The oldest service trams in Prague are of the same vintage as Melbourne Z class, but with much more modern electronic controls.claybro wrote: ↑Wed Aug 29, 2018 10:35 pmOne of the largest and one of the best... not necessarily the best. I've travelled on trams in both Germany and Prague. I don't see anything on those systems that is remarkably different to Melbourne. In fact some of the trams in Prague were pretty old, granted that was 7 years ago. Point being, the Melbourne system is probably most like what Adelaide aspires to. A mixture of road running, dedicated light rail corridor, tracks on ballast, tracks on concrete, tracks running through lawn.. they already have it all.. why travel to Germany or Prague or Poland? Why is our rolling stock from Germany and Spain? It is already all made just down the highway in Victoria.rubberman wrote: ↑Wed Aug 29, 2018 7:13 pmPeople asked that question when both Mr Goodman, and Mr Webb were appointed. Webb's appointment was particularly contentious, given he was a US citizen. I suggest that the results speak for themselves.
I'd also point out that it's pretty courageous to assert that nobody else in the world knows more than Melbourne. Are you certain that's the case? Yes, it's a big, well run system. But the best in the world? Nothing to learn from other systems carrying many more passengers? Brave call. Heroic.
Oh, high speed points maybe, where Melbourne has its trams stop before points...every-single-time. Combined bus/tram corridors with Kassel curbs. Specialised rail welding and repair methods I certainly haven't seen in Australia. The Škoda 15T is a very good 100% low floor tram.Those are a few things I can think of from the top of my head. Melbourne does its track replacement quicker though. That's really good.
However, this notion that somehow we are the best in the world, and don't need to learn from anywhere else will kill trams here. The economic case is not good, and without a good economic case, other sectors seeking government money will rightly have higher priority. We cannot afford to miss one benefit, nor fail to eliminate unnecessary waste. Every benefit we miss, and every bit of unneeded expenditure just sets the economic case back further and further.
In the examples I gave above, there are benefits that Prague gets that we do not. If we used their methods in those areas, we could improve the economic case.
End point: we either ruthlessly seek out benefits, and eliminate costs to get the best chance of an economic case, or we sit back and declare we don't need to worry, and see other projects with better economic credentials get the funding.
While I have been a life long tram fan, I am also aware that other projects are worthy of funding, and if I have a choice, I would rather my tax dollars go to projects that are economic. If the offer is slow, outdated, excessive cost trams vs other worthy and economic projects, don't be surprised if most voters will do without trams.
We have to choose. Do it economically, or risk no trams, or mickey mouse extensions every couple of elections. That's the choice.