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Old December 20th 11, 07:57 AM posted to uk.railway,uk.transport.buses,uk.transport.london
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Default Modern double deck trams

I can't find a tram related newsgroup.

I've sometimes wondered why modern tramcar makers don't make double deckers.
Yes, modern artics swallow lots of people quickly but they also take up a
lot of space. A double deck artic (with connections at both levels) could
take the same number of people, maybe more, than a single decker in less
length.

I'm guessing there are 2 reasons the main one being that double deckers have
always been a bit of a British oddity. Yes, there have been other places
in the world that used them but these days in particular the market is in
countries where single deck trams are the norm so we get single deckers.
The other reason seems to be loading times.

And, I am aware of the new double deck trams in Hong Kong.

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Old December 20th 11, 08:02 AM posted to uk.railway,uk.transport.buses,uk.transport.london
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Default Modern double deck trams

On Dec 20, 9:57*am, "Graham Harrison"
wrote:

I've sometimes wondered why modern tramcar makers don't make double deckers.
Yes, modern artics swallow lots of people quickly but they also take up a
lot of space. * A double deck artic (with connections at both levels) could
take the same number of people, maybe more, than a single decker in less
length.

I'm guessing there are 2 reasons the main one being that double deckers have
always been a bit of a British oddity.


Partly because normal height clearances on roads (where trams run)
tend to be higher in the UK than other European countries, and most
trams are off-the-shelf European designs.

Berlin does double-decker buses (albeit lower ones than usual for the
UK, if I recall), but they are not common elsewhere in Europe for the
same reason.

OTOH, because the height clearance issue is the opposite way around
for rail, the UK doesn't do double-deckers on rail (the 4-DD excepted)
but they are very common in mainland Europe. Were the UK the main
supplier of trains to Europe, I expect the situation would be similar
to trams.

Neil
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Old December 20th 11, 08:36 AM posted to uk.railway,uk.transport.buses,uk.transport.london
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Default Modern double deck trams

On 20/12/2011 09:02, Neil Williams wrote:
On Dec 20, 9:57 am, "Graham Harrison"
wrote:

I've sometimes wondered why modern tramcar makers don't make double deckers.
Yes, modern artics swallow lots of people quickly but they also take up a
lot of space. A double deck artic (with connections at both levels) could
take the same number of people, maybe more, than a single decker in less
length.

I'm guessing there are 2 reasons the main one being that double deckers have
always been a bit of a British oddity.


Partly because normal height clearances on roads (where trams run)
tend to be higher in the UK than other European countries, and most
trams are off-the-shelf European designs.

Berlin does double-decker buses (albeit lower ones than usual for the
UK, if I recall), but they are not common elsewhere in Europe for the
same reason.


Rome has, or at least had last time I was there, double decker buses.

--
Graeme Wall
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Railway Miscellany at http://www.greywall.demon.co.uk/rail
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Old December 20th 11, 08:42 AM posted to uk.railway,uk.transport.buses,uk.transport.london
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Default Modern double deck trams

On Tue, 20 Dec 2011 01:02:03 -0800 (PST)
Neil Williams wrote:
OTOH, because the height clearance issue is the opposite way around
for rail, the UK doesn't do double-deckers on rail (the 4-DD excepted)
but they are very common in mainland Europe. Were the UK the main


Though even the euro double deckers (or at least the ones I've been on in
france) are really at the limit of practicality. The top deck is rather
low height and the curved sides impinge quite noticably. Its only really in
the USA that you get proper double deckers.

B2003


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Old December 20th 11, 09:43 AM posted to uk.railway,uk.transport.buses,uk.transport.london
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Default Modern double deck trams


Though even the euro double deckers (or at least the ones I've been on in
france) are really at the limit of practicality. The top deck is rather
low height and the curved sides impinge quite noticably. Its only really
in
the USA that you get proper double deckers.


And Canada.

There are other countries on this side of the pond with Canada being the
largest.


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Old December 20th 11, 09:46 AM posted to uk.railway,uk.transport.buses,uk.transport.london
Bob Bob is offline
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Default Modern double deck trams

On Dec 20, 11:43*am, "Roger Traviss"
wrote:
Though even the euro double deckers (or at least the ones I've been on in
france) are really at the limit of practicality. The top deck is rather
low height and the curved sides impinge quite noticably. Its only really
in
the USA that you get proper double deckers.


And Canada.

There are other countries on this side of the pond with Canada being the
largest.


And of course the largest DD rolling stock of the lot are the formerly
Hawker Siddeley now Bombardier cars developed for GO. I've only
ridden on them in Vancouver, but they were very generously sized. I
hear some are used south of 49 too.

Robin
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Old December 20th 11, 09:48 AM posted to uk.railway,uk.transport.buses,uk.transport.london
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Default Modern double deck trams

On 20 Dez., 11:46, bob wrote:

And of course the largest DD rolling stock of the lot are the formerly
Hawker Siddeley now Bombardier cars developed for GO. *I've only
ridden on them in Vancouver, but they were very generously sized. *I
hear some are used south of 49 too.


I've never ridden on those, but find Amtrak's Superliners to be
extremely comfortable and spacious.
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Old December 20th 11, 10:05 AM posted to uk.railway,uk.transport.buses,uk.transport.london
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Default Modern double deck trams

On Tue, 20 Dec 2011 02:43:49 -0800
"Roger Traviss" wrote:
Though even the euro double deckers (or at least the ones I've been on in
france) are really at the limit of practicality. The top deck is rather
low height and the curved sides impinge quite noticably. Its only really
in
the USA that you get proper double deckers.


And Canada.

There are other countries on this side of the pond with Canada being the
largest.


Fair point!

B2003


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Old December 20th 11, 08:46 AM posted to uk.railway,uk.transport.buses,uk.transport.london
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Default Modern double deck trams

On 20 Dez., 09:57, "Graham Harrison"
wrote:

And, I am aware of the new double deck trams in Hong Kong.


Alexandria also has some double-deck trams. I beleive they are of
Chinese make.


In the past, double deck trams were more common. Paris and Berlin both
had them and no doubt several other cities besides.

I am not sure about the details, but I believe that one factor that
was different in the UK was legislation concerning trailers. I am not
sure whether they were banend outright, or it was something else.
Anyway, although some British trams did have trailers, they were
extremely rare. Where the Germans for example used trailers to grow
capacity, British operators built upwards.

Of course one disadvantage of trailers was that they needed to be
shunted at the at end of trip, and so loop tracks had to be provided.
Many operators worked around this by building turning loops in which
no shunting was required but the entire tram went around on a cicle of
track to face the other direction. The provison of these prepared the
way for the next development which was that of the uni-directional
tram, having a cab at only one end and doors on only one side. They
were less flexible in service as they needed loops but from the
maintenance perspective there was less hardware to be maintained. The
absence of doors on the off side also meant that more seats could be
provided. From there they went to articulated trams which again was a
step backwards in terms of flexibility (compared to trailers) but had
advanatges in terms of passenger flow and better utilisation of space
etc. Also the concept was scalable so longer and longer trams could be
made just by adding intermediate segments.




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