Personal thoughts on the new trams vs the old trams:
- the new trams have no stairs
- the old trams have stop buttons that are (theoretically) reachable from every seat
Thus, I can express no preference. While my knees complain sometimes when mounting the stairs into the old trams, when trying to get off of the new ones, I must get up and go to the doors in order to press the stop button, then sit down again until it actually stops, lest I fall over when it makes sudden (and not so sudden) movements like this mornings' bus.
Actually, yes, I can express a preference. You can wipe the old trams' seats off with a damp cloth before sitting down, as they're vinyl, not fabric. The new ones have fabric seats, and cannot be cleared of whatever debris has accumulated there without removing the seat.
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I just loved how, after weeks of testing and so forth, the new trams had to be pulled out of service to have their airconditioning systems modified to cope with cooling a tramload of passengers on a real Summer's day ...
The romance has gone now.
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It's as if their (German?) designers didn't have to think about the logistics of the vehicle being used in an Australian Summer... About one in every three trams I catch at the moment is an old tram.
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No. They were designed for Europe. The procurement guys just liked the look of them, I imagine.
Whatever the testing processes that were designed, at no point did anyone think: "Hey, our Summers can achieve 40oC+ - we ought to test these things for those conditions ..."
I don't think the "interior designers" brief mentioned sand, salt water, or commonsense.
The olds ones are still being phased out/new ones being phased in - asn new ones arrive and are considered ready to roll out.
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I could, of course, have completely misunderstood what little I know about the whole saga :)