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Pages in category "Diesel–electric locomotives of Canada" The following 67 pages are in this category, out of 67 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
GTAA Cogeneration Plant is a combined cycle natural gas and steam power station owned by the Greater Toronto Airports Authority, in Mississauga, Ontario.The plant is primarily used to supply steam (for heating and cooling) and power to the Toronto Pearson International Airport with surplus power sold onto the Ontario grid. [1]
An electric bus costs $1.5 million compared with $700,000 for a diesel bus; the electric bus has lower fuel and maintenance costs. Between charges, an electric bus can run about 225 kilometres (140 mi) in winter and 300 kilometres (190 mi) in summer; GO bus routes can be as long as 650 kilometres (400 mi).
Diesel-electric Daimler Buses North America: 1500–1689 Orion VII "Next Gen" 41 [b] Mal: 2008 36 12 Diesel-electric Daimler Buses North America 3100–3369 LFS: 270 McN, Qsy: 2018 33 12 Diesel Nova Bus: 3400–3454 LFS Hybrid 55 Mal: 2018 33 12 Diesel-electric Nova Bus 3455–3654 LFS Hybrid 200 Arw, Mal, Wil: 2019 33 12 Diesel-electric Nova ...
Dixie Road: Lakeshore Road: RR 12 Mississauga, Lakeview, Brampton, Bramalea Passes by Toronto Pearson International Airport to the east; Regional jurisdiction terminates at the Region's first roundabout and continues north as Horseshoe Hill Road under the jurisdiction of the Town of Caledon.
This page was last edited on 28 October 2024, at 07:01 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
A Canadian-only DTC (Diesel Torque Converter) was built for the CPR featuring a diesel-hydraulic design rather than the conventional diesel-electric. On July 26, 1965, CLC became Fairbanks-Morse (Canada) Ltd. and was no longer an independent Canadian company. Locomotive construction dwindled even further as the company branched out into ...
In Peel County (now Peel Region), Airport Road served as the north-south dividing line between the original five townships within the county; with Caledon, Chinguacousy, and Toronto (not to be confused with the City of Toronto), to the west, and Albion and Toronto Gore to the east. Airport Road ceased being said divide after the county was ...