regardless of the actual demand.
(Maybe it's because I want an excuse to think about rebuilding the Canada Line elevated for most of its run instead of being a subway that I want to know this, lol- regardless of how necessary it is.)
The existing Canada Line stock is less efficient than the newer SK stock, and if they can get the frequency to 60s-75s, they should be able to reach max capacities slightly lower than the Bombardier lines.
I want to know if there are any other no-LIM or rubber tyre subway systems rated for 75-60s max, especially for similar systems in Asia (since this is using South Korean rolling stock)- as this would theoretically double the maximum frequency on the Bridgeport-Waterfront segment.