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TITANKISSER69 posted:Offhand, I do know that their new streetcars have been somewhat of a fiasco with Toronto Transit, with many being delivered very late and some having to be sent back. The Toronto Star did a major investigation into the streetcar fiasco. They mismanaged the supply chain badly with parts arriving late or out of spec. They outsourced a lot of the welding work to a plant in Mexico so that they could keep the bid low and then failed to properly train or retain the workers there. https://projects.thestar.com/bombardier-ttc/index.html
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# ? Jan 23, 2020 08:49 |
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# ? May 10, 2024 02:00 |
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Would you believe there's another corrupt Canadian company based in Quebec that is bad at rail? https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa/snc-lavalin-technical-evaluation-1.5438697
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# ? Jan 24, 2020 17:04 |
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Nebakenezzer posted:Hi, train friends well the CRJ and dash-8 line sales make sense. the market pretty well dried up for both and it was transitioning entirely to aftersales support. bombardier also needed cash at the time.
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# ? Jan 24, 2020 17:20 |
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Uh.. that looked like it was close to a huge fuckup https://twitter.com/thomaslmajor/status/1221922465363791872?s=19
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# ? Jan 28, 2020 04:54 |
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Glad nobody had to call Todd
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# ? Jan 28, 2020 05:21 |
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Bombardier has also had tremendous trouble with the Twindexx contract for the Swiss Federal Railways (SBB). They were supposed to deliver them starting in 2013. Deliveries started instead in 2018. The few units in service have been plagued by poor reliability, insufficient access for handicapped people, software crashes (sometimes preventing the train from running at all), a tilting system that shakes passengers around, and more. They've only recently ironed out enough bugs that the trains can run without Bombardier support staff aboard to fix things. As a compensation, Bombardier has had to deliver a handful of units to the SBB free of charge.
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# ? Jan 28, 2020 08:42 |
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Nebakenezzer posted:Would you believe there's another corrupt Canadian company based in Quebec that is bad at rail? "The SNC-Lavalin bid failed to include a signalling and train control system, had no plan for snow removal and, at one point, appeared to believe the trains that run on the Trillium Line were electric, not diesel." My good bitch what are you doing
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# ? Jan 28, 2020 09:41 |
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evil_bunnY posted:"The SNC-Lavalin bid failed to include a signalling and train control system, had no plan for snow removal and, at one point, appeared to believe the trains that run on the Trillium Line were electric, not diesel." Ooh, reminds me of Connex when they took over management of the Melbourne passengee trains.
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# ? Jan 28, 2020 10:16 |
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Nationalize all passenger rail
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# ? Jan 28, 2020 23:45 |
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Resume production of the Tatra T3!
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# ? Jan 29, 2020 00:13 |
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Whoops. https://twitter.com/amnayang/status/1222420795294568448 https://twitter.com/amnayang/status/1222429230366986240
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# ? Jan 29, 2020 09:06 |
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Kilonum posted:Nationalize all passenger rail I'm so glad our regulations specify best value instead of lowest price. It makes it trivially easy to dismiss lowball shitbag bids.
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# ? Jan 29, 2020 09:21 |
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Any of you train nerds interested in virtual trains should check out the humble bundle at the moment https://www.humblebundle.com/games/...ator2020_bundle $450 worth of dlc, pay what you want over a few hundred bucks. I only have a passing interest from a mechanical perspective (especially this thread), but I flipped 15 bucks because hey, it's charity
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# ? Feb 5, 2020 09:42 |
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this is cool https://www.reddit.com/r/videos/comments/eyoxfb/oc_i_have_made_60_fps_4k_version_of_1896_movie/ also, lol safety
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# ? Feb 9, 2020 05:13 |
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sincx fucked around with this message at 05:55 on Mar 23, 2021 |
# ? Feb 9, 2020 06:04 |
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Kilonum posted:this is cool I recently went through a Star Trek marathon, and when watching the video-based Deep Space 9 after film-based The Next Generation, I really wished we could just feed all the high quality photos of the actors and sets to a neural net and have it reconstruct the series.
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# ? Feb 9, 2020 16:48 |
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Saukkis posted:I recently went through a Star Trek marathon, and when watching the video-based Deep Space 9 after film-based The Next Generation, I really wished we could just feed all the high quality photos of the actors and sets to a neural net and have it reconstruct the series. iirc DS9, Voyager, and Enterprise were all shot on film but all the post production was done on tape.
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# ? Feb 9, 2020 18:41 |
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Kilonum posted:iirc DS9, Voyager, and Enterprise were all shot on film but all the post production was done on tape. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q4rDBV1MCfU
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# ? Feb 10, 2020 06:42 |
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Kilonum posted:iirc DS9, Voyager, and Enterprise were all shot on film but all the post production was done on tape. ...so was TNG. Viacom/CBS/whoever the gently caress just won't release the negatives like they did for the TNG release. e: that clip is from the DS9 Documentary, "What we Left Behind" which is AMAZING.
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# ? Feb 11, 2020 01:51 |
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Remember us talking about train wheels w/ axle on semi-trucks? Found one in the wild: This Swedish trucker hauls them on a regular basis. Starts at about 4:50. Still don't understand it.
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# ? Feb 11, 2020 02:02 |
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madeintaipei posted:Remember us talking about train wheels w/ axle on semi-trucks? Found one in the wild: This Swedish trucker hauls them on a regular basis. Starts at about 4:50. Still don't understand it. I don't remember that, and I don't know what you're curious about, but I think I know something about this! That looks like a driving axle and wheel pair unit for a SJ Rc locomotive but without the wheel flanges. The flanges are manufactured separately and are shrunk onto the wheels; they are wear items and they need to be replaced occasionally. The wheels themselves are of course also wear items and are occasionally touched up on a lathe. Removing the wheels from the axle seems to only be done in exceptional circumstances; normally the axle, the transmission (the big bulky thing inboard of the wheel on one side) and the wheel pair seem to be treated as a unit with a single serial number. I don't know exactly why you'd ship around the entire thing around on a truck, but I presume that it might be for certain types of maintenance that cannot be done everywhere. All I know about SJ Rc wheels is from this report (in Swedish) from the Swedish equivalent of the NTSB, regarding a 2008 derailing caused by a wheel flange on one of the locomotive's driving wheels breaking off.
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# ? Feb 11, 2020 12:22 |
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madeintaipei posted:Remember us talking about train wheels w/ axle on semi-trucks? Found one in the wild: This Swedish trucker hauls them on a regular basis. Starts at about 4:50. Still don't understand it.
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# ? Feb 11, 2020 12:38 |
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TheFluff posted:I don't know exactly why you'd ship around the entire thing around on a truck, but I presume that it might be for certain types of maintenance that cannot be done everywhere. I quite regularly see flatbed artic trucks loaded with rail wheelsets on the motorways here in the UK. I've always just assumed it's because there are only a few places that will lathe/re-tyre/whatever a wheel and, with the way the rail system is run, it's easier and cheaper to send it by road. In the old days of BR you'd either send the loco/wagon/carriage direct to a BR workshop, or if the wheelsets had to be sent separately then just pop them in a Departmental wagon and hitch that to the back of the next freight train heading in the right direction as a non-revenue load. Now, there are no Departmental wagons and essentially no regular wagonload freight trains to attach them to. The wheelsets will be owned by one company, operated by another and probably maintained by a third, with the actual job done by a fourth. The costs of sending by rail would be astronomical in comparison to sending them by road and, actually, there's a good chance that the workshop isn't even rail-connected in the first place. It's often cheaper to move entire locomotives from one point on the rail network to another by road on a heavy-haul low-loader than pay out for a crew, a track path and all the access charges etc.
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# ? Feb 12, 2020 02:02 |
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But... The free market is the most efficient way to allocate resources?????????????????
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# ? Feb 12, 2020 07:20 |
Stairmaster posted:But... The free market is the most efficient way to allocate resources????????????????? i think the time that he's referring to when wheelsets would move by rail was when british railroads were private, and then they all got nationalized. now, they're back to private but in a weird arrangement where various companies own licenses or concessions to operate certain routes and another company owns all the rail and dispatching. the present state of british railroads doesnt seem like it can get pinned on failure of the market to work properly. vains fucked around with this message at 07:36 on Feb 12, 2020 |
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# ? Feb 12, 2020 07:33 |
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vains posted:i think the time that he's referring to when wheelsets would move by rail was when british railroads were private, and then they all got nationalized. now, they're back to private but in a weird arrangement where various companies own licenses or concessions to operate certain routes and another company owns all the rail and dispatching. Whether pre-BR private system or the days of the nationalised BR, the rail vehicle, the wheelsets from it, the physical rail system, the workshop where the work would be carried out, the wagon that would transport the wheels to the workshop, the locomotive that would haul the wagon and the crew that would run the locomotive were all employed by the same entity. These days, all those elements could be in the hands of different companies, each demanding a fee or charge of some sort. So it makes financial sense to just cut out all the middle-men and pay one transport firm to send them by road. And that doesn't get around the more basic fact that, up to the 1980s, there were still plenty of wagonload freight trains trundling around the national network, so tacking a wagon of wheelsets on the back was absolutely routine. Now 99% of the freight trains in the UK are fixed-formation unit trains carrying one cargo from Point A to Point B and neither of those points will be somewhere a wheelset needs to come from or go. And because all the operations are franchised (although the physical trains are operated by private companies what those operations are are rigidly controlled by the government), an operator running a fleet of passenger trains wouldn't have any freight vehicles or locos of its own anyway - their franchise is to carry people, not stuff. In the Good Old Days (tm), when BR ran the entire network, a huge amount of small-item shipping (packages and parcels etc. - the stuff that these days is distributed in a DHL/DPD/UPS/FedEx/Yodel van) was carried around on BR passenger trains, nearly all of which had a luggage/parcels compartment. Now that can't happen because rail franchises are specifically either Passenger or Freight, not both. Our 'privatised' railway system is a farce. But mostly because it combines the absolutely worst features of both a private and a nationalised system without getting the full advantages of either. There's no doubt that in many ways the system is in much better shape, and a much better service-provider, than it was in the last few creaking, worn-out, run-down, 'managed decline' years of BR...but then the system as a whole receives something like three times more government funding and subsidy than BR ever did. It's a mess. Anyway - that's not the good kind of Insanity. Here are some narrow-gauge steam pics I took back in the summer and have just found on my phone: The big blue saddle-tank is engine No.19 from the Darjeeling Himalayan Railway in India. Built in the UK in 1889, the loco was retired in 1960, went to a steam museum in the USA and then returned to the UK in 2003 for restoration. It's the only DHR locomotive to leave India. BalloonFish fucked around with this message at 14:44 on Feb 12, 2020 |
# ? Feb 12, 2020 14:40 |
BalloonFish posted:Whether pre-BR private system or the days of the nationalised BR, the rail vehicle, the wheelsets from it, the physical rail system, the workshop where the work would be carried out, the wagon that would transport the wheels to the workshop, the locomotive that would haul the wagon and the crew that would run the locomotive were all employed by the same entity. These days, all those elements could be in the hands of different companies, yup, thats how normal railroads work.
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# ? Feb 13, 2020 14:07 |
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England: it's not just our trains that are crap, it's how we run them too!
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# ? Feb 13, 2020 17:01 |
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vains posted:yup, thats how normal railroads work. Yeah, not exactly seeing anything inherently “bad” here. Here in the US, I’d say most freight rolling stock is now privately owned or controlled by TTX. For autoracks (cars for transporting finished vehicles), the flatcar portion is often owned by one party, usually TTX, while the rack itself is owned by the railroad.
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# ? Feb 13, 2020 20:20 |
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My company manufactures track components, sells to railroads/rail contractors, and we spend a fortune on shipping by truck. Increases the price anywhere between 6-30% It's more efficient to ship by rail, but only for repeated or massive quantities delivered between the same two points, and with railcar loading/unloading facilities at both ends. If we ever shipped by rail, we'd have to load a truck at our plant, send it to the closest rail yard, arrange for an empty car to be there (sometimes they've shown up with other poo poo in them), arrange for someone to transfer the material to the rail car, send the railcar to the closest yard to the job site (might need to pay freight if the material is bound for another RR's track), arrange for another truck to get to that yard when it arrives (could take a week), arrange for someone to unload the railcar's material onto the truck, and then arrange for another person to unload the truck at the job site. Hell of a lot of administrative work, and you load/unload two more times than necessary. That's two more opportunities for the poo poo to get damaged. Much easier to throw it on one truck, and let one driver get it all the way there.
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# ? Feb 13, 2020 20:48 |
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vains posted:yup, thats how normal railroads work.
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# ? Feb 13, 2020 21:18 |
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I don't see anything inefficient about shipping railroad-related stuff by some method other than rail. I bet the reason BR didn't do it that way was because it could get the rail capacity for "free" due to bad cost accounting.
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# ? Feb 13, 2020 21:24 |
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Behold! (xpost from the OSHA thread) https://i.imgur.com/rOT3QTt.mp4
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# ? Feb 13, 2020 23:15 |
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That's one way to do a high rail truck.
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# ? Feb 14, 2020 04:10 |
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I was so disappointed when the railset didn't roll down the incline at full gravity speed.
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# ? Feb 14, 2020 04:18 |
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Mortabis posted:I don't see anything inefficient about shipping railroad-related stuff by some method other than rail. I bet the reason BR didn't do it that way was because it could get the rail capacity for "free" due to bad cost accounting. in my experience costing for other industries, rail is cheaper for high volume and high weight shipments but requires the following 1) you have good access to rail at each end point 2) you absolutely do not give a gently caress about the timing of the shipment
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# ? Feb 14, 2020 14:17 |
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Pigsfeet on Rye posted:Behold! (xpost from the OSHA thread) it's a keirailer
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# ? Feb 14, 2020 17:54 |
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In the true spirit of Murphy's Law, the first Amtrak long distance train to use one of the new Siemens Chargers in revenue service hit a cement truck. No fatalities, but minor injuries reported.
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# ? Feb 22, 2020 11:00 |
Tex Avery posted:In the true spirit of Murphy's Law, the first Amtrak long distance train to use one of the new Siemens Chargers in revenue service hit a cement truck. No fatalities, but minor injuries reported. the reddit thread had the most onion autistic reporter line ever: "Sad to see one of the new Siemens Chargers (SC44) damaged in the accident. Luckily nobody was seriously injured!"
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# ? Feb 22, 2020 14:37 |
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# ? May 10, 2024 02:00 |
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Tex Avery posted:In the true spirit of Murphy's Law, the first Amtrak long distance train to use one of the new Siemens Chargers in revenue service hit a cement truck. No fatalities, but minor injuries reported. Oh hey Amtrak got some of those? My local commuter railroad got some in 2018. They look pretty neat. Anyone here enough of a nerd/industry insider to know if they're a good or lovely design?
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# ? Feb 22, 2020 18:00 |