Comment by James_K
1 day ago
I'd assumed the point of them was that you can take the several cars of a tram and split them up to have more frequent services. Though I suppose this would compound with the cost of having a driver on each car, potentially cancelling some of the gains from cheap installation. As for the point of automation, I think the tram can probably be a lot easier than the bus because of the human factor. It seems safer, so legislators will be more willing to legalise it and residents less likely to complain. Also, you've got rails in the road that clearly mark the route of the tram which make it more visible than an automated bus. Most of these automated taxi companies still have a human supervising the process, and I imagine that could be employed here to good effect and with fewer or faster manual interventions than would otherwise be needed.
Even if all that falls through, I'm not gonna complain about it. We sorely need more public infrastructure in the UK. Even if an experiment like this fails, at least you actually get a tram line and experience out of it. Much better than a project which sucks up million then gets cancelled. (Cough cough HS2.)
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