Damn, those Bredas sound like they could fall apart any second! And knowing their reliability firsthand from sore experience, I do believe that they might! Glad to see the new trains replacing them. It's time for the Bredas to be replaced.
Those bredas are absolutely the worst. Muni couldn’t keep up with fixing them coz as soon as 1 gets fixed, another 2 broke down. Ansaldobreda makes the worse trains ever
Septa would probably be better getting something low floor, like the Bombardier Flexity series, or the Alstom Citatids, or if the want to please the American government something from Brookville.
They are still testing. Give it time man, lol they just got back up and running. Shit ain't gunna just change overnight. Stuff like this takes weeks before it's fully back up. Remember people are still scared.
Brilliant! How expansive is the light rail system in San Francisco? When will the trains run to Chinatown? I am watching from the Netherlands. Keep up the good work!
Thank you! The MUNI Metro system consists of six lines (seven if you include the S Shuttle) that run on 71.5 miles of track. The system covers much of the city, but many areas are far from rail service as the current system is a shell of its former self. It is still, however, the third busiest light rail system in the United States. The Chinatown extension is supposed to open in Spring 2022. Rest assured we will have footage of that as soon as it opens. Greetings from California!
Remember it isn’t just light rail, it’s actually more of a tram system. The majority of service in the western part of the city operates as a tram service in mixed traffic. The high floor vehicles have pneumatic steps which are lowered at each door so they can function in the street.
@@crazyoncoffee I am now utterly confused about what Europeans call tram vs light rail. So tram is just streetcar in "American", right? The slower street running version, usually one-car trains, that we see in European cities a lot. And light rail is closer to a tram-train in Europe, right? Or do they have their name for light rail too? As far as I can see, most American light rail seems to be using tram-train rolling stock. About half of them use some variant of the Siemens Avanto which is mostly a tram-train type of vehicle in Europe.
These were closed for so long it feels nice to see them on the streets again.
So glad to see MUNI running again. Things are slowly slowly coming back to normal finally.
Nice to know I’m honestly not the only one that records the trains here in the Bay Area, keep up the great work
I subscribed btw 👊
Thank you
Very very nice!
More please!^^
Greetings from Dresden, Germany.
Thank you! More is coming in the future.
Dresden ist einfach nur grandios schön 😍Und hat ein tolles öffentliches Netz ❗👌Da brauchst Du echt kein Auto Top 👍
So amazing this Video 👌
Love greetings from Düsseldorf ❗😍And San Francisco is so beautiful 😍
Thank you! Greetings from the Bay Area :)
Damn, those Bredas sound like they could fall apart any second! And knowing their reliability firsthand from sore experience, I do believe that they might!
Glad to see the new trains replacing them. It's time for the Bredas to be replaced.
Those bredas are absolutely the worst. Muni couldn’t keep up with fixing them coz as soon as 1 gets fixed, another 2 broke down. Ansaldobreda makes the worse trains ever
I think septa should get some of them lrv4 trolleys.
i doubt it anytime soon cuz they gotta upgrade the system for these so expect them at least by 2022-2024 & expect them to restore a few trolley lines
Septa would probably be better getting something low floor, like the Bombardier Flexity series, or the Alstom Citatids, or if the want to please the American government something from Brookville.
It"s pretty bad when 2 trains stop at the same time, and no one gets on or off either train.
They are still testing. Give it time man, lol they just got back up and running. Shit ain't gunna just change overnight. Stuff like this takes weeks before it's fully back up. Remember people are still scared.
Brilliant! How expansive is the light rail system in San Francisco? When will the trains run to Chinatown? I am watching from the Netherlands. Keep up the good work!
Thank you! The MUNI Metro system consists of six lines (seven if you include the S Shuttle) that run on 71.5 miles of track. The system covers much of the city, but many areas are far from rail service as the current system is a shell of its former self. It is still, however, the third busiest light rail system in the United States. The Chinatown extension is supposed to open in Spring 2022. Rest assured we will have footage of that as soon as it opens. Greetings from California!
Remember it isn’t just light rail, it’s actually more of a tram system. The majority of service in the western part of the city operates as a tram service in mixed traffic. The high floor vehicles have pneumatic steps which are lowered at each door so they can function in the street.
@@BayAreaTransitNews Thank you! Hartelijk dank!
@@crazyoncoffee I am now utterly confused about what Europeans call tram vs light rail. So tram is just streetcar in "American", right? The slower street running version, usually one-car trains, that we see in European cities a lot.
And light rail is closer to a tram-train in Europe, right? Or do they have their name for light rail too? As far as I can see, most American light rail seems to be using tram-train rolling stock. About half of them use some variant of the Siemens Avanto which is mostly a tram-train type of vehicle in Europe.
You should go to Montgomery station next.
It's still closed, Embarcadero is the only open underground station right now.
@JesusMyLordNSavior Official Yes, there's been quite a lot of changes compared to several months ago!
@JesusMyLordNSavior Official You're gonna like the upcoming videos then
Are the streetcars going to open up?
Eventually, but we don't know when yet.
Ok
Thx
How dated. This video opens wth the old Bay-bridge.