There would be no point in installing second hand rails since the cost of installing them would be far more than the rails. Far cheaper in whole life terms to install new rails and not have to replace them so soon.
Very true. Old rails tend to end up either on heritage lines or in scrap yards.
Trainer's point is well made,although Sheffield was to a large extent the prototype from which the lessons were learned by others. Part of the original idea was to link steel works to an estate of high rise flats, but shortly after the supertram opened, the former closed and the latter was demolished. For some years, the trams ran through a wasteland, although no more.
I have been following the extension of the Manchester Metrolink through my birth town, Oldham, to Rochdale. It hasn't been without incidents or dissent, but businesses have by and large hung on, and there seems to be some evidence of regeneration already. The removal of the former rail service was bemoaned by many in the letters page and comments of the
Oldham Chronicle for the three years it took to build, voices that quickly changed their tune when it opened. The rail line was under funded, and was in need of complete replacement, something that may have led to closure. The nay-sayers didn't take that into account.
The same is proving true of the route through the town centre. Voices that were "agin it" are beginning to sing praises.
I rode Metrolink during a visit to the land of my fathers in October. We went to visit the rellies in Blackpool, and took First Transpennine to Piccadilly - very nice ride in a 175, with announcements over the
PA▸ like "Please have tickets, passes, and any other travel related paraphernalia ready for inspection", and Mrs FTN being referred to as "Love" by all staff, so you knew you were in Lancashire. From there, we went to Media City by tram, then the Imperial War Museum, before getting the tram back towards Manchester Centre. The PID on board told us when to change for Oldham. We disembarked, the tram went, our tram for Oldham pulled up within a minute, and off we went, Our pass, bought at PIC, covered all trams and buses of two different companies that we used. It was wonderful to see a modern integrated transport system in action. Even Mrs FTN was impressed.
The temporary line following the old Oldham loop line through Mumps is about to close - early next year - and driver training through the town centre starts next week.
We're getting a bust rabid transit route in Bristol, which is nothing more than a cover story for a big road building scheme, underpinned by consultants' reports straight out of Hans Christian Andersen, or more likely the brothers Grimm. But then, Bristol isn't a huge thriving metropolis like Oldham, is it?