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First cars with AC propulsion, cars 5344–5345 converted to Toronto Rocket T35A08 mock-up cars in June–July 2006. Electronic side destination signs, including automated audible pre-boarding route and destination announcements and closed-circuit television cameras have since been installed on all T1 trains. 5381–5386 ⋮ 6131–6136 6141/2/5/6
Berlin U-Bahn: H & HK train stocks; Boston Subway: "#3 Red Line" cars (01800 series) Bucharest Metro: MOVIA 346 for lines 1,2 and 3; Chicago 'L': 706 new cars under construction; Detroit People Mover: INNOVIA ART 100 (ART Mark I) Docklands Light Railway: all rolling stock; Delhi Metro: Broad-gauge MOVIA trainsets
Rotterdam Metro: Series 5300, Series 5400, Series 5500 (R Stock / RSG3), and 5600 Series (R Stock / SG3) Shanghai Metro: Movia 456 (AC04) Singapore MRT: Movia C951 for Downtown MRT line in 2013. Movia R151 for North South and East West lines. Stockholm metro: The new C30 stock cars, being introduced in 2020.
The T series, also known as the T-1, is the fourth series of rapid transit rolling stock used in the subway system of Toronto, Ontario, Canada.They were ordered by the Toronto Transit Commission (TTC) in 1992 and built in one production set between 1995 and 2001 by Bombardier Transportation in Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada.
Subway cars - for the Toronto Transit Commission (1965–1979) Automated Expo-Express surface metro cars - for the Expo 67 World's Fair (1965) PA3-type rapid transit cars for Port Authority Trans-Hudson (1972) and Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority 's Blue Line (1979) and Orange Line (1980)
These were the last Toronto subway car models not equipped with air-conditioning systems. Interior of an H-6 subway car with individual vinyl orange covered seats. Based on the 75 ft (22.86 m) M1, the early H-series cars improved on the design, notably by enlarging the operator's cab and using a single-handle controller. [2]
270 3-car C20 Movia sets (810 cars) originally built by Kalmar Verkstad and Adtranz (later acquired by Bombardier), as well as one 3-car C20F Movia set built by Bombardier with "FICAS" technology. 96 4-car C30 Movia sets (384 cars) have been ordered to be used as 48 full-length trains on the Red line.
A new overlay area code, 437, started operation on March 25, 2013. [6] [7] That effectively allocates 24 million numbers to a city of 2.5 million people. Area code 942 is scheduled for addition to the 416/647/437 overlay on April 26, 2025. [8] Area code 387 has been reserved for Toronto's future use.