SafeSpeed wrote:
The ability to steer around an obstruction is a big advantage not to be sniffed at. Cars can. Trams can't.
But the ability to stay on track and never veer off line into another tram is also a big advantage. Trams can. Cars can't.
SafeSpeed wrote:
The braking thing ...
With all these cars veering off line into you, it is a good job the brakes are good. Trams, on the other hand, should occupy thier own road space, with access to the tracks strictly limited. For example, the trams along Landesberger Strasse in Munich between Hauptbahnhof and the Mittlerring, have perhaps two or three sections over a 3 km run where trams could interact without interlock lights. That is one of the places that I got caught out on, but I only did that once. The trams along Ganghofer Strasse, on the other hand, used to run along the road between Harras and West End Park. It gets a bit dodgy there, especially near the top of LindenStrasse. But don't forget, the public transport system in Munich has made cars unnecessary. They have a U-Bahn system like London but clean, effective and cheap, with trains every 5 minutes from 5 am up to 1 am. Terminals are conected by trams and busses. On top of that, they have a standard rail system, and then also the S-Bahn, which reaches all the outlying villages to a dustance or 20 or 30 km.
You really should go there and check out a fully integrated public transport system - no one in this country can even start to understand one without visting Munich. Transport in the UK is a noddy system totally dependant on cars. Montreal is not far behind Munich. Check out the Montreal underground, again cheap, fast and clean. Also, it is well integrated with the bus system, and the city airport (Dorval) is 15 minutes from downtown. Really great, again in the UK we can't imagine a good system because ours are so bad with nothing but congested roads everywhere, and fed up motorists in jams.