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London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London. |
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On Mon, 31 Oct 2005, thoss wrote:
In article , Clive D. W. Feather writes The main reason for choosing trams over trolleybuses for any given scheme is capacity. My vague memory is that the Cross-London route would require 40tph or 130tbph to provide the same capacity; presumably the same applies on the Uxbridge Road. That implies that a trolley-bus can carry only 30% of a tram's passengers. Why not bigger trolley-buses, maybe bendy ones? For the same reason we don't have bendy-buses the length of a train - the presence of a track. The track guides the vehicle, at every point along its length, over a very precisely defined path, with no input from the driver. This makes it possible for a long, bendy vehicle to take fairly sharp corners extremely safely. ISTR the idea of a bus guided automatically by a signal from a cable buried under the road, a sort of 'virtual tram'; that would presumably allow much longer buses. I don't know if this is a real technology or a pipe dream, though. tom -- see im down wid yo sci fi crew |
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