HOW YOU UNLOAD A NEW TRAM FROM THE TRUCK - Alstom Bombardier E2 Tram 6098 - Melbourne Trams
Вставка
- Опубліковано 30 лис 2024
- Welcome to Schony747 trams on Saturday. If you enjoy the video hit the like button and hit the bell to subscribe to Schony747 for new Train, Plane and Tram videos.
This is how Alstom (Bombardier) deliver a tram of the Doolan's Heavy Haulage Truck when the tram arrvies at Yarra Trams Preston Workshops and New Preston Tram Depot. In this case the tram is E2 6098 and the tram is delivered all over white before the PTV
Livery is applied at Preston. The Doolan's truck and trailer is long and has to be to accommodate the 34 metre tram. There is also a separate drive control on the trailer which moved the tyres and allows the trailer to move about in tight situations such as this one.
If you would like to see the previous delivery of 6097 in pictures, click on the link included here - • PICTURE PERFECT - NEW ...
This is the third last tram to be delivered in the current order. Sit back and enjoy the interesting tram delivery.
Have a great weekend - Brenden S.
Welcome to Schony747 trams on Saturday.
New Uploads Weekly - Trains, Planes, Trams
Filmed 6th July 2021 Preston Workshops & New Preston Tram Depot
Filmed in 4K Canon EOS R6 Handheld
Links:
Facebook: / schony747
UA-cam: / schony747
Storyful: www.storyful.com
Photos:
www.brendensch...
/ brendenschonfelderphotos
Email Enquiries:
Schony747@gmail.com
What an incredible piece of engineering that trailer is!
Yea indeed and the crew do an amazing job as well.
I agree, but absolutely necessary as we saw.
Great video. Thanks for sharing. My 2 cent tip for next time... try overlaid subtitle style notes instead of stopping the video footage with a black screen all the time. It makes for a much smoother experience for viewers.
Thanks for the thoughts. I've had comments saying some like the black screen and some like the overlays. I can certainly revisit that.
Yes, subtitles!!
Alternative method: 1. Release chains, 2. Reverse at speed, 3. Apply brake.
That would work and you wouldn't need the tractor 😂😅🤣
And, hey, if you line it up right, you might even be able to use the tram afterward!🤣
Thanks for the comprehensive coverage, very interesting procedures and good work! 👍
Thanks 😀😀. Your contributions are always welcome.
I'd never seen this done before. This was more involved than I realised. Brilliant. Thanks for sharing.
@tardis mole. They cheated by having a "ready built" ramp. I have seen a lot of the European modern stock delivered. They simply back up to a line in the depot yard, unload loads of rail and build a ramp with carefully measured 'spacing bars' and supports underneath (of course). Then proceed to PUSH the tram off by hand, I've seen up to 7 car 'Bendy' trams unloaded like this and none have ever 'slipped off' the ramp. Everyone gives a hand - enthusiasts who were filming and all, - and then simply push it into the depot. Time taken in all around 50 minutes. There are several videos of this 'method' on YT if you 'dig around'. Personally I didn't see the need for the 'Overhead Gang' as they didn't raise the 'pantograph' until the tram was on a 'Main Depot' line.
Excellent video! The Kenworth COE prime mover is a ballast tractor. Not a common sight in Australia. Most heavy haul uses a converter dolly coupled to the prime mover's fifth wheel. I used to go to the Preston depot regularly, to pick up and deliver these orange painted electrical boxes, which I transported to and from an off-site overhaul/repair shop, (in Bayswater). The drop off/pick up point was behind the brick gatehouse off Miller St. Going in between the shop and the tram sheds meant you got quite close to the sheds' Traverser pit, and had to pay attention to not drop a wheel in it!
There's a new traverser at Preston as well. I don't know anything about trucks so your information is very interesting.
I'm pretty sure this was the truck with tram that I saw parked outside of Heidelberg McDonald's, heading west towards Preston, at midnight one night when I went in to get a coffee, before picking up my partner from work. Awesome.
Probably right. I don't know the route but that would seem pretty right
I am well and truly amazed by this video. I would've never thought that there are speed limits as high as 70km/h anywhere in Melbourne. This is unbelievable.
Sometimes you can see limits as high as 80! Thanks for looking.
@@Schony747 That's insanely dangerous. If you ride a bike at 80kph, you can spill your soy latte and ruin the new pair of vegan suede shoes.
Brilliantly informative and interesting video.
Thanks for having a look 😀😀😀
Very interesting!
I have often wondered how we get new DART Light Rail cars here, so I'm quite sure its basically the same, except I'm inclined to think they are bought in by rail more or less. I see them in training consists on videos.
Great video!👍🏿
Thanks! The team is very well drilled at what they do and it's interesting to watch.
That was absolutely fabulous! I'm sending the URL to a truckie friend in NZ. Give the truckie a medal!
Pretty impressive work from the whole team 😀😀
@@Schony747 Horrid thing to have to do at night also. Pack another Thermos!
A really nice looking tram.thanks..:)
It looks great and comes up pretty good when the green PTV livery is applied.
Excellent job, especially the driving by the truck driver. In the early 1980s, Buffalo NY USA (NFTA) built its light rail system. The LRVs were built overseas and each vehicle was delivered to site on a flatbed, then lifted by crane over a fence onto the rail yard. This worked fine for all of the vehicles, except one. The slings slipped and the vehicle dropped, impaled onto the spiked iron fence. OOPS! Buffalo NFTA had one less vehicle in its fleet.
Trams have always been delivered to Preston. As the factory is about an hour away and Preston has no practical rail offloading facilities, this makes perfect sense.
Everyone needs a parts vehicle. 😜
Alstom: We need to deliver this tram.
The Boys: 1 trip?
One trip and a couple of attempts to reverse 😀😀
I find it a bit surprising when the truck is ready to unload the tram at the ramp ?
2 guys laying on the ground guiding the truck into position ??
I would have thought there would be a better system to unload the tram.
I guess it doesn't happen often enough to warrant a better system for unloading or loading.
Good of you to be out on a cold night like this to make a video for us to enjoy while sitting at home with the heater on.
Thanks for posting this video.
I had just finished driving a test tram and stuck around for the delivery. Guiding the truck back is fairly normal as the rails on the truck need to line up perfectly with the delivery ramp. The last thing they want is a derailment off the truck.
Great video! Thanks for taking the time and effort to make this video of a somewhat hidden part of our tram system.
Thanks 😀😀😀😀
You'd think that they'd upgrade the trailer to remote control so that the operator could walk around and see what's happening. Also it would be safer for the operator as he could stand in one place and not worry about the truck running them over.
I guess it's an old trailer they keep just for this job.
Most of the new trailers are remote control.
Funny thing with remote control ?
Some companies prefer not to run remote control as other signals around them interfere with the signal.
( but this might be an excuse for not keeping up with technology also ?? LOL )
Good to see how smoothly they handle it. I presume from the number that you now have 98 E Class trams in operation. I suspect, however, that your A and B Class trams will remain in use for some time yet. Some routes require only a smaller-capacity tram, they're still quite functional, and then there is tradition and sentiment.... !
98 has been delivered which is what you saw here. 97 is in service and the A, B2 and Z3 trams look like being around for a few years yet!
Pretty cool. Thanks for the vid.
Thanks for having a look
Nice piece of reversing skills cool
Pretty impressive but you would be pretty good after 48 trams
he ought to get a job at a boat ramp!
I really enjoyed watching this.
Why not share it with the news services and the rest of Melbourne can see we are still getting more trams. :)
More trams. wow.
Good idea. Yarra Trams have a media policy so I'll leave it to them to sort it out.
i aso never new how this was done great video. good to see australian content starting to appear on youtube. keep the vids coming
It's fascinating to see it in person. Thanks for having a look.
For whatever reason, I figured the factory would be part of the tram system or something, never gave thought to it. At least here in Queensland, our heavy rail is directly connected to factories and whatnot. I guess Gold Coast light rail would be similar to the situation here.
Alstom / Bombardier is connected to the heavy rail network. Trams as you point out is not. I'm sure G Link would be the same.
Hay Brendan. From 8:40 to 8:50 it looks like the Rear Controllers doing the Hard Yards by pushing it by himself. By the camera angle. I don't know if anyone else thought this. Also before anyone say's anything. Yes I am quite aware it was the Prime Mover doing it.
I saw that optical illusion as well 😀😀😀😀
I think he was just making sure it didn't fall over.
Very nice and interesting
Thanks Matthew. Thanks for all your contributions.
Brilliant
Thanks mate 😀😀😀😀
Great video mate!
Thanks mate 😀😀😀😀
Precision. If this move had been down 10 yrs ago?, the truck driver would have done the "come back, go forward, move to the left etc", now it is, turn the wheels, by "someone on foot".
An interesting look at how new trams are brought to point of impending use. Tongue in cheek, was expecting to see at end (caution sign), in exterior area above driver's seat the sign "Not In Use".
The seat still had the plastic on the seat if that suffices 😀😀😀
our electric trains in states where i live have each car seperated by a interlock. only max 4 cars can be linked depending on the station but average length is 3 cars
Here it's generally 2 car sets for the electric trains. I'm sure more could be coupled, but the station infrastructure won't allow trains that size to run in service.
Is there any particular reason for the flashing street light when they were unloading?
It's very technical - it's been reported but hasn't been fixed. It's been flickering for months 😀😀
It helps to remind you the power is still on, LOL.
Nice.
Thanks 😀😀😀😀. Thanks for your contributions.
Great vid thank you! I wonder how long before those pesky tagers take to the tram with their cans. 😤
Surprisingly these trams are left alone. But when they are tagged with Art Work, they do a big job!
@@Schony747 😉👍🍻
Hi Brendan. I assume this always happens inthe ( very cold) wee small hours to allow for less traffic on St George's Road
Less traffic on Bell St as well. Only held up about half a dozen cars in this case
@@Schony747 It seems completely insane to cart a tram through Melbourne on a truck, when it could cart itself on rails. If it wasn't for the Australian railway gauge lunacy, it could go on rails all the way from Dandenong.
@@WillKemp You're using common sense with your thoughts ??
This will Never work when Government is involved in anything, LOL
Saw it was 19 minute video. Wondered why so long! After watching, very fascinating!! How long did the actual process take? I am assuming this is a very heavily edited video!!
All up around half an hour to 40 minutes from when the truck arrives. It's a well rehearsed process these days so it's only a matter of reversing the truck in which only takes a few attempts, up to the ramp and off. The process you saw was pretty well how it is with as you say some editing to speed up the experience.
Another facinating tram infrastructure video! Congratulations to the crew that handles this operation. Their skills are very evident. Your shot of the overhead "line truck" now makes me want to see a video on their work. Also, is there a "line car" to handle private right of way situations, or does the truck have a hi-rail setup? Growing up, my favorite piece of rolling stock on the Chicago, South Shore & South Bend RR was their line car, which was built from an old interurban car from an abandoned interurban electric. Cheers from Wisconsin.
Hi Andrew. The crew from Doolan's Heavy Haulage are a well trained team now as you would expect after 48 deliveries. Thanks for all your contributions 😀😀😀😀
i work in the overhead for yarratrams i have done many of tram deliveries to that depot . our line truck does have a high rail set up . we do all the maintenance and renewal of the electrical overhead system
@@deanwalker6640 Thanks for your reply, Dean! I hope to see a video sometime on how overhead maintenance gets done there on your system in Melbourne, which is very impressive.
We need to get something organised then!
How long or rather how far the new trams need to be tested before certified fit for use?
It's 1000km of fault free testing which is normally around 3 weeks from delivery and the rest of the fitout of the tram, livery aoication and testing.
Hey, nice video and great to see you were there, is this tram at Preston depot or Southbank? Also I’ve been on that tram 🚈.
6097 is a Southbank tram mate
Better to just drive onto a straight section of open track in the road and unload, but reversing made possible by SCHEUERLE Heavy transport trailer, Quality made in Germnay!
Driving into the road would probably work. This is how trams are delivered here and it works pretty well. Thanks for looking.
Great video, Is it my imagination, but was there minor damage to the centre of the white panel on the tram that can be seen when trailor is being reversed? And on the other end of the tram, the white panel is raised up, for some reason.
No damage on the tram. The front panel is raised up so the tow bar can be connected underneath and to the tractor. You are better of having the raised panel working before you leave the factory knowing it works instead of having problems on arrival.
Wouldn't it be much easier to deliver these via existing rail lines? Are they a non-standard gauge?
Different gauge, different voltage.
The trams actually are standard gauge 1,435 mm (international standard), Victorian trains run wider at 1,600 mm
Trams are 600VDC, trains are 1500VDC
Light rail typically does not connect to the heavy rail network, so a truck would be required to bridge the gap in the rails. At that point, they might as well load it onto a truck from the factory to remove the problems associated with transloading from a train flatcar to a truck. As far as towing the train on the tracks instead of loading it, in the US the trams do not have to comply with the same crashworthiness regulations that regular trains do, so they aren't allowed to tow it; I expect it's similar in Australia.
@@Spacek531 iirc when carried as cargo stuff doesn't need to be passenger-crash-norm-compliant. Imagine the tram just as a special load on a normal Wagon, here in Germany a company made special carts just to transport broad gauge locos as cargo: www.railadventure.de/equipment/ www.globalrailwayreview.com/news/23429/finland-welcomes-vectron-locomotive-for-broad-gauge-rail-system/
@@martinum4 The loco in the article is a regular heavy rail train running on heavy rail tracks, so there's no problem with towing it on the rails with its wheels turning if it weren't for the difference in gauge.
@@jackprice6599 Before they removed the railcrossings they could have made it dual gauge from Dandenong and then towed the trams with a diesel to an exchange point where it could be towed further along the tram network. I doubt it is feasible now.
very interesting, I looked on Google Maps, and on Street view, there is nothing there... it hasn't been updated.
What has been updated is the normal view...
That's interesting considering it was converted years ago now.
Brendan, once the livery is applied and the tram passes all acceptance checks, do they then get delivered by rail to the different depots that will house them? Kew, South Melbourne and which others?
They only operate out of Preston and Southbank. So if it's allocated to Soutbank, it'll be transfered by rail.
High speed braking acceptance is normally undertaken on the 96 light rail. The 1000km fault free testing is normally undertaken at Preston and then it'sallocated to Southbank or Preston. Both depots swap trams anyway so many E class end up at both depots at some point.
Nice video mate. Where do these trams get built?
Built at the old Comeng Factory Dandenong
Engine in the truck sounds nice, do you know what engine it has?
No idea. I couldn't see any badge on the side of the Kenworth either.
They Run A Cummins Engine 😃. Though It Depends On The Customers Specs & What They Want 😃
Thanks for that Schony, very impressed by the size of these modern trams. How often do new trams arrive I wonder, would it be one or two every month ?
Generally once a month at the current rate. Last one is delivered in September
Very interesting . Good to see some road vehicles still made in Australia . Why is the tram white , are all new trams white or do they come in different colours :-)
The tram is delivered white from the factory in Dandenong and is wrapped in the green PTV livery at Preston
They really didn’t think about access for delivering new trams when the built that depot.
The old setup had access near the new west gate entrance before the redevelopment. So this set up isn't as easy as reversing like the old days but it's still functional
How do ypu get a tram off a lo-loader? With much 'carefulling' how else😉
LOL 😀😀. Thanks for looking.
Why di they build trams so far away from tram tracks ?
It's actually built right next door to a train track which is handy for the Vlocity heavy rail vehicle also being delivered. Since 1975, Trams have been built at the Dandenong Facility.
Good video, but I can't believe how poorly thought out that delivery method is! I worked at the Edinburgh tram depot and they had a proper road in and out for the trams, not to mention a specific area for unloading the trams.
Space and design would have been an issue as Preston Workshops has been around for many years. There aren't many tram deliveries and For the 40 minutes it takes to unload, it works pretty well
@@Schony747 the size of trams has increased a lot too. They were one carriage when Preston was built
@@Schony747 I wasn't aware that it was a legacy depot. I guess there wasn't anything else for it!
when do a "tram network" become a "light rail system"
citys are creating a new mode of transport and are calling them "light rail" but then Melbourne is a "tram network" and having more and more of the same "light rail" vehicles
Melbourne is a legacy network so will always be known as a tram network. It's always an interesting discussion point and I don't think there's really a proper answer either.
WA plates on tralier to avoid tax lol
Didn't even notice that!
I like the content, but your white text boxes are really annoying, I wish you just put that text over top of the video instead of stopping the video to put text constantly 😵
Thanks for the comments. I've fallen behind with this lot of replies. Thanks for looking.
These informative titles are annoying when you kept them on screen for such long time...BTW interesting as it is done on open public road, I expect some tram depot...
Depots either are not high enough for the trucks to drive in or are just not long enough
if he had turned right at the lights first, he would have been able to back it straight in and the whole episode would have taken half the time. even the guy editing and uploading was paid by the hour. advice from a retired road train driver.
No pay by the hour for the photographer. I had just finished running a test tram. Not sure why they back in this way but I'm sure there's someogic behind it. Thanks for having look.
I call fail on the planing dept. as always they never even thing about the truck, or how it is going to make a could have made a rd side track to just do a straight line back up.
The infrastructure was already there. It works OK for the few trams that actually get delivered but as you say improvements can always be made.