Comment by seanmcdirmid

1 day ago

> Steel wheel on steel rail is low friction, and you get most of the energy used to go uphill back when you go downhill.

If you were going up and down hills, would you still use steel wheel in steel rail unless you had some sort of cable to work with? I always thought the Muni did relatively level routes for that reason? The Lausanne m2 for example uses rubber (well, ideally you’d be able to just balance the train going up with the train going down, but that only works for simple inclines with limited stops). Actually, a battery powered rubber wheeled tram service on some sort of steep incline like SF’s cable car routes could get some wicked regen going down.

Even if level, they could still get some regen from making stops.

Modern speed control technology has expanded the incline range for steel-wheeled trains quite a bit. Inclines that would have historically pointed towards rubber-tired or non-traction systems are usually within the range of steel wheels with solid-state motor control. Basically the control of torque is much finer than in old resistance-box parallel/series speed controllers, so you can avoid slippage much more easily.

> would you still use steel wheel in steel rail unless you had some sort of cable to work with?

A rack rail is also an option, though tends towards the noisy and slow.

But yeah usually light rail keeps under 5%, and can’t really go above 10 on pure adhesion.

The J Church line on Muni is still a train in part because back when they were converting lines to buses, the hill on Church St was too steep for buses.

  • Wiki says it was more because of the private right away used, not necessarily its steepness:

    > While many streetcar lines were converted to bus lines after World War II, the J Church avoided this due to the private right-of-way it uses to climb the steepest grades on Church Street, between 18th Street and 22nd Street.[9]

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J_Church

muni has "relatively level routes" because the routes that were preserved were ones with tunnels that buses couldn't fit through (or narrow ROW in the case of the J), and given sf geography those tunnels invariably go through hills. muni, and especially the J, is one of the steeper adhesion railways in the world

Problem with rubber wheels in metros is absolutely atrocious air quality. I avoid them like the plague.