Besides, the link that I provided is giving enough info.![]()
... Eng has also directed his chief engineer to explore installing safety barriers on some train platforms after observing such infrastructure on his trip, he said. The T plans to issue a request for proposals later this year to solicit bids for that safety equipment, according to officials.
CTRL+F "electrification" Not Found.Interesting detail in this Globe article today:
Where should the MBTA look for ideas? For Phil Eng, it’s Tokyo, Seoul, and Singapore.
My understanding was that any sort of platform screen doors require CBTC signalling so that trains can consistently stop in the exact same place. That should be true for the Green Line post GLTPS phase 2, but not any other lines. Are there ways around this limitation, or will this just be an RFP doomed to go nowhere?Interesting detail in this Globe article today:
Where should the MBTA look for ideas? For Phil Eng, it’s Tokyo, Seoul, and Singapore.
Not necessarily. There are definitely platform screen door systems out there that are far older than CBTC signaling. Operators may need some in-car optical sensor assist on stopping position so it's accurate to the inch instead of the foot, but it shouldn't require an all-new signal system. However, most world examples tend to be on high-platform HRT lines. The Green Line, despite having some of the worst crowding conditions on the system, wouldn't be an appropriate place at all for it because of the low-level boarding, degree of operator independence even within the GLTPS next-gen signaling, and the track crossings and double-berthing like at Park Street.My understanding was that any sort of platform screen doors require CBTC signalling so that trains can consistently stop in the exact same place. That should be true for the Green Line post GLTPS phase 2, but not any other lines. Are there ways around this limitation, or will this just be an RFP doomed to go nowhere?
That's only needed on systems that intermix rolling stock of differing door configurations. We don't have that anymore with all our lines either having uniform per-line fleets or having uniform-fleet procurements ongoing, and we won't have that going forward with door configurations unlikely to change in future orders since the current modern fleets will be at pretty much the most-accessible ideals for that.The youtube link in my first post of this thread.
Platform dynamic doors
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ST Engineering launches variable platform screen doors
SCREEN DOORS: ST Engineering launched its variable pitch platform screen door at the AusRAIL Plus trade show that took place in Sydney on December 3-5. The VP-PSD detects the door configuration as each train approaches the platform, automatically moving the doors to the correct stopping...www.railwaygazette.com