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In Sydney recently and we couldn't see the buildings for the poles. You have some really really dumb and stupid people in charge there.
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cheers and best wishes,
David in Avenel.au,
[Before you change anything, learn why it is the way it is.]
It's impossible to read without wearing out my scrolling sideways and up n down finger.
It's also a letter Greg got published 8 years ago!
I did a Circular Quay run at lunch time. The trams are free today (Although for many users who have to come in from else where, it isn't much of a saving and may make no difference to their weekly PT bill at all if they regularly hit the $50 cap). There are still many APS dead spots (despite a weekend close-down for 'trackwork'), but looking at the condition of the APS rail and the insulated sections, there is a considerable amount of soot on them - that has to come from some where. I wonder how fast the APS shoes wear?
The Wynyard emergency crossover looks nearly bad enough to actually tear shoes off. It does have a 10km 'TSR'.
The traction batteries on the Sydney 305s are saving APS by hiding the faults and allowing operation over faulty segments. (The battery is actually referred to as the APS battery, not a traction supply battery)
The white plastic light bars on the front are starting to look a
bit sad - they definitely didn't choose an Australian Sun rated
plastic to make that part.
“There’ve been a few instances lately where it’s stopped working for hours at a time.” A few! Depends on your definition of “A few” I suppose.
“Cables that have aged quickly in the elements are to blame.” So we didn’t design the system to work in the real world eh?
Back in the day when I used to do Capex’s I was taught that 25 years was a reasonable life expectancy for an electrical job probably longer if you did the job correctly.
I guess that I just cannot see the big picture but we electrical dinosaurs tend to suffer from that affliction.
Rumour has it that whilst those poles look spectacular they would not be able to hold overhead up, no surprise really.
Geoff O.
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Tony,
I think that you will find that the Sydney ones are of very light construction.
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On 13 Nov 2024, at 1:56 PM, 'Geoff Olsen' via TramsDownUnder <tramsdo...@googlegroups.com> wrote:
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I think that you will find that the Sydney ones are of very light construction.
Some of the poles in Sydney are fat and strong - but many are simple extruded sections with a decorative trim cover to make them look fat and strong.
I have attached a couple of pics of the latter showing the trim pulle up on one of the poles - I think in Devonshire St.
Mal Rowe - observer from the GTCOTS