"The vast majority" of cars running after the shutdown will be new, is the language the T is using.
You'll still see a few old ones...
Lost in the hoopla over the OL shutdown, NETransit is now showing the number of active new cars exceeds the number of active old cars for the very first time, 72 to 66. 54 old cars are now in the dead line awaiting scrap, with the first group of 30 expected to start being scrapped later this month.
I hope there's an official "Goodbye to the 1200 series" event; the last cars to run on the Washington Street Elevated deserve a better send-off than "No train service".
I hope there's an official "Goodbye to the 1200 series" event; the last cars to run on the Washington Street Elevated deserve a better send-off than "No train service".
As it crosses the Mystic. Oh wait, we did that already.A viking funeral would be a proper send-off.
One of my questions concerning the redo of the Orange Line is about the Charlie mechines. Are they going to install the very latest ones to replace the old ones? Just thought that I'd throw that out there, since they ARE doing a redo of the entire line.
I can echo this story line.I bought my condo next to the Orange Line seven years ago. I have lived car-free the entire time and used to be a more-than-daily Orange Line rider.
Honestly, the quality and reliability of the Orange Line has dropped so much that I almost never ride it. I bike everywhere instead and bicycle infrastructure has improved quite a bit while the Orange Line has decayed. It was just closed for a month and now today it looks like there were massive delays today due to an issue with one of the new trains. Even if service ran “perfectly,” it would have 12 minute peak headways. This is not the Orange Line I relied on for years pre-COVID.
The “majority new” trains mean nothing to me personally because service is so abysmal, I avoid it relying on it. Unfortunately, winter is coming and I hope it’s better by then, but I’m not holding my breathe.