• smokinliver@sopuli.xyz
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    3 months ago

    I am certainly not but imho…

    You would need many places to overtake since the normal trams go super slow by stopping every couple hundret meters.

    And even if the cargo ones go slow as well you would need many more switches/sidings to places where you can (un)load them and switches are expensive to maintain

    So even though the concept is super nice, it often times lacks the practicality as well as the financial benefits to convince networks to get it stated in the first place

    • Swedneck@discuss.tchncs.de
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      3 months ago

      but you don’t need cargo all day, stores generally restock in the off hours or maybe just straight up at night. Certainly grocery stores restock the actual shelves from their internal storage every morning.
      So you’d do a cargo tram run every night when there’s plenty of time to do things slow and not have to worry about passenger services.

      As for switches, that’s the thing! you wouldn’t need extra switches since you can operate outside of passenger hours and just use the existing platforms most of the time, maybe building a little extra platform where needed.

      The only really new part of this is using trams, it’s already perfectly normal for most deliveries to be made in the off hours in places where there’s a lot of pedestrianization.

      • smokinliver@sopuli.xyz
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        3 months ago

        Yup that doesn’t sound all too impractical and I would love to see it (in my city).

        The only thing holding it back is probably one city to pull it off successfully for others to follow. And as a open platform-like system cause in the case of Dresden/Volkswagen the trams were company exclusive.