Sheffield’s Super Trams
cost £1.6 million per
vehicle each 35 metres long
and 2.65 metres wide providing
a gross floor space of 92 sq
metres. In comparison an Olympian
3-axle double decker bus offers
a gross floor area of £54
sq metes at a cost of perhaps
£150,000. If the bus lasts
15 years and the tram 30 years
then, ignoring interest payments,
the annual capital costs per
sq metre are £580 for
the tram and £185 for
the bus. If interest is set
to the old Treasury discount
rate of 6% the annual costs
become £290 for the bus
and £1260 for the tram.
That suggest the annualised
capital costs of the rolling
stock are in favour of the bus
by a factor of 3 to 4.
Vehicle and track maintenance
costs will probably favour the
rubber tyred option by a factor
of 10, or at least that is the
case for track maintenance on
national rail. That arises because
the steel tyred option requires
a meticulously maintained track
which is subjected to very high
point loads from the steel tyred
wheels. Meanwhile changing a
steel tyre is not quick fit
and is needed as soon as slight
irregularities arise if the
tack is not to be hammered to
pieces.
As to use – the Super
Tram network has 3 legs. If
the busiest leg carries half
the passengers and if all the
20 million annual journeys are
to or from the town centre then
the daily arrivals on the busiest
leg, based on a 300 day year,
amount to 17,000. If 20 % are
in the peak hour they amount
to some 3,300. 40 Double decker
buses with all passengers seated
would suffice for that, a trivial
flow bearing in mind that in
on the approaches to the New
York bus terminal 700 buses
an hour pass in one lane 3.2
metres wide every week day.
That is in line with our general
conclusion, namely that steel
tyred rapid transit is catastrophically
expensive compared with the
rubber tyred option. At the
same time the capacity to move
people is in favour of the bus
by a facto of 3 to 4. After
all Victoria main line requires
4 pairs of tracks to discharge
the same passenger flow as is
achieved in one bus lane in
New York
Why therefore are we stealing
tax payers money so that gown
men can play at trams?
Meanwhile in Nottingham they
have agreed to cut bus services
which were knocking the stuffing
out of the new tram system -
for fear that the trams may
fail. That is what a railway
person would call a level playning
field.
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