News & Reviews News Wire MBTA looks at returning older Orange Line equipment to operation

MBTA looks at returning older Orange Line equipment to operation

By Trains Staff | January 9, 2023

| Last updated on February 6, 2024

Agency remains short of equipment because of new cars’ defects

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Subway train at nearly empty station
An MBTA Orange Line train prepares to depart Boston’s Forest Hills station in July 2013. The agency may return some of this older equipment to operation. Scott A. Hartley

BOSTON — The Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority may return some of its older Orange Line trainsets to operation to address an equipment shortage as it continues to inspect and repair new equipment for the latest in a series of defects, Boston.com reports.

At least nine of the new Orange Line cars built in Massachusetts by an affiliate of China’s CRRC were removed from service in late December because of a power-cable problem that could lead to electrical arcing [see “MBTA sidelines some Orange Line equipment …,” Trains News Wire, Dec. 31, 2022]. While cars have been repaired, workers continue to perform weekly inspections to find the source of the electrical problem, the MBTA wrote on its Twitter feed, and may return the old equipment to service as a backup plan.

As of the time of that Twitter message, the Orange Line was running one train short of the number needed to maintain a full schedule.

The new CRRC equipment for the Red and Orange lines has experienced a series of problems, leading the MBTA to blast the manufacturer for having “abandoned” its responsibilities to quality management in a letter sent before the latest issue, although it only became public afterward [see “MBTA letter blasts CRRC …,” News Wire, Jan. 5, 2023].

3 thoughts on “MBTA looks at returning older Orange Line equipment to operation

  1. The moral of the story:
    Never buy railway equipment from the Chinamen.
    Why couldn’t they just hire Alstom or Bombardier for the construction of the new trainsets?

  2. And way back when folks were worried about the Chinese government putting spyware on the new cars? Folks I guess should have been worried about reliability first.

  3. 1200 series cars: “You couldn’t live with your own failure. And where did that bring you? Back to me.”

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