PeFe wrote:And no-one has answered my question on how many 0-Bahn journeys are one seat rides?
My guess is that during business hours it is probably high 70-80%, but then across the weekend and night time it probably plummets to 30%. So the 0-Bahn has significant transfer obligations built into its operating structure.
And as for having a bus meet every single tram, not going to happen, some bus routes justify that, others do not. Obviously you redploy O-Bahn buses to serving the tram, I doubt you need more buses, in fact I think you need less....
I can't find the current percentage of single seat rides over a whole day. But as explained already; your question is based on a faulty premise and is a strawman argument. You're looking at the advantage the O-Bahn has where single seat rides are possible. And assuming that the advantage is only gained if single rides are offered on every journey.
A single vehicle can run the feeder route, on street, and then jump on the track and go the whole route into and through the city (and beyond for cross town services), or the reverse going back out to the suburbs.
This doesn't mean EVERY service SHOULD do this. During peak periods, where patronage is high, and we are trying to encourage people to leave their cars at home, single seat journeys are a good idea. Off peak, however, patronage is lower. It would be expensive and wasteful to run EVERY service direct, so we can either run less services overall, or revert to a feeder system but keep the frequency high.
The O-Bahn has this option. Rail does not. Therefore it's an advantage over rail.
Light rail requires feeder services all the time. A feeder service means a transfer. Passengers hate transfers. This (as noted above) means an average transfer penalty value from bus to light rail of 19 minutes. That extra perceived penalty value is enough to shift butts into cars and off the PT we are trying to get them to take.
PeFe wrote:And no-one has answered my question about why the O-Bahn has not been copied numerous times around the world.
And this is another question based on a false premise. Guided busways have been built numerous times. More so in the last two decades, as more studies have been published and decision makers are starting to take notice. There's at least four in England and Scotland.
However, it's a number of factors, most of them are perception and ideologically based. Prof Graham Currie has published at least one paper on the phenomenon.
None of heavy rail, light rail, BRT or guided BRT are a panacea. Each situation needs to be looked at and whichever solution works best in that situation should be implemented. Your examples show this.
Exit on the right in the direction of travel.