This past October riding NJT from Trenton to Newark, I was really impressed by what seemed to be brand-new double-decker cars. Smooth, quiet, comfortable and totally non-claustrophobia-inducing.
Can someone tell me a little about the rolling stock, manufacturer, etc...?
Also, I noticed that the cars are riveted. I thought shot-welding took over ever since the streamlined 1930s. Is riveting on commuter equipment making a comeback? Or is it that it never really went away....??
All answers welcome, thanks, al s.
Rode those about two months back....
Train seemed slower as opposed to MU NJT silverliners
From an NJT press release:
NJ TRANSIT will exercise an option negotiated in a 2002 contract with Bombardier Transportation for the purchase of 131 additional bi-level rail cars, bringing the total order to 231 cars. The option allows the Corporation to take advantage of a favorable and very competitive price-$1.57 million per car-that was built into the original agreement.
The new order, at a total cost of $214 million, will maximize the prior investment in developing state-of-the-art rail cars, which have been specifically designed to operate through the Hudson River tunnel. NJ TRANSIT is expected to take delivery of the first bi-level cars from the original 2002 purchase at the end of the summer.
The bi-level fleet enables NJ TRANSIT to replace more than 170 aging and obsolete Comet-I cars currently in service on the Main/Bergen, Montclair-Boonton, Raritan Valley and North Jersey Coast Lines.
http://www.njtransit.com/tm/tm_servlet.srv?hdnPageAction=PressReleaseTo&PRESS_RELEASE_ID=1931
blue streak 1 wrote:Question: If NJ transit's loads keep increasing will they even consider retiring Comet cars? Parking all that equipment may become a major problem.
Part of the "Access to the Regions Core" program is a new storage yard in the meadowlands in between Hoboken and the Secaucus Transfer. That yard and the new mid town terminal should help soak up the equipment.
paulsafety wrote: blue streak 1 wrote:Question: If NJ transit's loads keep increasing will they even consider retiring Comet cars? Parking all that equipment may become a major problem.Part of the "Access to the Regions Core" program is a new storage yard in the meadowlands in between Hoboken and the Secaucus Transfer. That yard and the new mid town terminal should help soak up the equipment.
Does NJT get a lot of subsidy? The authority seems to have a lot on the ball -- contracting for big numbers of double-deckers and saving hundreds of thousands of each one -- retiring older cars -- even the fares are cheaper than what I'm used to in the Northeast.
I'm not preaching, because Chicago's Metra gets only about 35-40% of its revenue from the fare box.
Would someone like to point out where NJT is on these matters? - al
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