Comet V Explained

Comet V
Interiorimage:File:CometV 6068.JPG
Interiorcaption:Interior of a Comet V car.
Service:2002–present
Manufacturer:Alstom
Family:Comet
Fleetnumbers:
  • 6000–6083, 6700–6714 (cab cars)
  • 6200–6213, 6750–6754 (trailers with lavatories)
  • 6500–6601, 6755–6799 (trailers without lavatories)
Operator:New Jersey Transit (65 cars owned by Metro-North Railroad)
Yearconstruction:1999–2004
Yearservice:April 2002
Numberbuilt:265
Numberservice:263
Numberscrapped:1
Carlength:85feet
Width:10inchesft6inchesin (ftin)
Doors:
  • 6 (2 high-level handicap doors and 4 regular, low-level doors.)
  • 5 on cab units (3 high-level handicap doors and 2 regular, low-level doors.)
Weight:100000lb
Capacity:
  • 109 (cab)
  • 111 (with lavatory)
  • 117 (without lavatory)

The Comet V railcar is the fifth generation of the Comet railcar series. Produced by the manufacturer Alstom, the Comet V is a rather different car compared to previous models in the series. The Comet V has been in use by New York metropolitan area commuter rail operators New Jersey Transit and Metro-North since April 2002.[1]

Layout and design

The main design of the Comet V is similar to its predecessors starting with the Comet III. Each trailer car has six doors for entering and exiting (like the Comet IV, the cab cars have five doors); the doors at the ends of the car are single-leaf with trap doors for low-level boarding while those in the middle are double-leaf but lack steps and trapdoors, only opening at high platform stations. The length of the cars at 85feet over the couplers remains unchanged from previous models and their width adheres to the standard loading gauge of .

The one unique feature of Comet V cab cars, compared to earlier Comets and especially the Comet IV, is the lack of steps and a trapdoor at the door in the vestibule opposite the engineer's operating position. Therefore, it can only be used for high-platform boarding. Like the Comet IV, the engineer's side of the cab vestibule has no door.

The interiors of the trains have significant differences from previous Comet railcars, featuring redesigned seats and windows that are larger than previous Comet coaches. There are also new LED digital information displays along with slightly more seating.[1] Major external differences include a stainless-steel exterior and visible, roof-mounted air conditioning units.

The Comet V was the inspiration for the Bombardier MultiLevel Coach, which began construction in 2006. Since 2021, Alstom has continued to construct these coaches.

Door problems

One prominent problem of the Comet V is failures in its door-opening mechanism. On the Comet V, Alstom added a new button to open vestibule doors that lead to the end doors labeled with "push to open."[2] This led to confusion among passengers about how to open the doors; eventually many resorted to opening them manually.[2] The Comet V's software glitches came to light as doors failed to open or malfunctioned.[3]

Accidents

On the morning of September 29, 2016, an NJ Transit train crashed through a bumper block and into the concourse of Hoboken Terminal, killing one person and injuring over 110.[4] [5] Comet V cab car No. 6036 suffered major damage due to falling debris.

Notes and References

  1. April 10, 2002. NJDOT commissioner James Fox unveils new locomotive and rail cars. New Jersey Transit. June 24, 2008.
  2. Web site: Comet V cars. NJ/NY Rails. June 24, 2008. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20030504073407/http://www.njnyrails.com/preview/comet5.html. May 4, 2003.
  3. News: Malinconico . Joe . April 11, 2004 . NJ Transit riders face an open-and-shut problem. Star-Ledger. June 24, 2008 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20041106221634/http://sierraactivist.org/article.php?sid=43848 . November 6, 2004.
  4. Web site: Hoboken train station crash: One dead and dozens hurt in New Jersey. BBC News. September 29, 2016.
  5. Web site: At Least 1 Dead, More Than 100 Hurt After Train Crash At Hoboken, Nj Station. September 29, 2016. September 29, 2016. Fox News.