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PCC streetcar

The PCC (Presidents' Conference Committee) is a tram design that was first built in the United States in the 1930s. The design proved successful domestically, and after World War II it was licensed for use elsewhere in the world where PCC based cars were made. The PCC car has proved to be a long-lasting icon of streetcar design, and many remain in service around the world.

PCC streetcar
Three PCCs on the San Francisco Municipal Railway's F-line. Pictured are an example of one double-ended streetcar and two single-ended cars.
Interior of a PCC car
In service1936–present
ManufacturerSt Louis Car Company
Pullman Standard
Constructed1935–1952 (USA)
1949–1978 (Europe)
Number built5,000+
Capacity52–61 Seats
Specifications
Car length46–50.5 ft (14.02–15.39 m)
Width100–108 in (2.54–2.74 m)
Maximum speed50 mph (80 km/h)[citation needed]
Weight35,000–42,000 lb (15,900–19,100 kg)
Traction motors4 × 55 hp (41 kW) motors, 43:6 (~7.17) gear ratio
AccelerationVariable, Automatic 1.5–4.75 mph/s (2.41–7.64 km/(h⋅s))
DecelerationService: Variable to 4.75 mph/s (7.64 km/(h⋅s)),
Emergency: 9.0 mph/s (14.5 km/(h⋅s)) maximum
Electric system(s)600–750 V DC from overhead catenary
Current collector(s)Pantograph or trolley pole
UIC classificationBo'Bo'
AAR wheel arrangementB-B
Braking system(s)Dynamic Service Braking; Friction; for Final Stop, Park; Magnetic
Track gauge5 ft 2+12 in (1,588 mm) and other broad gauges
4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
1,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in) and other narrow gauges

Origins Edit

The "PCC" ("Presidents' Conference Committee") originated from the design committee formed in 1929. It was renamed the "Electric Railway Presidents' Conference Committee" (ERPCC) in 1931. The group's membership consisted primarily of representatives of several large operators of U.S. urban electric street railways plus potential manufacturers. Three interurban lines and at least one "heavy rail", or rapid transit, operator—Chicago Rapid Transit Company—were represented as well. Also included on the membership roll were manufacturers of surface cars (streetcars) and interested component suppliers.

ERPCC's goal was to design a streamlined, comfortable, quiet, and fast accelerating and braking streetcar that would be operated by a seated operator using floor mounted pedal controls to better meet the needs of the street railways and appeal to riders. ERPCC prepared a detailed research plan, conducted extensive research on streetcar design, built and tested components, made necessary modifications and revisions based upon the findings, and ultimately produced a set of specifications for a standardized and fixed design. It included a modest list of available options with ample room for customer customization but was to be built with standard parts as opposed to a custom designed car body with diverse parts added depending on the whims and requirements of the individual customer. Numerous national and international users operated large fleets of PCC cars for many years.

Many design patents resulted from the work of ERPCC. These were transferred to a new business entity called the Transit Research Corporation (TRC) when ERPCC expired in 1936. Although this company continued the work of research on improvements to the basic design of the car and issued sets of specifications three times in the ensuing years, because TRC defined a PCC car as any vehicle which used patents on which it collected royalties, it was formed for the primary purpose of controlling those patents and promoting the standardization envisioned by the ERPCC. The company was funded by its collection of patent royalties from the railways which bought PCC cars. The company was controlled by a voting trust representing the properties which had invested in the work of ERPCC. One participant in Committee meetings, Philadelphia trolley manufacturer JG Brill Company brought a competitive design—the Brilliner—to market in 1938. Because Raymond Loewy designed elements that were very similar to the PCC look, the Brilliner attracted no large orders, being built only for Atlantic City Transit and the Red Arrow Lines in suburban Philadelphia. Fewer than 50 were sold.[1]

A significant contribution to the PCC design was noise reduction with extensive use of rubber in springs and other components to prevent rattle, vibration, and thus noise and to provide a level of comfort unknown before.[2] Wheel tires were mounted between rubber sandwiches and were electrically isolated so that shunts were required to complete a ground. Resilient wheels were used on most PCC cars, with later heftier versions known as "Super-Resilient".

Gears were another source of considerable noise, solved by employing hypoid gears which are mounted at a right angle to the axle, where three of the six teeth constantly engaged the main gear, reducing lash and noise. All movable truck parts employed rubber for noise reduction as well.[3] "Satisfactory Cushion Wheel of Vital Importance; Develop New Truck Design; Generous Use of Rubber" are headings within a paper that Chief Engineer Clarence F. Hirshfeld both presented and published.[4]

After a specification document suitable for purchasing cars was generated by TRC, orders were placed by eight companies in 1935 and 1936. First was Brooklyn & Queens Transit Corporation (B&QT) for 100 cars, then Baltimore Transit Co. (BTCo) for 27 cars, Chicago Surface Lines (CSL) for 83 cars, Pittsburgh Railways Co. (PRCO) for 101 cars, San Diego Electric Railway (SDERy) for 25 cars, Los Angeles Railway (LARy) for 60 cars, and then Boston Elevated Railway (BERy) for one car. In late 1935 or early in 1936 Westinghouse Electric Corporation pressed for one car to be equipped with their electrical equipment for testing in Pittsburgh, since the Brooklyn order would have all cars equipped by General Electric, and Clark Equipment Company pressed for one car to be made by them of aluminum for delivery to B&QT. Agreements among the parties were reached whereby St Louis Car Company would build 101 essentially identical cars and Clark would build one of its own body design.

Brooklyn received its first car number 1001 on May 28, 1936, PRCo took delivery of car number 100 on July 26, 1936, and Baltimore received its first car on September 2, 1936. In the late 1936 discussions of operating experience, it was noted that the Brooklyn car had run 3,000 miles by the time the Pittsburgh car had run 1,000 miles. One of the key patents was filed by Dan H. Bell on January 8, 1937, and granted on July 5, 1938, and entitled, "Rail Car or Similar Article," Patent No. 110,384.[5] The first car to be placed in a scheduled public service was PRCo 100 in August and B&QT launched its first scheduled service with a group of cars on October 1, 1936, followed by CSL on November 13, 1936. Production continued in North America by St. Louis Car Co. and Pullman Standard until 1952, with 4,978 units being built. Under license to use the designs patented by TRC, thousands more PCC and partially PCC type cars were produced in Europe through the last half of the 20th century. The cars were well-built, and many hundreds are still in operation. The majority of large North American streetcar systems surviving after 1935 purchased PCC streetcars; those systems which eventually terminated streetcar operations often sold their cars to surviving operators.

The Melbourne & Metropolitan Tramways Board (MMTB) in Australia was keen to build two new tram routes after World War II, and these routes would be served by PCC Streetcars. The MMTB decided that it was too expensive and Melbourne only ever had two PCC streetcars, of which one was a prototype for a completely different class.

Several dozen remain in public transit service, such as the in Boston, and in Philadelphia, Kenosha, San Diego and San Francisco following extensive overhauling. All other surviving and functional North American PCC cars are operated by museums and heritage railways.[6] Several retired PCCs from Boston, Cleveland, and Philadelphia were purchased as scrap and have been privately stored just outside Windber, Pennsylvania since 1992.[7]

Washington, D.C., PCCs were unique[8] because of conduit plows which collected current from a slot between the rails into which the plow dipped, contacting positive and negative rails under the street on either side. At the city limits were "plow pits", where the plow was dropped and removed, the trolley pole raised, and the car then continued along using overhead wire. The process was reversed in the opposite direction into Washington.

"The PCC car was not just another modular vehicle but the result of the only systems engineering approach to mass producing a rail car."[9] Research into passenger comfort resulting from vibrations, acceleration, lighting, heating and cooling, seat spacing, cushion height, space for arms, legs, standing passengers, economies of weight affecting maintenance, cost of power, reduced wear of components and track. Dimensions were established to fit the majority but could easily be changed for special situations. Windows were spaced to match seating.

While some of the components in the PCC car had been used before—resilient wheels, magnetic braking, sealed gears, and modular design to name a few—the ERPCC redesigned, refined, and perfected many of these while developing new acceleration and braking controls and put them all in one package.

Manufacturing Edit

 
A PCC streetcar at Boston's Riverside station in the early 1960s

PCC cars were initially built in the United States by the St Louis Car Company (SLCCo) and Pullman Standard. Clark Equipment built the only aluminum-body PCC[10] as well as all narrow gauge B1 trucks for Los Angeles, all the standard and broad gauge B2 trucks both air- and all-electric, and the B2B trucks used under PRCo 1725–1799 and Toronto 4500–4549.[11][citation needed] SLCCo built all B3 trucks, both standard and broad gauge.[12][citation needed] PCC cars for Canadian cities were assembled in Montreal, Quebec by Canadian Car & Foundry from bodies and trucks supplied by St. Louis Car.[13]

Westinghouse (Westinghouse Electric, Westinghouse Air Brake Company, Canadian Westinghouse Co.) and General Electric both supplied electrical packages and brake components which were designed and built in cooperation with the ERPCC.[14] The customer specified the equipment, which was to be installed, performance was similar, and most cities ordered from both suppliers.[15] Since Westinghouse was home based near Pittsburgh, PRCo ordered 75% of its PCC fleet with Westinghouse equipment, the balance with GE.[citation needed] Indeed, PCCs are often identified as either Westinghouse or GE.[clarification needed]

The last PCC streetcars built for any North American system were a batch of 25 for the San Francisco Municipal Railway, manufactured by the St Louis Car Company and delivered in 1951–2.[16]

Approximately 4,586 PCC cars were purchased by United States transit companies – 1052 by Pullman Standard and 3534 by St. Louis. Most transit companies purchased one type, but Chicago, Baltimore, Cleveland, and Shaker Heights operated both examples. The Baltimore Transit Co. (BTC) considered the Pullman cars of superior construction. The St. Louis cars had a more aesthetically pleasing design with a more rounded front and rear plus other fancy frills. The BTC found the Pullman cars easier to work on. St. Louis cars had compound curved wheel wells.

Performance Edit

Westinghouse developed the XD-323 rotary accelerator for motor control with 99 points. It was installed in the first PRCo car, number 100, and minor modifications allowed use in the last PCCs produced in North America for San Francisco in 1952. Prior streetcar control, existing from the 1890s, required a standing operator at a three-foot-high vertical "switch stand" to rotate a handle to one of six brass points mounted within the stand to provide traction motor control and acceleration. The PCC had its accelerator under the floor where the pedal activated linkage to resistance ribbons were mounted to each PCC point around the outside edge of the accelerator. An arm rotating in the center had rollers on either end which cut out resistance alternately as it rotated approximately 180 degrees. This same accelerator was also used for dynamic braking; when the power pedal was released the accelerator sought optimum braking for the speed, which prevented a lag when the brake pedal was depressed. General Electric developed a control system for PCC cars that mirrored the Westinghouse scheme in function, although not in simplicity or maintainability.[17] With the GE commutator motor controller operating by air pressure, it had to be redesigned with the advent of the All-Electric PCC. Acceleration was variable between 1.5- and 4.75-mph per second depending upon the depression of the power pedal with the accelerator advanced automatically by a low-voltage pilot motor. Service braking was also variable and the maximum dynamic application decreased speed by 4.75-mph/s; pressing the brake pedal into emergency also brought the friction and magnetic brakes into play providing a maximum deceleration of 9.0-mph/s. Compared to a maximum of 14 points on old time equipment, the PCC was considerably smoother.

Most PCCs employed three pedals with a dead man's switch to the left, brake in center, and power pedal on the right. Depressing the brake about half-way and then releasing the deadman pedal put the PCC in "park". Lifting the deadman alone would apply all brakes, drop sand, and balance the doors so they could be pushed open easily. Chicago used "bicycle-type levers" for power and brake but converted some cars to two pedals. St. Louis Public Service Co. (SLPS) used two pedals, both with heel interlocks. The right pedal is the brake; depressing this pedal about halfway while lifting away from the heel applied "park". Once the brake is released the heel need not be engaged with the interlock (although a professional driver is to cover the brake at all times.) The left pedal applied the power and the heel interlock had to be engaged at all times since it was the deadman; only when the brake was in "park" could the deadman be disengaged.

SLPS is unique in that all 300 of their PCCs are All-Electric with the 1500s ordered in late 1939, the 1600s ordered late 1940s and the 1700s in January 1945. SLPS was the rolling laboratory for All-Electrics and what was learned here was applied to the post-WW2 All-Electric Demonstrator in the fall of 1945.

From 1936 to 1945, PCC cars were "Air-Electrics" with friction brakes, doors, and windshield wipers operated by air pressure. PRCo PCC 1600 of 1945 was the post WW2 All-Electric Demonstrator[18] which eliminated the air compressor and associated piping while incorporating such features as standee windows, a sloped windshield to eliminate nighttime glare, redesigned back end, forced-air ventilation, and other features. Dynamic brakes were the service brake on all PCCs; when almost stopped, friction brakes completed the stop and held the car in "park". Dynamic brakes slowed the "Air" cars to 3.0-mph at which point a lock-out relay allowed automatic application of air-applied friction brakes against each of the eight wheels. On All-Electric cars the dynamics were effective to 0.75-mph where the lockout relay then allowed a spring applied friction brake to engage a drum on each of the four motor drive shafts; this completed the stop and held the car in park. Drum brakes were released by an electric solenoid operating from low-voltage battery power; a power failure would prevent the drums from releasing which would prevent power application, a fail-safe feature. Drum brakes were quite popular and greatly reduced maintenance thus some "Air" cars were retrofitted with drums. Four magnetic brakes, one between the wheels on each side of each truck, applied additional braking for emergency stopping where all brakes were generally employed.

"These performances [acceleration and braking] enable the P.C.C. car to out-pace the average automobile which, in America, is of substantially higher performance than the typical British vehicle."[19] This, of course, is only true when comparing to the automobiles of that period.

Body variations Edit

 
North American (Toronto) versus European PCC (The Hague): European PCC-cars had narrower bodies and (often) larger windows.

Two main body standards were made, 1936 and 1945, sometimes called pre-war and post-war, the most prominent difference being the windows.

The pre-war cars usually had a right side arrangement of front door, five windows, center door, five windows, and one large rear quarter window. These cars were 46 ft (14.0 m) long and 8 ft 4 in (254 cm) wide. There were variations, Washington, D.C. ordered shorter cars, at 44 ft (13.4 m), with one less window, while Chicago ordered longer and wider cars, at 50 ft 5 in (15.4 m) by 8 ft 9 in (267 cm), with a three-door arrangement. Chicago cars were built with the centerline of the carbody to the right of the centerline of the tracks, so the widened cars could pass on the existing trackage.[20][21][22]

Post war cars had a rationalized window arrangement. The windows and pillars were narrower, and there were small "standee" windows above each window. Right side arrangement usually was front door, 7 windows, side door, four windows, and two rear quarter windows. Most post-war cars had a length of 46 ft 5 in (14.1 m). Other body differences were a recessed windshield and wider doors. There were far fewer variations of this style, width being the most common.[22][23]

Most double ended cars, at 50 ft 5 in (15.4 m) long by 9 ft (270 cm) wide, were larger than standard, with different door arrangements. Only Dallas ordered standard size double ended cars. All double ended cars retained the pre-war style body until the end of production.[22][24]

Rapid transit cars Edit

There were four rapid transit companies on the committee, but the primary focus was streetcars, rapid transit development was slower. The difference in operations between the systems also made standardization difficult.

By 1940, Brooklyn had five three-section articulated trainsets with PCC components, after WWII Chicago ordered four similar trainsets. Chicago ordered two from Pullman and two from St. Louis, with different equipment, so that competing manufacturers could be directly compared. Experience from the trainsets influenced the following car standards.

Cars were to be approximately 48 ft (14.6 m) long (the Chicago maximum, Boston had some 55 ft (16.8 m) long) with one cab per car arranged in "married" two car sets, a double ended single car variant was possible. Number and type of doors and windows, interior layout, and width of cars varied with each system. Boston had two sizes, the longest at 55 ft (16.8 m), and narrowest at 8 ft 4 in (254 cm), Cleveland had the widest at 10 ft 4 in (315 cm).

Trucks were a major focus, both Clark and St. Louis developed trucks with 28 in (710 mm) wheels and a 70 mph (110 km/h) maximum speed, but only Boston used them, Clark B10s on 40 cars. Chicago used streetcar type trucks, with 26 in (660 mm) wheels and a speed of 50 mph (80 km/h), adequate for their system. When Clark stopped building railroad equipment in 1952 PCC trucks were no longer available, Boston and Cleveland then used non PCC trucks with 28 in (710 mm) wheels.

Chicago ordered the first of 770 (720 + 50 double-ended) 6000 series cars in 1948 (before the standard, which they influenced), Boston (40, then later 100) in 1950, and Cleveland (70 + 18 double-ended) in 1952. Chicago's first 200 cars were entirely new, but in 1953 they started using components salvaged from new, but no longer needed, streetcars. Toronto, on the committee, did not buy any, nor did Brooklyn, who had bought the first five trainsets.

240 PCC rapid transit cars were built in four years, from 1948 to 1952, then 438 cars with non-PCC trucks until 1957, the last of Chicago's 570 cars built with salvaged components were delivered in 1958. Some Chicago cars were in regular service in 1990, car number 30 made its last revenue run in 1999.[25][26][27][28]

PCC fleets Edit

Historical Edit

Operator Country New Used Total Notes
Toronto Transit Commission Canada 540 225 765

Toronto's first PCC streetcar entered service on September 22, 1938. All new PCCs purchased by 1951; second-hand by 1957. The TTC now owns and operates only two PCCs for private charter: numbers 4500 and 4549. One PCC, #4612, was donated in operating condition by the TTC to the Edmonton Radial Railway Society in 1997; the society has two additional PCCs from Toronto (4349 and 4367) awaiting restoration.[29][30] The Halton Country Railway Museum (near Milton Ontario) owns 3 retired TTC streetcars, 4000, 4386 and 4426. They operate a short section of track and 4000 is used for rides in rotation with others streetcars in their collection.

Chicago Surface Lines United States 683 000 683 A total of 683 cars were purchased in 1948. Ten years later all but one of the prewar cars had been scrapped, and most of the postwar cars had been stripped of parts. These were reused in 570 new CTA 1-50 and 6200-series rapid transit cars.[31][32][33] Two PCC streetcars are preserved at the Illinois Railway Museum: one prewar car for display only, and one postwar car in operating condition.[34]
Pittsburgh Railways United States 666 000 666 666 in 1949; 609 in 1959 (11 lost to Homewood fire in May 1955;[35]); 595 in 1960; 457 in 1961.[31] Twelve cars fully rebuilt (and four partially) into 4000 series cars in 1981–88, all remaining cars retired by 1988. The last 4000-series cars were retired in 1999.
Philadelphia Transportation Company United States 470 090 560 All new PCCs purchased by 1947; 60 second-hand by 1955.[31][36] 30 additional ex-Toronto/Kansas City class A-14 PCCs purchased in 1976. All cars retired by 1992, with some retained for work service or charter runs. 18 rebuilt into PCC II cars in 2003, and returned to revenue service.
Washington, D.C. United States 489 000 489 Built to a unique shorter-than-standard design. Only PCCs that used conduit current collection.[37][38]
Mexico City Mexico 001 390 391 A single PCC in 1947 from St. Louis Car Company, plus later second-hand cars: 116 in 1947–48 from the United States and tramways in Aviación and Dolores; 91 in 1954 from Minneapolis; 183 in 1955 from Detroit.[39]
Boston United States 344 000 344 The Green Line ran PCC streetcars from 1937 until their retirement in 1985. PCCs continue to operate along a section of the Red line (see section below).
St. Louis United States 300 000 300 100 purchased in 1940; 100 in 1941; 100 in 1946. System abandoned in 1966.[40][41]
Baltimore United States 275 000 275 [42][40]
The Hague Netherlands 234[43] 000 234 The Hague's first PCC streetcar arrived July, 1949. All new PCCs purchased by 1975.
Detroit United States 186 000 186 [44][45][circular reference][40]
Kansas City United States 184 000 184 Originally planned to be 371 cars.[46]
Los Angeles Railway United States 165 000 165 First cars delivered in 1937. System sold to Los Angeles Metropolitan Transit Authority in 1958 and abandoned in 1963.[47]
Minneapolis-St. Paul United States 141 000 141 System abandoned in 1954.[48]
Cairo Egypt 000 140 140 140 cars purchased from Toronto in 1968, but 13 never entered service. Of the 127 cars in service, 85 were converted between 1972 and 1978 into two-car trains or double-ended three-car trains. The entire fleet was withdrawn by 1984 in favor of modern rolling stock.[49]
San Francisco Municipal Railway United States 040 080 120 Five double-ended non-patent cars purchased in 1939. Ten cars in 1948 and another 25 in 1952. Muni number 1040 was the last new PCC built in the U.S. Replaced by LRVs in 1980–1982.[40][50][51][52][53][54] Revived along a former segment in 1995 (see section below).
Barcelona Spain 000 101 101 Second-hand from Washington DC.[55][56]
Brooklyn United States 100 000 100 First cars delivered in 1936. The sole Clark-built PCC ran here. Withdrawal began in 1950, system abandoned in 1956.[57] Cars 1000 and 1001 are preserved in museums.
Cleveland Transit System United States 050 025 075 Second-hand cars purchased from Louisville in 1946. All cars sold to Toronto in 1952. Nine cars sent to Shaker Heights in 1978.[40]
Sarajevo Yugoslavia 000 071 071 50 cars in 1958, followed by an additional 21 in 1962, all from Washington, D.C
Belgrade Yugoslavia 000 070 070 Delivered from Washington between 1958 and 1961. 14 were rebuilt into two-car articulated trams in 1964.[58][59]
Shaker Heights United States 025 043 068 Original Pullman cars were extra-wide and had left-side doors. 20 cars purchased from Twin Cities Rapid Transit in 1953; 10 cars purchased from St. Louis in 1959; 2 former Illinois Terminal cars leased from museums in 1975; 2 cars purchased from NJ Transit in 1977; 9 ex-Cleveland cars purchased from Toronto in 1978. PCCs were used until 1981.
Cincinnati United States 026 025 051 [60][40]
Birmingham Railway and Electric Company United States 048 000 048 [61][40]
Tampico Mexico 000 043 043 Purchased used from Kansas City (10 cars), St. Louis (20), and Toronto (10). System abandoned on 13 December 1974.[62]
Vancouver Canada 036 000 036 System abandoned 1955.[63][40]
San Diego Electric Railway United States 028 006 034 First cars purchased in 1937. System abandoned in 1949. System reopened in 1981. Historic PCC operation resumed in 2011.[40][64]
Pacific Electric United States 030 000 030 Double-ended. Longest PCCs built.[65]
Newark United States 000 030 030 Cars were purchased from Twin City Rapid Transit in 1954. They were in operation until 2001.[66]
Dallas United States 025 000 025 Double-enders. All sold to Boston in 1958–59.[67]
Louisville Railway United States 000 025 025 [40]
El Paso United States 000 020 020 17 purchased from San Diego in 1947, plus three more in 1952. System abandoned 1974. System reopened in 2019 with six restored cars.[68]
Montreal Canada 018 000 018 Delivered in 1944. System abandoned in 1959.[69]
Johnstown Traction Company United States 017 000 017
Buffalo Metro Rail United States 000 012 012 These cars were purchased by the Niagara Frontier Transportation Authority in the 1980s, but were never used.
Illinois Terminal Railroad United States 008 000 008 [70]
Tandy Center Subway United States 000 007 007 Second-hand Washington cars rebuilt for double-ended high platform operation.

Current Edit

Most PCC-based systems were dismantled in the post-war period in favor of bus-based transit networks. Of the rail transit systems that survived this period, most had replaced their PCCs with modern light rail vehicles (LRVs) by the early 1980s. Beginning in the late 1990s, several cities began to make use of historic PCCs to serve historic streetcar lines that combined aspects of tourist attractions and transit. The following is a table of places where transit agencies still employ PCCs in revenue service as opposed to a short-run or intermittent heritage railway.

Ashmont-Mattapan High Speed Line Edit

 
PCC 3263 at Mattapan

Boston; started 1941; number in service: 4.
The Ashmont–Mattapan High-Speed Line in Boston is a light-rail extension of the MBTA's heavy Red Line. It runs from the Ashmont terminus of the Red Line to Mattapan, and runs PCCs exclusively. The line was shut down for reconstruction from June 24, 2006, until December 22, 2007, but PCC cars have resumed operation since the line's bridges cannot support heavier light rail vehicles (LRV) operated on the MBTA's Green Line. Not considered historic equipment, the PCC cars in use on the Mattapan–Ashmont line represent the oldest cars still in revenue service, originally built between 1943 and 1946. These cars are also the only air-electric PCCs still in regular service in North America. Several retired PCCs from Boston are now at the Seashore Trolley Museum.

McKinney Avenue Transit Authority Edit

Dallas; started 2003; number in service: 1.
The McKinney Avenue Transit Authority in Dallas, Texas, owns three PCC cars, two from Toronto, one from the former Tandy Center Subway. One of the ex Toronto cars is currently in service.

El Paso Streetcar Edit

 
An El Paso tram in the 1960s had just crossed the border to Mexico.

El Paso; started 2018; number in service: 6.
Officials in El Paso expressed their desire to preserve the history of the city by refurbishing the old PCC streetcars that once made their way through Downtown from 1949 to 1974.[71] They operated on the international streetcar line that connected El Paso, Texas in the United States, with Ciudad Juárez, Mexico. Originally, the line operated until 1973. Six cars in total have been restored, regular revenue operations began in late 2018 for the downtown loop.

Kenosha Electric Streetcar Edit

 

Kenosha; started 2000; number in service: 7.
The Kenosha Electric Streetcar in Kenosha, Wisconsin, has been operating six ex-Toronto Transit Commission PCCs (five since 2000 and the sixth since 2009) and one ex-SEPTA car since 2009. The Kenosha Electric is unique among modern PCC operations in that PCCs had not run in the city before 2000—the original rail system was shut down in 1932 before any PCC cars had been built. Two of its cars are still painted in their original TTC colours, while the rest have been re-decorated in the liveries of several U.S. cities including Pittsburgh, Johnstown, Chicago and Cincinnati.

SEPTA Route 15 Edit

 

Philadelphia; started 2005; number in service: 18[72].
SEPTA restored trolley service to the Route 15 Girard Avenue line in Philadelphia in September 2005 after a 15-year "temporary" suspension of trolley service in favor of diesel buses. The line uses restored and modernized (by the Brookville Manufacturing Company) PCC cars, known as PCC-IIs, painted in their original green and cream Philadelphia Transit Company livery, rather than SEPTA's white with red and blue stripes. Modernization included all-new control systems, modern turn markers, HVAC system (which accounts for the noticeably larger roof enclosure), and ADA compliant wheelchair lifts. The line runs from Haddington to Port Richmond down the median of Girard Avenue. It crosses both the Broad Street Subway and the Market–Frankford Line, and stops at the Philadelphia Zoo, among other landmarks. SEPTA had originally planned to run modern Kawasaki trolleys along the line once service was restored, but a combination of economics and a desire to help revive the Girard Avenue corridor with a more "romantic" vehicle led to the agency restoring the old vehicles for about half the cost of new cars.[citation needed] SEPTA uses Kawasaki vehicles on the rest of its trolley lines, including the Subway-Surface Green Line linking West Philadelphia with Center City and its 69th Street Terminal with the western suburbs of Media and Sharon Hill via light rail routes 101 and 102.

Silver Line (San Diego Trolley) Edit

 

San Diego; started 2011; number in service: 2.
San Diego Trolley currently uses 2 PCCs and is in the process of determining viability of a third car as of 2016. They are in use on the Silver Line which opened in 2011 and runs in a clockwise loop around Downtown San Diego.

F Market & Wharves Edit

 

San Francisco; started 1995; number in service: 24.

The F Market Line (historic streetcar service) in San Francisco, opened in 1995, runs along Market Street from The Castro to the Ferry Building, then along the Embarcadero north and west to Fisherman's Wharf. This line is run by a mixture of PCC cars built between 1946 and 1952, and earlier pre-PCC cars. Due to its success, a second heritage line was inaugurated in 2015, the E Embarcadero, which serves to facilitate a one-seat ride from the Caltrain San Francisco Station to Fisherman's Wharf. Although San Francisco had removed PCCs from revenue service when the city's light rail was transformed into the Muni Metro system in 1980, they had made occasional festival trips in the ensuing years before being returned to full-time service. Car 1074 is painted in Toronto Transit Commission livery, but was never owned by the TTC.

Toronto streetcar system Edit

 

Toronto; started 1938; number in service: 2.
The first PCC cars in Canada were operated by the Toronto Transit Commission (TTC) in 1938.[73] By 1954, Toronto had the largest PCC fleet in the world, including many purchased second-hand from U.S. cities that abandoned streetcar service following the Second World War.[31][74] Although it acquired new custom-designed streetcars in the late 1970s and 1980s (and which was replaced by modern LRVs by Dec. 2019), the TTC continued using PCCs in regular service until 1995, and retains two (numbers 4500 and 4549) for charter purposes.

Models based on the PCC streetcar Edit

The PCC license was used worldwide after World War II had ended which resulted in adaptations based on the American PCC design. Two such licensees were successful, namely the Belgian company La Brugeoise et Nivelles (since 1988 a subsidiary of Bombardier Transportation, itself since 2021 a subsidiary of the French Alstom), who built both standard-gauge and meter-gauge cars based on the PCC license for many networks in Belgium, France and the Netherlands; and particularly the Czech ČKD Tatra, who built the largest number of the PCC type in the world, supplying a number of Central and Eastern European countries. Trams such as the Tatra T3 and its variant Tatra T4, together the most numerous of any tram model ever produced, are still in service today in many of the regions where they were first introduced. Modern variants of the Tatra T3 are still produced today by some manufacturers, such as KOS Krnov. The Polish Konstal 13N was not built under license. Only models with direct references to the original American PCC streetcar are included here. Later models of a particular series such as the Tatra T5 were adapted and modernized further.

Model Country Introduced Number built
7700-series/ 7900-series Belgium 1951 00,125 (both models)
A28 number 11 West Germany 1951 00,001
Konstal 13N Poland 1959 00,842
PCC 980 Australia 1949 00,001
PCC A28 Sweden 1953 00,002
Tatra T1 Czechoslovakia, Poland, Russia 1951 00,287
Tatra T2 Czechoslovakia, Russia, Ukraine 1955 00,771
Tatra T3 Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Latvia, Romania, Russia, Ukraine, Uzbekistan, Yugoslavia 1962 14,113
Tatra T4 East Germany, Estonia, Latvia, Romania, Russia, Ukraine, Yugoslavia 1968 02,637
TMBT number 5501 Japan 1954 00,001

Note that the country listed only covers areas where the cars were initially delivered; references for these areas can be found in the text.

7700-series/7900-series[75] Edit

 

Belgium; introduced 1951; number built: 125 (both models)[76].

The first PCC cars in Brussels (series 7000–7100) were built in prevision of the Expo 58: they were single-body non-reversible two-bogie cars. Articulated trams arrived since 1965: first two-body non-reversible trams (series 7500) then two-body (series 7700–7800) and three-body (series 7900) reversible ones, the last one delivered in 1978. The last single-body PCC tram in commercial service in Brussels ran in February 2010. All series 7500 trams were converted to series 7700 by addition of a second steering post except the 7500 prototype which was versed to the collection of the Brussels Tram Museum. Two-body and three-body reversible PCC trams are still in regular service next to more modern low-floor trams. All these articulated PCC cars use Jacobs bogies under the articulations (see example at right).

Brussels tramways use standard gauge (1.435 m); metre-gauge PCC trams are in use in Ghent and Antwerp.

A28 number 11[77] Edit

 

West Germany; introduced 1951; number built: 1.
The only PCC in West Germany was delivered from La Brugeoise to Hamburg in 1951. The car was sold to Brussels in 1957. Returned to Hamburg in 1995, where it was used as a historical tram in the VVM Schönberger Strand museum. In 1999, the tram was sold to the Danish tram museum of Skjoldenaesholm.[77]

Konstal 13N[78] Edit

 

Poland; introduced 1959; number built: 842.
These trams were used in Poland from 1959 to their retirement in 2012. Several remain as maintenance cars, while others have been preserved in museums. Konstal 13Ns were not produced under a PCC licence.

PCC 980 Edit

Australia; introduced 1949; number built: 1.
One set of PCC bogies and control equipment was imported into Melbourne circa 1949 and fitted to a modified W class body. Additional cars were planned, but never built. The single car was numbered 980,[79] and was withdrawn from service in 1971. Z Class tram prototype car 1041 was built in 1972 using bogies salvaged from 980.[80]

PCC A28[77] Edit

Sweden; introduced 1953; number built: 2.
Only two of the planned 300 of the PCC A28 type trams had been delivered to Stockholm by ASJ in 1953. This was probably due to the withdrawal of the Polish side of the contract in 1946, which primarily stated the delivery not only of the tram wagons, but also 8 locomotives and 44 electric passenger trains by the ASEA company. The only ones that were built, based on bogies and the electrical system delivered from the USA. They were the first PCCs in Europe equipped with multiple-unit electrical systems and were only used in pairs (no more trams of this type were constructed) on tourist line number 700. In 1962, the routes were converted to buses. One of the two cars was scrapped, the other one (number 11) is preserved in the Tramway Museum of Malmkoping.[77]

Tatra T1 Edit

 

Czechoslovakia, Poland, Russia; introduced 1951; number built: 287[81].

Tatra T2 Edit

 

Czechoslovakia, Russia, Ukraine; introduced 1955; number built: 771[82].

Tatra T3[77] Edit

 

Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Latvia, Russia, Romania, Ukraine, Uzbekistan, Yugoslavia; introduced 1962; number built: 14,113[83].

Tatra T4[77] Edit

 

East Germany, Estonia, Latvia, Russia, Romania, Ukraine, Yugoslavia; introduced 1968; number built: 2,637[84].

TMBT number 5501 Edit

Japan; introduced 1954; number built: 1.
The TMBT (Tokyo Metropolitan Bureau of Transportation) wanted to modernize its streetcar, so ordered one PCC car to Naniwa Koki Company (later Alna Sharyo Company in Hankyu Hanshin Holdings) in Osaka in 1953. Sumitomo Metal Industries as bogie manufacturer, and Mitsubishi Electric Corporation that had the electric motor licensee from Westinghouse Electric Corporation, also participated in the project. The streetcar was completed in 1954 with number 5501. The class 5500 was extended with other 6 cars (5502–5507), but these were called no real PCC cars because of their different configuration.[85][circular reference][86]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Brill, Debra (2001). History of the J. G. Brill Company. Indiana University Press. pp. 202–205. ISBN 0-253-33949-9.
  2. ^ Jaxson, The. "Abandoned: Where Trolleys Go To Die?". www.thejaxsonmag.com. Retrieved 2023-03-05.
  3. ^ Carlson & Schneider (1980), pp. 117–119.
  4. ^ C.F. Hirshfeld, Ch.Engr., PCC; (October 1933) Electric Transit and Bus Journal, pp.321–325, 331.
  5. ^ "Design for a rail car or similar".
  6. ^ Proceedings of the American Transit Association, 1936, pp. 821, 822, 833, 834, 1126, 1127 & 1938 Proceedings, pp. 372, 374, 376, 378, 380, 382, 384, 408, 416, 417, 418, 420, 422, 380, 382, 384, & An American Original, The PCC Car, Kashin and Demoro, pp 42, 43, 46, 187.
  7. ^ Hoover, Amanda (6 September 2015). "Why are old Green Line trolleys wasting away in rural Pennsylvania?". Boston Globe. Retrieved 21 April 2017.
  8. ^ King, Leroy O., Jr., 100 Years of Capital Traction: The Story of Streetcars in the Nation's Capital. Dallas: Publisher Leroy O. King, Jr. (1972), page 153
  9. ^ Carlson & Schneider (1980), p. 59.
  10. ^ Carlson & Schneider (1980), p. 87.
  11. ^ Carlson & Schneider (1980), pp. 123, 129, 236–237, supplement.
  12. ^ Carlson & Schneider (1980), pp. 131–135, supplement.
  13. ^ Carlson, S.P.; Schneider, F.W. (1983). PCC: From Coast to Coast. Interurban Press. p. 235. ISBN 0-916374-57-2.
  14. ^ Carlson & Schneider (1980), pp. 144–155.
  15. ^ Carlson & Schneider (1980), pp. 239–241, supplement.
  16. ^ Kashin, S.; Demoro, H. (1986). An American Original: The PCC Car, p. 79. Glendale (CA): Interurban Press, ISBN 0-916374-73-4.
  17. ^ Carlson & Schneider (1980), p. 149.
  18. ^ Carlson & Schneider (1980), pp. 98–100.
  19. ^ H.G. McClean, B.Sc, M.I.E.E., M.I.Loco.E.; December 14, 1945, "Passenger Transport Journal:" The American P.C.C. Car, p. 348.
  20. ^ Carlson & Schneider (1980), pp. 48–49, 87-89. 91, rear foldout #1.
  21. ^ Lind (1979), pp. 48–49, 87–89, 399.
  22. ^ a b c "PCC-Not so standard". www.nycsubway.org. Retrieved 7 April 2014.
  23. ^ Carlson & Schneider (1980), p. 74-75, 98-99, rear foldout #3.
  24. ^ Carlson & Schneider (1980), pp. 94, supplement.
  25. ^ Carlson & Schneider (1980), pp. 3, 136–137, 162–173, supplement.
  26. ^ Chicago's Rapid Transit v.1: Rolling Stock/1892–1947. Central Electric Railfans’ Association. 1973. pp. 215–227. ISBN 0-915348-15-2.
  27. ^ Chicago's Rapid Transit v.2: Rolling Stock/1947–1976. Central Electric Railfans’ Association. 1976. pp. 8–71, 186, 189–191, 195–196, 199. ISBN 0-915348-15-2.
  28. ^ Lind (1979), pp. 16, 37, 400, supplement.
  29. ^ "Toronto 4612". Edmonton Radial Railway Society. January 1, 2018. Retrieved 2022-06-18.
  30. ^ "Future Projects". Edmonton Radial Railway Society. January 1, 2018. Retrieved 2022-06-18.
  31. ^ a b c d Dr. Harold E. Cox (1963) PCC Cars of North America.
  32. ^ Chicago's Rapid Transit V II. Central Electric Railfans’ Assoc. 1976. pp. 8–11. ISBN 0-915348-15-2.
  33. ^ Borzo, Greg (2007). The Chicago "L". Arcadia Publishing. p. 113. ISBN 978-0-7385-5100-5.
  34. ^ "IRM Roster - Chicago Transit Authority 4391". www.irm.org.
  35. ^ "$400,000 Flash Fire Destroys Homewood Car Barn, 14 Trolleys". The Pittsburgh Press. May 19, 1955. Retrieved December 8, 2010.
  36. ^ "Philadelphia Trolley Tracks". www.phillytrolley.org.
  37. ^ . National Capital Trolley Museum. Archived from the original on 2007-02-05. Retrieved 2007-03-15.
  38. ^ . General Electric. Archived from the original on 27 September 2007. Retrieved 5 June 2019.
  39. ^ "The Tramways of Mexico City: Part 4". www.tramz.com.
  40. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Expozicemhd.cz – Expozicemhd.cz".
  41. ^ "1050 - St. Louis Public Service Company".
  42. ^ "1063 - Baltimore, Maryland". Market Street Railway.
  43. ^ "PCC's in hun tweede leven". www.haagstramnieuws.org.
  44. ^ "1079 - Detroit, Michigan".
  45. ^ QLine
  46. ^ "DALŠÍ AMERICKÉ MĚSTO ZAŽILO NÁVRAT K TRAMVAJÍM" (in Czech). Československý Dopravák. 13 May 2016. Retrieved 10 March 2018.
  47. ^ "1052 - Los Angeles Railway".
  48. ^ "1071 - Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minnesota".
  49. ^ John F Bromley (23 October 2009). "Streetcars on the Waterfront (1968)". Steve Munro. Retrieved 14 November 2010.[dead link]
  50. ^ "1006 - San Francisco Municipal Railway (1950s)". Market Street Railway.
  51. ^ "1008 - Muni (Wings)". Market Street Railway.
  52. ^ "1010 - San Francisco Municipal Railway (1940s)". Market Street Railway.
  53. ^ "1011 - Market Street Railway Company". Market Street Railway.
  54. ^ "San Francisco Market Street Railway | We keep San Francisco's Vintage Streetcars on Track". Market Street Railway.
  55. ^ . Archived from the original on 2015-02-23. Retrieved 2019-04-05.
  56. ^ "History of tramways in Barcelona". public-transport.net.
  57. ^ "1053 - Brooklyn, New York".
  58. ^ "Sarajevo trams, part 1". urban-trans.net. Retrieved 2019-03-31.
  59. ^ Railsiferradures (2017-07-01). "rails i ferradures: SARAJEVO II". rails i ferradures. Retrieved 2019-03-31.
  60. ^ "1057 - Cincinnati, Ohio".
  61. ^ "1077 - Birmingham, Alabama".
  62. ^ Allen Morrison (2003). "The Tramways of Tampico". Electric Transport in Latin America: Past & Present. Allen Morrison. Retrieved 3 August 2011.
  63. ^ tundria.com/trams/CAN/Vancouver–1955
  64. ^ "1078 - San Diego, California". Market Street Railway.
  65. ^ "1061 - Pacific Electric".
  66. ^ "Farewell to Newark PCCs" (October 2001). Tramways & Urban Transit, p. 386. Ian Allan Publishing.
  67. ^ "1009 - Dallas, Texas".
  68. ^ "1073 - El Paso, Texas & Juarez, Mexico". Market Street Railway.
  69. ^ http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tramway de Montréal
  70. ^ Wiesel, Jamison. "1015 - Illinois Terminal Railroad". Market Street Railway.
  71. ^ Flores, Aileen B. "El Paso City Council seeks to refurbish old trolleys for project". El Paso Times. Archived from the original on August 22, 2013. Retrieved February 21, 2015.
  72. ^ "Route 15 / Girard Avenue Trolley". phillytrolley.org.
  73. ^ Mike Filey (September 22, 2012). "The very first PCC streetcars went into service 74 years ago today". Toronto Sun. Retrieved December 20, 2018. It was on this day back in 1938 that Torontonians, who for decades had relied on a variety of less-than-agreeable street railway vehicles, were finally introduced to the latest model streetcar, the amazing PCC Streamliner.
  74. ^ "The Post-War Used PCC Cars (Classes A9 to A14) - Transit Toronto - Content". transittoronto.ca.
  75. ^ "La STIB a reçu son dernier T3000 et envisage déjà une nouvelle commande". www.rtbf.be (in French). March 17, 2015. Retrieved January 27, 2018.
  76. ^ Tram 2000 November 2017, p. 10
  77. ^ a b c d e f "The most popular tram in the world - PCC, part 2: Europe". kmk.krakow.pl. Retrieved January 27, 2019.
  78. ^ Witold Urbanowicz (March 25, 2017). "Tramwaje Warszawskie odnawiają "parówki"". www.transport-publiczny.pl (in Polish). Retrieved January 27, 2019.
  79. ^ Jones, Russell (2010). "The remarkable PCC tramcar: why Melbourne missed out". Friends of Hawthorn Tram Museum. Retrieved 28 June 2016.
  80. ^ "Melbourne & Metropolitan Tramways Board PCC No 1041". Friends of Hawthorn Tram Museum. 2008. Retrieved 28 June 2016.
  81. ^ "Tatra T1 deliveries". Strassenbahnen-Online. Retrieved 2007-12-08.
  82. ^ "Tatra T2 deliveries". Strassenahnen-Online. Retrieved 2007-12-08.
  83. ^ "Tatra T3 deliveries". Strassenbahnen-Online. Retrieved 2007-12-09.
  84. ^ "Tatra T4 deliveries". Strassenbahnen-Online. Retrieved 2019-04-22.
  85. ^ "Naniwa Koki Co. PCC No. 5501 (Tokio)". September 9, 2019 – via Wikipedia.
  86. ^ "東京都交通局,都電,都電おもいで広場". 東京都交通局.

Further reading Edit

  • Carlson, Stephen P.; Schneider, Fred W. (1980). PCC--the car that fought back. Glendala, California: Interurban Press. ISBN 978-0-916374-41-9.
  • Lind, Alan R. (1979). Chicago Surface Lines: An Illustrated History (3rd ed.). Park Forest, Illinois: Transport History Press. ISBN 978-0-934732-00-0.
  • Carlson et al. (1986), The Colorful Streetcars We Rode, Bulletin 125 of the Central Electric Railfans' Association, Chicago, Il. ISBN 0-915348-25-X
  • Kashin, S.; Demoro, H. (1986), An American Original: The PCC Car, Interurban Press, ISBN 0-916374-73-4
  • (in Spanish) López Bustos, Carlos, Tranvías de Madrid, Aldaba Ediciones, Madrid 1986, ISBN 84-86629-00-4
  • Wickson, Ted, ed. (November–December 2015). "The PCC streetcar in Canada" (PDF). Canadian Rail. No. 659. pp. 255–298. Retrieved 26 January 2017.

External links Edit

  • List of PCC Streetcars in the 21st century
  • The PCC streetcar club
  • The PCC Car—Not So Standard
  • PCC streetcars in NYC
  • Madrid trams (in Dutch)
  • Approximately 30 videos of San Francisco PCCs from the early 1980s
  • "The P.C.C. Car: Now a Reality" (PDF). St. Louis Car Company.
  • PCC History In Pittsburgh, PA. USA

streetcar, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, tone, style, reflect, encyclopedic, tone, used, wikipedia, wikipedia, guide, writing, better, . This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article s tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for suggestions March 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article may be in need of reorganization to comply with Wikipedia s layout guidelines Please help by editing the article to make improvements to the overall structure November 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article uses bare URLs which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting such as Reflinks documentation reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message The PCC Presidents Conference Committee is a tram design that was first built in the United States in the 1930s The design proved successful domestically and after World War II it was licensed for use elsewhere in the world where PCC based cars were made The PCC car has proved to be a long lasting icon of streetcar design and many remain in service around the world PCC streetcarThree PCCs on the San Francisco Municipal Railway s F line Pictured are an example of one double ended streetcar and two single ended cars Interior of a PCC carIn service1936 presentManufacturerSt Louis Car CompanyPullman StandardConstructed1935 1952 USA 1949 1978 Europe Number built5 000 Capacity52 61 SeatsSpecificationsCar length46 50 5 ft 14 02 15 39 m Width100 108 in 2 54 2 74 m Maximum speed50 mph 80 km h citation needed Weight35 000 42 000 lb 15 900 19 100 kg Traction motors4 55 hp 41 kW motors 43 6 7 17 gear ratioAccelerationVariable Automatic 1 5 4 75 mph s 2 41 7 64 km h s DecelerationService Variable to 4 75 mph s 7 64 km h s Emergency 9 0 mph s 14 5 km h s maximumElectric system s 600 750 V DC from overhead catenaryCurrent collector s Pantograph or trolley poleUIC classificationBo Bo AAR wheel arrangementB BBraking system s Dynamic Service Braking Friction for Final Stop Park MagneticTrack gauge5 ft 2 1 2 in 1 588 mm and other broad gauges4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm standard gauge 1 000 mm 3 ft 3 3 8 in and other narrow gauges Contents 1 Origins 2 Manufacturing 2 1 Performance 2 2 Body variations 3 Rapid transit cars 4 PCC fleets 4 1 Historical 4 2 Current 4 2 1 Ashmont Mattapan High Speed Line 4 2 2 McKinney Avenue Transit Authority 4 2 3 El Paso Streetcar 4 2 4 Kenosha Electric Streetcar 4 2 5 SEPTA Route 15 4 2 6 Silver Line San Diego Trolley 4 2 7 F Market amp Wharves 4 2 8 Toronto streetcar system 5 Models based on the PCC streetcar 5 1 7700 series 7900 series 75 5 2 A28 number 11 77 5 3 Konstal 13N 78 5 4 PCC 980 5 5 PCC A28 77 5 6 Tatra T1 5 7 Tatra T2 5 8 Tatra T3 77 5 9 Tatra T4 77 5 10 TMBT number 5501 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksOrigins EditThe PCC Presidents Conference Committee originated from the design committee formed in 1929 It was renamed the Electric Railway Presidents Conference Committee ERPCC in 1931 The group s membership consisted primarily of representatives of several large operators of U S urban electric street railways plus potential manufacturers Three interurban lines and at least one heavy rail or rapid transit operator Chicago Rapid Transit Company were represented as well Also included on the membership roll were manufacturers of surface cars streetcars and interested component suppliers ERPCC s goal was to design a streamlined comfortable quiet and fast accelerating and braking streetcar that would be operated by a seated operator using floor mounted pedal controls to better meet the needs of the street railways and appeal to riders ERPCC prepared a detailed research plan conducted extensive research on streetcar design built and tested components made necessary modifications and revisions based upon the findings and ultimately produced a set of specifications for a standardized and fixed design It included a modest list of available options with ample room for customer customization but was to be built with standard parts as opposed to a custom designed car body with diverse parts added depending on the whims and requirements of the individual customer Numerous national and international users operated large fleets of PCC cars for many years Many design patents resulted from the work of ERPCC These were transferred to a new business entity called the Transit Research Corporation TRC when ERPCC expired in 1936 Although this company continued the work of research on improvements to the basic design of the car and issued sets of specifications three times in the ensuing years because TRC defined a PCC car as any vehicle which used patents on which it collected royalties it was formed for the primary purpose of controlling those patents and promoting the standardization envisioned by the ERPCC The company was funded by its collection of patent royalties from the railways which bought PCC cars The company was controlled by a voting trust representing the properties which had invested in the work of ERPCC One participant in Committee meetings Philadelphia trolley manufacturer JG Brill Company brought a competitive design the Brilliner to market in 1938 Because Raymond Loewy designed elements that were very similar to the PCC look the Brilliner attracted no large orders being built only for Atlantic City Transit and the Red Arrow Lines in suburban Philadelphia Fewer than 50 were sold 1 A significant contribution to the PCC design was noise reduction with extensive use of rubber in springs and other components to prevent rattle vibration and thus noise and to provide a level of comfort unknown before 2 Wheel tires were mounted between rubber sandwiches and were electrically isolated so that shunts were required to complete a ground Resilient wheels were used on most PCC cars with later heftier versions known as Super Resilient Gears were another source of considerable noise solved by employing hypoid gears which are mounted at a right angle to the axle where three of the six teeth constantly engaged the main gear reducing lash and noise All movable truck parts employed rubber for noise reduction as well 3 Satisfactory Cushion Wheel of Vital Importance Develop New Truck Design Generous Use of Rubber are headings within a paper that Chief Engineer Clarence F Hirshfeld both presented and published 4 After a specification document suitable for purchasing cars was generated by TRC orders were placed by eight companies in 1935 and 1936 First was Brooklyn amp Queens Transit Corporation B amp QT for 100 cars then Baltimore Transit Co BTCo for 27 cars Chicago Surface Lines CSL for 83 cars Pittsburgh Railways Co PRCO for 101 cars San Diego Electric Railway SDERy for 25 cars Los Angeles Railway LARy for 60 cars and then Boston Elevated Railway BERy for one car In late 1935 or early in 1936 Westinghouse Electric Corporation pressed for one car to be equipped with their electrical equipment for testing in Pittsburgh since the Brooklyn order would have all cars equipped by General Electric and Clark Equipment Company pressed for one car to be made by them of aluminum for delivery to B amp QT Agreements among the parties were reached whereby St Louis Car Company would build 101 essentially identical cars and Clark would build one of its own body design Brooklyn received its first car number 1001 on May 28 1936 PRCo took delivery of car number 100 on July 26 1936 and Baltimore received its first car on September 2 1936 In the late 1936 discussions of operating experience it was noted that the Brooklyn car had run 3 000 miles by the time the Pittsburgh car had run 1 000 miles One of the key patents was filed by Dan H Bell on January 8 1937 and granted on July 5 1938 and entitled Rail Car or Similar Article Patent No 110 384 5 The first car to be placed in a scheduled public service was PRCo 100 in August and B amp QT launched its first scheduled service with a group of cars on October 1 1936 followed by CSL on November 13 1936 Production continued in North America by St Louis Car Co and Pullman Standard until 1952 with 4 978 units being built Under license to use the designs patented by TRC thousands more PCC and partially PCC type cars were produced in Europe through the last half of the 20th century The cars were well built and many hundreds are still in operation The majority of large North American streetcar systems surviving after 1935 purchased PCC streetcars those systems which eventually terminated streetcar operations often sold their cars to surviving operators The Melbourne amp Metropolitan Tramways Board MMTB in Australia was keen to build two new tram routes after World War II and these routes would be served by PCC Streetcars The MMTB decided that it was too expensive and Melbourne only ever had two PCC streetcars of which one was a prototype for a completely different class Several dozen remain in public transit service such as the in Boston and in Philadelphia Kenosha San Diego and San Francisco following extensive overhauling All other surviving and functional North American PCC cars are operated by museums and heritage railways 6 Several retired PCCs from Boston Cleveland and Philadelphia were purchased as scrap and have been privately stored just outside Windber Pennsylvania since 1992 7 Washington D C PCCs were unique 8 because of conduit plows which collected current from a slot between the rails into which the plow dipped contacting positive and negative rails under the street on either side At the city limits were plow pits where the plow was dropped and removed the trolley pole raised and the car then continued along using overhead wire The process was reversed in the opposite direction into Washington The PCC car was not just another modular vehicle but the result of the only systems engineering approach to mass producing a rail car 9 Research into passenger comfort resulting from vibrations acceleration lighting heating and cooling seat spacing cushion height space for arms legs standing passengers economies of weight affecting maintenance cost of power reduced wear of components and track Dimensions were established to fit the majority but could easily be changed for special situations Windows were spaced to match seating While some of the components in the PCC car had been used before resilient wheels magnetic braking sealed gears and modular design to name a few the ERPCC redesigned refined and perfected many of these while developing new acceleration and braking controls and put them all in one package Manufacturing Edit A PCC streetcar at Boston s Riverside station in the early 1960sPCC cars were initially built in the United States by the St Louis Car Company SLCCo and Pullman Standard Clark Equipment built the only aluminum body PCC 10 as well as all narrow gauge B1 trucks for Los Angeles all the standard and broad gauge B2 trucks both air and all electric and the B2B trucks used under PRCo 1725 1799 and Toronto 4500 4549 11 citation needed SLCCo built all B3 trucks both standard and broad gauge 12 citation needed PCC cars for Canadian cities were assembled in Montreal Quebec by Canadian Car amp Foundry from bodies and trucks supplied by St Louis Car 13 Westinghouse Westinghouse Electric Westinghouse Air Brake Company Canadian Westinghouse Co and General Electric both supplied electrical packages and brake components which were designed and built in cooperation with the ERPCC 14 The customer specified the equipment which was to be installed performance was similar and most cities ordered from both suppliers 15 Since Westinghouse was home based near Pittsburgh PRCo ordered 75 of its PCC fleet with Westinghouse equipment the balance with GE citation needed Indeed PCCs are often identified as either Westinghouse or GE clarification needed The last PCC streetcars built for any North American system were a batch of 25 for the San Francisco Municipal Railway manufactured by the St Louis Car Company and delivered in 1951 2 16 Approximately 4 586 PCC cars were purchased by United States transit companies 1052 by Pullman Standard and 3534 by St Louis Most transit companies purchased one type but Chicago Baltimore Cleveland and Shaker Heights operated both examples The Baltimore Transit Co BTC considered the Pullman cars of superior construction The St Louis cars had a more aesthetically pleasing design with a more rounded front and rear plus other fancy frills The BTC found the Pullman cars easier to work on St Louis cars had compound curved wheel wells Performance Edit Westinghouse developed the XD 323 rotary accelerator for motor control with 99 points It was installed in the first PRCo car number 100 and minor modifications allowed use in the last PCCs produced in North America for San Francisco in 1952 Prior streetcar control existing from the 1890s required a standing operator at a three foot high vertical switch stand to rotate a handle to one of six brass points mounted within the stand to provide traction motor control and acceleration The PCC had its accelerator under the floor where the pedal activated linkage to resistance ribbons were mounted to each PCC point around the outside edge of the accelerator An arm rotating in the center had rollers on either end which cut out resistance alternately as it rotated approximately 180 degrees This same accelerator was also used for dynamic braking when the power pedal was released the accelerator sought optimum braking for the speed which prevented a lag when the brake pedal was depressed General Electric developed a control system for PCC cars that mirrored the Westinghouse scheme in function although not in simplicity or maintainability 17 With the GE commutator motor controller operating by air pressure it had to be redesigned with the advent of the All Electric PCC Acceleration was variable between 1 5 and 4 75 mph per second depending upon the depression of the power pedal with the accelerator advanced automatically by a low voltage pilot motor Service braking was also variable and the maximum dynamic application decreased speed by 4 75 mph s pressing the brake pedal into emergency also brought the friction and magnetic brakes into play providing a maximum deceleration of 9 0 mph s Compared to a maximum of 14 points on old time equipment the PCC was considerably smoother Most PCCs employed three pedals with a dead man s switch to the left brake in center and power pedal on the right Depressing the brake about half way and then releasing the deadman pedal put the PCC in park Lifting the deadman alone would apply all brakes drop sand and balance the doors so they could be pushed open easily Chicago used bicycle type levers for power and brake but converted some cars to two pedals St Louis Public Service Co SLPS used two pedals both with heel interlocks The right pedal is the brake depressing this pedal about halfway while lifting away from the heel applied park Once the brake is released the heel need not be engaged with the interlock although a professional driver is to cover the brake at all times The left pedal applied the power and the heel interlock had to be engaged at all times since it was the deadman only when the brake was in park could the deadman be disengaged SLPS is unique in that all 300 of their PCCs are All Electric with the 1500s ordered in late 1939 the 1600s ordered late 1940s and the 1700s in January 1945 SLPS was the rolling laboratory for All Electrics and what was learned here was applied to the post WW2 All Electric Demonstrator in the fall of 1945 From 1936 to 1945 PCC cars were Air Electrics with friction brakes doors and windshield wipers operated by air pressure PRCo PCC 1600 of 1945 was the post WW2 All Electric Demonstrator 18 which eliminated the air compressor and associated piping while incorporating such features as standee windows a sloped windshield to eliminate nighttime glare redesigned back end forced air ventilation and other features Dynamic brakes were the service brake on all PCCs when almost stopped friction brakes completed the stop and held the car in park Dynamic brakes slowed the Air cars to 3 0 mph at which point a lock out relay allowed automatic application of air applied friction brakes against each of the eight wheels On All Electric cars the dynamics were effective to 0 75 mph where the lockout relay then allowed a spring applied friction brake to engage a drum on each of the four motor drive shafts this completed the stop and held the car in park Drum brakes were released by an electric solenoid operating from low voltage battery power a power failure would prevent the drums from releasing which would prevent power application a fail safe feature Drum brakes were quite popular and greatly reduced maintenance thus some Air cars were retrofitted with drums Four magnetic brakes one between the wheels on each side of each truck applied additional braking for emergency stopping where all brakes were generally employed These performances acceleration and braking enable the P C C car to out pace the average automobile which in America is of substantially higher performance than the typical British vehicle 19 This of course is only true when comparing to the automobiles of that period Body variations Edit North American Toronto versus European PCC The Hague European PCC cars had narrower bodies and often larger windows Two main body standards were made 1936 and 1945 sometimes called pre war and post war the most prominent difference being the windows The pre war cars usually had a right side arrangement of front door five windows center door five windows and one large rear quarter window These cars were 46 ft 14 0 m long and 8 ft 4 in 254 cm wide There were variations Washington D C ordered shorter cars at 44 ft 13 4 m with one less window while Chicago ordered longer and wider cars at 50 ft 5 in 15 4 m by 8 ft 9 in 267 cm with a three door arrangement Chicago cars were built with the centerline of the carbody to the right of the centerline of the tracks so the widened cars could pass on the existing trackage 20 21 22 Post war cars had a rationalized window arrangement The windows and pillars were narrower and there were small standee windows above each window Right side arrangement usually was front door 7 windows side door four windows and two rear quarter windows Most post war cars had a length of 46 ft 5 in 14 1 m Other body differences were a recessed windshield and wider doors There were far fewer variations of this style width being the most common 22 23 Most double ended cars at 50 ft 5 in 15 4 m long by 9 ft 270 cm wide were larger than standard with different door arrangements Only Dallas ordered standard size double ended cars All double ended cars retained the pre war style body until the end of production 22 24 Rapid transit cars EditThere were four rapid transit companies on the committee but the primary focus was streetcars rapid transit development was slower The difference in operations between the systems also made standardization difficult By 1940 Brooklyn had five three section articulated trainsets with PCC components after WWII Chicago ordered four similar trainsets Chicago ordered two from Pullman and two from St Louis with different equipment so that competing manufacturers could be directly compared Experience from the trainsets influenced the following car standards Cars were to be approximately 48 ft 14 6 m long the Chicago maximum Boston had some 55 ft 16 8 m long with one cab per car arranged in married two car sets a double ended single car variant was possible Number and type of doors and windows interior layout and width of cars varied with each system Boston had two sizes the longest at 55 ft 16 8 m and narrowest at 8 ft 4 in 254 cm Cleveland had the widest at 10 ft 4 in 315 cm Trucks were a major focus both Clark and St Louis developed trucks with 28 in 710 mm wheels and a 70 mph 110 km h maximum speed but only Boston used them Clark B10s on 40 cars Chicago used streetcar type trucks with 26 in 660 mm wheels and a speed of 50 mph 80 km h adequate for their system When Clark stopped building railroad equipment in 1952 PCC trucks were no longer available Boston and Cleveland then used non PCC trucks with 28 in 710 mm wheels Chicago ordered the first of 770 720 50 double ended 6000 series cars in 1948 before the standard which they influenced Boston 40 then later 100 in 1950 and Cleveland 70 18 double ended in 1952 Chicago s first 200 cars were entirely new but in 1953 they started using components salvaged from new but no longer needed streetcars Toronto on the committee did not buy any nor did Brooklyn who had bought the first five trainsets 240 PCC rapid transit cars were built in four years from 1948 to 1952 then 438 cars with non PCC trucks until 1957 the last of Chicago s 570 cars built with salvaged components were delivered in 1958 Some Chicago cars were in regular service in 1990 car number 30 made its last revenue run in 1999 25 26 27 28 PCC fleets EditHistorical Edit Operator Country New Used Total NotesToronto Transit Commission Canada 540 225 765 Main article Presidents Conference Committee Toronto streetcar Toronto s first PCC streetcar entered service on September 22 1938 All new PCCs purchased by 1951 second hand by 1957 The TTC now owns and operates only two PCCs for private charter numbers 4500 and 4549 One PCC 4612 was donated in operating condition by the TTC to the Edmonton Radial Railway Society in 1997 the society has two additional PCCs from Toronto 4349 and 4367 awaiting restoration 29 30 The Halton Country Railway Museum near Milton Ontario owns 3 retired TTC streetcars 4000 4386 and 4426 They operate a short section of track and 4000 is used for rides in rotation with others streetcars in their collection Chicago Surface Lines United States 683 00 0 683 A total of 683 cars were purchased in 1948 Ten years later all but one of the prewar cars had been scrapped and most of the postwar cars had been stripped of parts These were reused in 570 new CTA 1 50 and 6200 series rapid transit cars 31 32 33 Two PCC streetcars are preserved at the Illinois Railway Museum one prewar car for display only and one postwar car in operating condition 34 Pittsburgh Railways United States 666 00 0 666 666 in 1949 609 in 1959 11 lost to Homewood fire in May 1955 35 595 in 1960 457 in 1961 31 Twelve cars fully rebuilt and four partially into 4000 series cars in 1981 88 all remaining cars retired by 1988 The last 4000 series cars were retired in 1999 Philadelphia Transportation Company United States 470 0 90 560 All new PCCs purchased by 1947 60 second hand by 1955 31 36 30 additional ex Toronto Kansas City class A 14 PCCs purchased in 1976 All cars retired by 1992 with some retained for work service or charter runs 18 rebuilt into PCC II cars in 2003 and returned to revenue service Washington D C United States 489 00 0 489 Built to a unique shorter than standard design Only PCCs that used conduit current collection 37 38 Mexico City Mexico 00 1 390 391 A single PCC in 1947 from St Louis Car Company plus later second hand cars 116 in 1947 48 from the United States and tramways in Aviacion and Dolores 91 in 1954 from Minneapolis 183 in 1955 from Detroit 39 Boston United States 344 00 0 344 The Green Line ran PCC streetcars from 1937 until their retirement in 1985 PCCs continue to operate along a section of the Red line see section below St Louis United States 300 00 0 300 100 purchased in 1940 100 in 1941 100 in 1946 System abandoned in 1966 40 41 Baltimore United States 275 00 0 275 42 40 The Hague Netherlands 234 43 00 0 234 The Hague s first PCC streetcar arrived July 1949 All new PCCs purchased by 1975 Detroit United States 186 00 0 186 44 45 circular reference 40 Kansas City United States 184 00 0 184 Originally planned to be 371 cars 46 Los Angeles Railway United States 165 00 0 165 First cars delivered in 1937 System sold to Los Angeles Metropolitan Transit Authority in 1958 and abandoned in 1963 47 Minneapolis St Paul United States 141 00 0 141 System abandoned in 1954 48 Cairo Egypt 00 0 140 140 140 cars purchased from Toronto in 1968 but 13 never entered service Of the 127 cars in service 85 were converted between 1972 and 1978 into two car trains or double ended three car trains The entire fleet was withdrawn by 1984 in favor of modern rolling stock 49 San Francisco Municipal Railway United States 0 40 0 80 120 Five double ended non patent cars purchased in 1939 Ten cars in 1948 and another 25 in 1952 Muni number 1040 was the last new PCC built in the U S Replaced by LRVs in 1980 1982 40 50 51 52 53 54 Revived along a former segment in 1995 see section below Barcelona Spain 00 0 101 101 Second hand from Washington DC 55 56 Brooklyn United States 100 00 0 100 First cars delivered in 1936 The sole Clark built PCC ran here Withdrawal began in 1950 system abandoned in 1956 57 Cars 1000 and 1001 are preserved in museums Cleveland Transit System United States 0 50 0 25 0 75 Second hand cars purchased from Louisville in 1946 All cars sold to Toronto in 1952 Nine cars sent to Shaker Heights in 1978 40 Sarajevo Yugoslavia 00 0 0 71 0 71 50 cars in 1958 followed by an additional 21 in 1962 all from Washington D CBelgrade Yugoslavia 00 0 0 70 0 70 Delivered from Washington between 1958 and 1961 14 were rebuilt into two car articulated trams in 1964 58 59 Shaker Heights United States 0 25 0 43 0 68 Original Pullman cars were extra wide and had left side doors 20 cars purchased from Twin Cities Rapid Transit in 1953 10 cars purchased from St Louis in 1959 2 former Illinois Terminal cars leased from museums in 1975 2 cars purchased from NJ Transit in 1977 9 ex Cleveland cars purchased from Toronto in 1978 PCCs were used until 1981 Cincinnati United States 0 26 0 25 0 51 60 40 Birmingham Railway and Electric Company United States 0 48 00 0 0 48 61 40 Tampico Mexico 00 0 0 43 0 43 Purchased used from Kansas City 10 cars St Louis 20 and Toronto 10 System abandoned on 13 December 1974 62 Vancouver Canada 0 36 00 0 0 36 System abandoned 1955 63 40 San Diego Electric Railway United States 0 28 00 6 0 34 First cars purchased in 1937 System abandoned in 1949 System reopened in 1981 Historic PCC operation resumed in 2011 40 64 Pacific Electric United States 0 30 00 0 0 30 Double ended Longest PCCs built 65 Newark United States 00 0 0 30 0 30 Cars were purchased from Twin City Rapid Transit in 1954 They were in operation until 2001 66 Dallas United States 0 25 00 0 0 25 Double enders All sold to Boston in 1958 59 67 Louisville Railway United States 00 0 0 25 0 25 40 El Paso United States 00 0 0 20 0 20 17 purchased from San Diego in 1947 plus three more in 1952 System abandoned 1974 System reopened in 2019 with six restored cars 68 Montreal Canada 0 18 00 0 0 18 Delivered in 1944 System abandoned in 1959 69 Johnstown Traction Company United States 0 17 00 0 0 17Buffalo Metro Rail United States 00 0 0 12 0 12 These cars were purchased by the Niagara Frontier Transportation Authority in the 1980s but were never used Illinois Terminal Railroad United States 00 8 00 0 00 8 70 Tandy Center Subway United States 00 0 00 7 00 7 Second hand Washington cars rebuilt for double ended high platform operation Current Edit Operator Line s Place Started PCCsMuni E Embarcadero F Market amp Wharves San Francisco California 1995 24SEPTA Route 15 Philadelphia Pennsylvania 2005 18Kenosha Electric Streetcar Kenosha Wisconsin 2000 0 7El Paso Streetcar El Paso Texas 2018 0 6Tourist Tram by HOVM The Hague Scheveningen loop The Hague South Holland 2016 0 4MBTA Ashmont Mattapan High Speed Line Boston Massachusetts 1941 0 4San Diego Trolley Silver Line San Diego California 2011 0 2McKinney Avenue Transit Authority Dallas Texas 2003 0 3Toronto Transportation Commission charter service Toronto Ontario 1938 0 2Most PCC based systems were dismantled in the post war period in favor of bus based transit networks Of the rail transit systems that survived this period most had replaced their PCCs with modern light rail vehicles LRVs by the early 1980s Beginning in the late 1990s several cities began to make use of historic PCCs to serve historic streetcar lines that combined aspects of tourist attractions and transit The following is a table of places where transit agencies still employ PCCs in revenue service as opposed to a short run or intermittent heritage railway Ashmont Mattapan High Speed Line Edit PCC 3263 at MattapanBoston started 1941 number in service 4 The Ashmont Mattapan High Speed Line in Boston is a light rail extension of the MBTA s heavy Red Line It runs from the Ashmont terminus of the Red Line to Mattapan and runs PCCs exclusively The line was shut down for reconstruction from June 24 2006 until December 22 2007 but PCC cars have resumed operation since the line s bridges cannot support heavier light rail vehicles LRV operated on the MBTA s Green Line Not considered historic equipment the PCC cars in use on the Mattapan Ashmont line represent the oldest cars still in revenue service originally built between 1943 and 1946 These cars are also the only air electric PCCs still in regular service in North America Several retired PCCs from Boston are now at the Seashore Trolley Museum McKinney Avenue Transit Authority Edit Dallas started 2003 number in service 1 The McKinney Avenue Transit Authority in Dallas Texas owns three PCC cars two from Toronto one from the former Tandy Center Subway One of the ex Toronto cars is currently in service El Paso Streetcar Edit An El Paso tram in the 1960s had just crossed the border to Mexico El Paso started 2018 number in service 6 Officials in El Paso expressed their desire to preserve the history of the city by refurbishing the old PCC streetcars that once made their way through Downtown from 1949 to 1974 71 They operated on the international streetcar line that connected El Paso Texas in the United States with Ciudad Juarez Mexico Originally the line operated until 1973 Six cars in total have been restored regular revenue operations began in late 2018 for the downtown loop Kenosha Electric Streetcar Edit Kenosha started 2000 number in service 7 The Kenosha Electric Streetcar in Kenosha Wisconsin has been operating six ex Toronto Transit Commission PCCs five since 2000 and the sixth since 2009 and one ex SEPTA car since 2009 The Kenosha Electric is unique among modern PCC operations in that PCCs had not run in the city before 2000 the original rail system was shut down in 1932 before any PCC cars had been built Two of its cars are still painted in their original TTC colours while the rest have been re decorated in the liveries of several U S cities including Pittsburgh Johnstown Chicago and Cincinnati SEPTA Route 15 Edit Philadelphia started 2005 number in service 18 72 SEPTA restored trolley service to the Route 15 Girard Avenue line in Philadelphia in September 2005 after a 15 year temporary suspension of trolley service in favor of diesel buses The line uses restored and modernized by the Brookville Manufacturing Company PCC cars known as PCC IIs painted in their original green and cream Philadelphia Transit Company livery rather than SEPTA s white with red and blue stripes Modernization included all new control systems modern turn markers HVAC system which accounts for the noticeably larger roof enclosure and ADA compliant wheelchair lifts The line runs from Haddington to Port Richmond down the median of Girard Avenue It crosses both the Broad Street Subway and the Market Frankford Line and stops at the Philadelphia Zoo among other landmarks SEPTA had originally planned to run modern Kawasaki trolleys along the line once service was restored but a combination of economics and a desire to help revive the Girard Avenue corridor with a more romantic vehicle led to the agency restoring the old vehicles for about half the cost of new cars citation needed SEPTA uses Kawasaki vehicles on the rest of its trolley lines including the Subway Surface Green Line linking West Philadelphia with Center City and its 69th Street Terminal with the western suburbs of Media and Sharon Hill via light rail routes 101 and 102 Silver Line San Diego Trolley Edit San Diego started 2011 number in service 2 San Diego Trolley currently uses 2 PCCs and is in the process of determining viability of a third car as of 2016 They are in use on the Silver Line which opened in 2011 and runs in a clockwise loop around Downtown San Diego F Market amp Wharves Edit San Francisco started 1995 number in service 24 The F Market Line historic streetcar service in San Francisco opened in 1995 runs along Market Street from The Castro to the Ferry Building then along the Embarcadero north and west to Fisherman s Wharf This line is run by a mixture of PCC cars built between 1946 and 1952 and earlier pre PCC cars Due to its success a second heritage line was inaugurated in 2015 the E Embarcadero which serves to facilitate a one seat ride from the Caltrain San Francisco Station to Fisherman s Wharf Although San Francisco had removed PCCs from revenue service when the city s light rail was transformed into the Muni Metro system in 1980 they had made occasional festival trips in the ensuing years before being returned to full time service Car 1074 is painted in Toronto Transit Commission livery but was never owned by the TTC See also San Francisco Municipal Railway fleet Active PCC fleet Toronto streetcar system Edit Toronto started 1938 number in service 2 The first PCC cars in Canada were operated by the Toronto Transit Commission TTC in 1938 73 By 1954 Toronto had the largest PCC fleet in the world including many purchased second hand from U S cities that abandoned streetcar service following the Second World War 31 74 Although it acquired new custom designed streetcars in the late 1970s and 1980s and which was replaced by modern LRVs by Dec 2019 the TTC continued using PCCs in regular service until 1995 and retains two numbers 4500 and 4549 for charter purposes Models based on the PCC streetcar EditThe PCC license was used worldwide after World War II had ended which resulted in adaptations based on the American PCC design Two such licensees were successful namely the Belgian company La Brugeoise et Nivelles since 1988 a subsidiary of Bombardier Transportation itself since 2021 a subsidiary of the French Alstom who built both standard gauge and meter gauge cars based on the PCC license for many networks in Belgium France and the Netherlands and particularly the Czech CKD Tatra who built the largest number of the PCC type in the world supplying a number of Central and Eastern European countries Trams such as the Tatra T3 and its variant Tatra T4 together the most numerous of any tram model ever produced are still in service today in many of the regions where they were first introduced Modern variants of the Tatra T3 are still produced today by some manufacturers such as KOS Krnov The Polish Konstal 13N was not built under license Only models with direct references to the original American PCC streetcar are included here Later models of a particular series such as the Tatra T5 were adapted and modernized further Model Country Introduced Number built7700 series 7900 series Belgium 1951 00 125 both models A28 number 11 West Germany 1951 00 00 1Konstal 13N Poland 1959 00 842PCC 980 Australia 1949 00 00 1PCC A28 Sweden 1953 00 00 2Tatra T1 Czechoslovakia Poland Russia 1951 00 287Tatra T2 Czechoslovakia Russia Ukraine 1955 00 771Tatra T3 Czechoslovakia East Germany Latvia Romania Russia Ukraine Uzbekistan Yugoslavia 1962 14 113Tatra T4 East Germany Estonia Latvia Romania Russia Ukraine Yugoslavia 1968 0 2 637TMBT number 5501 Japan 1954 00 00 1Note that the country listed only covers areas where the cars were initially delivered references for these areas can be found in the text 7700 series 7900 series 75 Edit Belgium introduced 1951 number built 125 both models 76 The first PCC cars in Brussels series 7000 7100 were built in prevision of the Expo 58 they were single body non reversible two bogie cars Articulated trams arrived since 1965 first two body non reversible trams series 7500 then two body series 7700 7800 and three body series 7900 reversible ones the last one delivered in 1978 The last single body PCC tram in commercial service in Brussels ran in February 2010 All series 7500 trams were converted to series 7700 by addition of a second steering post except the 7500 prototype which was versed to the collection of the Brussels Tram Museum Two body and three body reversible PCC trams are still in regular service next to more modern low floor trams All these articulated PCC cars use Jacobs bogies under the articulations see example at right Brussels tramways use standard gauge 1 435 m metre gauge PCC trams are in use in Ghent and Antwerp A28 number 11 77 Edit West Germany introduced 1951 number built 1 The only PCC in West Germany was delivered from La Brugeoise to Hamburg in 1951 The car was sold to Brussels in 1957 Returned to Hamburg in 1995 where it was used as a historical tram in the VVM Schonberger Strand museum In 1999 the tram was sold to the Danish tram museum of Skjoldenaesholm 77 Konstal 13N 78 Edit Poland introduced 1959 number built 842 These trams were used in Poland from 1959 to their retirement in 2012 Several remain as maintenance cars while others have been preserved in museums Konstal 13Ns were not produced under a PCC licence PCC 980 Edit Australia introduced 1949 number built 1 One set of PCC bogies and control equipment was imported into Melbourne circa 1949 and fitted to a modified W class body Additional cars were planned but never built The single car was numbered 980 79 and was withdrawn from service in 1971 Z Class tram prototype car 1041 was built in 1972 using bogies salvaged from 980 80 PCC A28 77 Edit Sweden introduced 1953 number built 2 Only two of the planned 300 of the PCC A28 type trams had been delivered to Stockholm by ASJ in 1953 This was probably due to the withdrawal of the Polish side of the contract in 1946 which primarily stated the delivery not only of the tram wagons but also 8 locomotives and 44 electric passenger trains by the ASEA company The only ones that were built based on bogies and the electrical system delivered from the USA They were the first PCCs in Europe equipped with multiple unit electrical systems and were only used in pairs no more trams of this type were constructed on tourist line number 700 In 1962 the routes were converted to buses One of the two cars was scrapped the other one number 11 is preserved in the Tramway Museum of Malmkoping 77 Tatra T1 Edit Czechoslovakia Poland Russia introduced 1951 number built 287 81 Tatra T2 Edit Czechoslovakia Russia Ukraine introduced 1955 number built 771 82 Tatra T3 77 Edit Czechoslovakia East Germany Latvia Russia Romania Ukraine Uzbekistan Yugoslavia introduced 1962 number built 14 113 83 Tatra T4 77 Edit East Germany Estonia Latvia Russia Romania Ukraine Yugoslavia introduced 1968 number built 2 637 84 TMBT number 5501 Edit Japan introduced 1954 number built 1 The TMBT Tokyo Metropolitan Bureau of Transportation wanted to modernize its streetcar so ordered one PCC car to Naniwa Koki Company later Alna Sharyo Company in Hankyu Hanshin Holdings in Osaka in 1953 Sumitomo Metal Industries as bogie manufacturer and Mitsubishi Electric Corporation that had the electric motor licensee from Westinghouse Electric Corporation also participated in the project The streetcar was completed in 1954 with number 5501 The class 5500 was extended with other 6 cars 5502 5507 but these were called no real PCC cars because of their different configuration 85 circular reference 86 See also EditBrilliner a competing streetcar design Two spiritual successors developed by UMTA the 1970s State of the Art Car SOAC demonstrated contemporary technologies for use in rapid transit systems US Standard Light Rail Vehicle SLRV designed as a replacement for PCCs and intended to modernize legacy streetcar systems KTM 1 and MTV 82 similarly standardized and mass produced trams in the Soviet Union Streetcars in North AmericaReferences Edit Brill Debra 2001 History of the J G Brill Company Indiana University Press pp 202 205 ISBN 0 253 33949 9 Jaxson The Abandoned Where Trolleys Go To Die www thejaxsonmag com Retrieved 2023 03 05 Carlson amp Schneider 1980 pp 117 119 C F Hirshfeld Ch Engr PCC October 1933 Electric Transit and Bus Journal pp 321 325 331 Design for a rail car or similar Proceedings of the American Transit Association 1936 pp 821 822 833 834 1126 1127 amp 1938 Proceedings pp 372 374 376 378 380 382 384 408 416 417 418 420 422 380 382 384 amp An American Original The PCC Car Kashin and Demoro pp 42 43 46 187 Hoover Amanda 6 September 2015 Why are old Green Line trolleys wasting away in rural Pennsylvania Boston Globe Retrieved 21 April 2017 King Leroy O Jr 100 Years of Capital Traction The Story of Streetcars in the Nation s Capital Dallas Publisher Leroy O King Jr 1972 page 153 Carlson amp Schneider 1980 p 59 Carlson amp Schneider 1980 p 87 Carlson amp Schneider 1980 pp 123 129 236 237 supplement Carlson amp Schneider 1980 pp 131 135 supplement Carlson S P Schneider F W 1983 PCC From Coast to Coast Interurban Press p 235 ISBN 0 916374 57 2 Carlson amp Schneider 1980 pp 144 155 Carlson amp Schneider 1980 pp 239 241 supplement Kashin S Demoro H 1986 An American Original The PCC Car p 79 Glendale CA Interurban Press ISBN 0 916374 73 4 Carlson amp Schneider 1980 p 149 Carlson amp Schneider 1980 pp 98 100 H G McClean B Sc M I E E M I Loco E December 14 1945 Passenger Transport Journal The American P C C Car p 348 Carlson amp Schneider 1980 pp 48 49 87 89 91 rear foldout 1 Lind 1979 pp 48 49 87 89 399 a b c PCC Not so standard www nycsubway org Retrieved 7 April 2014 Carlson amp Schneider 1980 p 74 75 98 99 rear foldout 3 Carlson amp Schneider 1980 pp 94 supplement Carlson amp Schneider 1980 pp 3 136 137 162 173 supplement Chicago s Rapid Transit v 1 Rolling Stock 1892 1947 Central Electric Railfans Association 1973 pp 215 227 ISBN 0 915348 15 2 Chicago s Rapid Transit v 2 Rolling Stock 1947 1976 Central Electric Railfans Association 1976 pp 8 71 186 189 191 195 196 199 ISBN 0 915348 15 2 Lind 1979 pp 16 37 400 supplement Toronto 4612 Edmonton Radial Railway Society January 1 2018 Retrieved 2022 06 18 Future Projects Edmonton Radial Railway Society January 1 2018 Retrieved 2022 06 18 a b c d Dr Harold E Cox 1963 PCC Cars of North America Chicago s Rapid Transit V II Central Electric Railfans Assoc 1976 pp 8 11 ISBN 0 915348 15 2 Borzo Greg 2007 The Chicago L Arcadia Publishing p 113 ISBN 978 0 7385 5100 5 IRM Roster Chicago Transit Authority 4391 www irm org 400 000 Flash Fire Destroys Homewood Car Barn 14 Trolleys The Pittsburgh Press May 19 1955 Retrieved December 8 2010 Philadelphia Trolley Tracks www phillytrolley org Washington Streetcar Collection National Capital Trolley Museum Archived from the original on 2007 02 05 Retrieved 2007 03 15 D C Transit General Electric PCC data sheet Bill Volkmer collection General Electric Archived from the original on 27 September 2007 Retrieved 5 June 2019 The Tramways of Mexico City Part 4 www tramz com a b c d e f g h i j Expozicemhd cz Expozicemhd cz 1050 St Louis Public Service Company 1063 Baltimore Maryland Market Street Railway PCC s in hun tweede leven www haagstramnieuws org 1079 Detroit Michigan QLine DALSI AMERICKE MESTO ZAZILO NAVRAT K TRAMVAJIM in Czech Ceskoslovensky Dopravak 13 May 2016 Retrieved 10 March 2018 1052 Los Angeles Railway 1071 Minneapolis St Paul Minnesota John F Bromley 23 October 2009 Streetcars on the Waterfront 1968 Steve Munro Retrieved 14 November 2010 dead link 1006 San Francisco Municipal Railway 1950s Market Street Railway 1008 Muni Wings Market Street Railway 1010 San Francisco Municipal Railway 1940s Market Street Railway 1011 Market Street Railway Company Market Street Railway San Francisco Market Street Railway We keep San Francisco s Vintage Streetcars on Track Market Street Railway Bcntrolei Archived from the original on 2015 02 23 Retrieved 2019 04 05 History of tramways in Barcelona public transport net 1053 Brooklyn New York Sarajevo trams part 1 urban trans net Retrieved 2019 03 31 Railsiferradures 2017 07 01 rails i ferradures SARAJEVO II rails i ferradures Retrieved 2019 03 31 1057 Cincinnati Ohio 1077 Birmingham Alabama Allen Morrison 2003 The Tramways of Tampico Electric Transport in Latin America Past amp Present Allen Morrison Retrieved 3 August 2011 tundria com trams CAN Vancouver 1955 1078 San Diego California Market Street Railway 1061 Pacific Electric Farewell to Newark PCCs October 2001 Tramways amp Urban Transit p 386 Ian Allan Publishing 1009 Dallas Texas 1073 El Paso Texas amp Juarez Mexico Market Street Railway http fr wikipedia org wiki Tramway de Montreal Wiesel Jamison 1015 Illinois Terminal Railroad Market Street Railway Flores Aileen B El Paso City Council seeks to refurbish old trolleys for project El Paso Times Archived from the original on August 22 2013 Retrieved February 21 2015 Route 15 Girard Avenue Trolley phillytrolley org Mike Filey September 22 2012 The very first PCC streetcars went into service 74 years ago today Toronto Sun Retrieved December 20 2018 It was on this day back in 1938 that Torontonians who for decades had relied on a variety of less than agreeable street railway vehicles were finally introduced to the latest model streetcar the amazing PCC Streamliner The Post War Used PCC Cars Classes A9 to A14 Transit Toronto Content transittoronto ca La STIB a recu son dernier T3000 et envisage deja une nouvelle commande www rtbf be in French March 17 2015 Retrieved January 27 2018 Tram 2000 November 2017 p 10 a b c d e f The most popular tram in the world PCC part 2 Europe kmk krakow pl Retrieved January 27 2019 Witold Urbanowicz March 25 2017 Tramwaje Warszawskie odnawiaja parowki www transport publiczny pl in Polish Retrieved January 27 2019 Jones Russell 2010 The remarkable PCC tramcar why Melbourne missed out Friends of Hawthorn Tram Museum Retrieved 28 June 2016 Melbourne amp Metropolitan Tramways Board PCC No 1041 Friends of Hawthorn Tram Museum 2008 Retrieved 28 June 2016 Tatra T1 deliveries Strassenbahnen Online Retrieved 2007 12 08 Tatra T2 deliveries Strassenahnen Online Retrieved 2007 12 08 Tatra T3 deliveries Strassenbahnen Online Retrieved 2007 12 09 Tatra T4 deliveries Strassenbahnen Online Retrieved 2019 04 22 Naniwa Koki Co PCC No 5501 Tokio September 9 2019 via Wikipedia 東京都交通局 都電 都電おもいで広場 東京都交通局 Further reading EditCarlson Stephen P Schneider Fred W 1980 PCC the car that fought back Glendala California Interurban Press ISBN 978 0 916374 41 9 Lind Alan R 1979 Chicago Surface Lines An Illustrated History 3rd ed Park Forest Illinois Transport History Press ISBN 978 0 934732 00 0 Carlson et al 1986 The Colorful Streetcars We Rode Bulletin 125 of the Central Electric Railfans Association Chicago Il ISBN 0 915348 25 X Kashin S Demoro H 1986 An American Original The PCC Car Interurban Press ISBN 0 916374 73 4 in Spanish Lopez Bustos Carlos Tranvias de Madrid Aldaba Ediciones Madrid 1986 ISBN 84 86629 00 4 Wickson Ted ed November December 2015 The PCC streetcar in Canada PDF Canadian Rail No 659 pp 255 298 Retrieved 26 January 2017 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to PCC type tramcars List of PCC Streetcars in the 21st century The PCC streetcar club PCC Car The Industry Saviour The PCC Car Not So Standard PCC streetcars in NYC Madrid trams in Dutch Approximately 30 videos of San Francisco PCCs from the early 1980s The P C C Car Now a Reality PDF St Louis Car Company PCC History In Pittsburgh PA USA Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title PCC streetcar amp oldid 1171287394, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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