Glenelg tram, of course.ChrisRT wrote:Too many per shuttle tram or Glenelg tram or both?Aidan wrote: At the moment there are too many passengers per tram, and because of this it takes longer than it should for the passengers to get on and off.
Both.Get on and off in the city or on the way to Glenelg somewhere?
The marginally speed improvements to the Glenelg service would be a very minor benefit - the reason for running more trams there is that the existing service doesn't have sufficient seating capacity. Passengers shouldn't have to stand for half an hour at a time!I think a fast and frequent shuttle service in the city is more important than a marginally faster Glenelg service, if I am understanding your argument correctly.
Now, a fast and frequent shuttle service in the City would indeed be nice. We used to have that in the form of the 99B. It was faster than the trams, because the traffic light sequencing does not give the trams priority. And more importantly, it ran every 5 minutes. The shuttle trams only run every 15 minutes. The Terrace to Terrace service is (at least theoretically) every 7 and a half minutes, but half of these are the overcrowded Glenelg trams that are so full that passengers often have trouble squeezing on. Sending all the trams to Glenelg would mean that the loadings in the City would be more evenly spread, so the passengers wouldn't have to put up with conditions quite as cramped as some of them get now. Admittedly it would also mean that passengers in the City would be less likely to get a seat all the way, but as they won't be on the trams for so long, that's not so important.