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Sunday 25 September 2022

(SFG) CALTRAIN DEBUTS NEW ELECTRIC FLEET

A lime green line at the foot of the doorway starts the tour into the all-new Caltrain electric feet.

Caltrain has run in the Bay Area since 1863, and prides itself as the oldest continually operating rail system west of the Mississippi. It will soon take a huge leap into the future of locomotive transportation.

Stepping on board, there’s an immediate tantalizing aroma of that fresh-train smell. Like leaving the car wash. Evergreen fresh.

A robotic female voice announces that the doors are closing, and then you’re sealed inside the most advanced train on the market. Power outlets for each seat. Space underneath for luggage or scooters. The paired seating like today’s Caltrains remains, but they’re well spaced from one another.

On the wall inside each passenger car is a live screen showing rider destinations akin the newest BART cars. The only oversight onboard might be the trash/recycling bins that are sized relatively small for a train that is set to fit 2,169 riders at max capacity.

Wisnet security cameras appear throughout the cars, but the digitals eyes don’t dampen the polished interior. Connecting the train carts is a white tunnel that resembles the narrow hallways on Princess Leia’s Tantive IV ship from the opening of “Star Wars: Episode IV – A New Hope.”

Once a tin can of calamity, the Caltrain bathroom is now fit for an astronaut with generous room and multiple steel handles to help hang tight over the occasional bumps along the Peninsula tracks.

Up front, inside the conductor’s cockpit, Caltrain engineers are giddy to give these all-electric trains a ride. The new console replaces most of the buttons with screens, and comes with cruise control, a new amenity. The trains can hit up to 110 mph but don’t expect these speeds when the trains come on board. There’s enough oversight and cameras inside the console to ensure the driver can’t pick their nose without someone else knowing.

Stadler — as in, the Stadler Plant in Salt Lake City where the EMUs are built — adorns the nose of the train in black lettering serving as a new nickname for the fleet.

Not everyone rides Caltrain, but if you live along the South Bay or near its train station in SoMa, then you’re familiar with that iconic horn. Once a button, the horn is now a toggle that’s ready to broadcast whenever a train approaches a four-way intersection.

Production on the fleet began in 2019, and Caltrain broke ground on the Electrification Project in 2017. The first electric trains arrived in the Bay Area in March.

Expected to debut for public use in 2024, the new trains mark a pivotal transition for the South Bay transit system. Its current fleet of diesel-electric locomotive powered trains were yesterday; the electric multiple units (EMU) are inbound for tomorrow.

Until then, anticipation grows as train enthusiasts begin to catch glimpses of the sleek fleet on the tracks as the EMUs continue to appear on the Peninsula for testing on the tracks. SFGATE - link - Silas Valentino - link - Charles Russo - link - more like this (electric trains) - link - more like this (California) - link

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