India’s definitely aping the US all right in terms of how utterly carbrained everyone is becoming

  • azimir@lemmy.ml
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    16 days ago

    Berlin’s S-Bahn is an anomaly in Germany. Normally S-Bahns are a form of light interurban rail networks. Not really metros (more classically within city subways and suburbs).

    Across Germany there are S-Bahn networks between cities, but Berlin has grown so much that it absorbed other cities into a single metro area and the S-Bahn with it. They also added extra stations in places making it a bit more metro like.

    It’s a weird beast for classification now.

    I like that the U-Bahns and S-Bahns are different rail companies in the city. That way when there’s a strike it normally only shuts down one of the two systems and I can still get around, just a bit slower.

    • MrMakabar@slrpnk.net
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      16 days ago

      Normally S-Bahns are a form of light interurban rail networks

      S-Bahns are not trams or tram trains, but are heavy rail. They are basically upgraded regional or commuter lines, which run on a common corridor through the city to allow for metro like frequencies on that section. A lot of the lines hav 20min frequency, but often share track to increase that. Quite a few of them are pretty close to metros. Not just the Berlin one. Hamburgs has 10min frequency on its lines for the most part, Cologne and the Rhein-Ruhr one is at 20-30min and a lot of shared track.

      There are some, which are worse, but Berlins system is not an anomaly in being rather metro like.

      • Baŝto@discuss.tchncs.de
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        16 days ago

        Same in Frankfurt. In the city the frequency is quite high and then they split into lines when they get outside, which only reach a 30min frequency during rush hour I think.

        Even the connection Frankfurt central station to Offenbach market place (city on the other river side) can reach a train every 5min during rush hour.

        But they can get delayed when they surface and get outside.