New Flyer Xcelsior Explained

New Flyer Xcelsior
Manufacturer:New Flyer
Production:2008–present
Predecessor:New Flyer Low Floor
Class:Transit bus
Body Style:Monocoque stressed-skin
Floortype:Low-floor
Doors:2 doors (35-foot)
2 or 3 doors (40-foot)
2, 3 or 5 doors (60-foot)
Transmission:Allison B 400 (35- & 40-foot), B 500 (60-foot), Voith or ZF
Length:over bumpers:
Width:1022NaN2
Height:10feet (diesel)
11feet (all others)
Sp:us

The New Flyer Xcelsior is a line of transit buses available in 35-foot rigid, 40-foot rigid, and 60-foot articulated nominal lengths manufactured by New Flyer Industries since 2008. In addition to the different available lengths, the buses are sold with a variety of propulsion systems: conventional diesel, compressed natural gas (CNG), diesel-electric hybrid, hydrogen fuel cell, overhead electric wire and battery electric. A future autonomous bus variant was announced in January 2021.

Model codes

For example, a New Flyer XE40 CHARGE NG is a 40-foot (nominal) rigid Next Generation Xcelsior with battery-electric power, or an XN60 is a 60-foot articulated Original Generation Xcelsior with CNG power. All power sources have 40- and 60-foot models, but not all power sources have 35-foot models: XHE35s (hydrogen-powered) and XT35s (trolleybus) do not exist.

History

The Xcelsior was introduced October 2008 APTA Expo held in San Diego. The Xcelsior started off as a set of improvements to the company's prior product, the New Flyer Low Floor, but over the development process the company said it ended up designing a new bus. Compared to the Low Floor, the Xcelsior was 10% lighter, boosting fuel economy by about 7%.[1]

The bus was also designed to allow a much larger cooling system and the addition of a SCR system, both required to meet the more stringent EPA mandates that were coming in 2010. To accommodate the change, the Thermo King air conditioning system was moved from the rear of the bus to a roof mount location over the front axle. New Flyer found that the move improved the weight balance of the bus, and when combined with enhanced insulation, contributed to the vehicle running quieter.[2]

The interior of the bus was also modified. By moving the fuel tank and modifying the rear suspension, seating capacity was increased from 39 to 42 (on the 40-foot model), with more forward-facing seats. To improve accessibility, the floor height was lowered to with the ability to kneel down to, and the front entry door was widened, allowing a wider wheelchair ramp. To improve interior aesthetics, visible fasteners were eliminated and molded plastic surfaces were introduced. The utilitarian instrument panel was replaced with an automotive-style electronic dashboard.

The bus also had a redesigned front face, bumpers, and roof shrouds that also offered better aerodynamics and the front improved visibility for the driver.

At launch, the Xcelsior was only available in a 40feet length with power from the Cummins ISL 280 and a Allison B400 conventional transmission or the Allison EP-40 hybrid drive. Brampton Transit, serving Brampton, Ontario, was the first agency to order the Xcelsior.

The first trolleybus version of the Xcelsior was an XT40 built in 2014 for the Seattle trolleybus system, operated by King County Metro,[3] the first unit of an order placed in 2013.[4] King County Metro also purchased the XT60 (articulated trolleybus), and both XT40s and XT60s were subsequently purchased by the San Francisco Municipal Railway, for the San Francisco trolleybus system.[5]

Xcelsior CHARGE

The first Xcelsior battery electric buses (XE40) were built in 2014 and delivered to the Chicago Transit Authority and Winnipeg Transit.[6] Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority was the lead agency for the XE60, ordered in January 2019[7] and placed into service on July 31, 2019.[8] The Toronto Transit Commission operates 25 XE40 buses.

The first battery-electric Xcelsior buses were a powertrain option within the regular Xcelsior line; development was announced in 2011, a prototype was shown in 2012, and regular production began in 2014.[9] The original battery-electric Xcelsior bus, offered as an XE40, used a permanent magnet traction motor built by Siemens.[10] In October 2017, the Xcelsior CHARGE sub-line was introduced.

The Xcelsior CHARGE variant (XEnn) uses the Siemens ELFA2 electric drive system with different options for battery capacity, depending on the charging speed and range required.[11] The traction motor used has an output of either 210or and 1033or. Batteries are supplied by XALT Energy[12] or A123 Systems (XE60 long-range models and XHEnn fuel cell models). On-route rapid charging is provided through an overhead pantograph designed to be interoperable with the SAE J3105 standard supplying 300–450 kW. Shop or depot charging may be performed using SAE J3068 and J1772 connectors supplying up to 150 kW.

At Altoona, the as-tested empty weight of an XE40 was measured at 32770lb with a capacity of 76 (38 seated passengers + 37 standing passengers + 1 driver) for a total GVW of 43550lb. It was equipped with 4 XALT Xsyst 7 (7 kWh) batteries and a SPHEROS fuel-fired heater. When accelerating from a constant speed, the bus emitted an average maximum noise level of 66.1 dB(A),[13] considerably lower than the average maximum noise level of 70.4 dB(A) measured from a conventionally-powered XD40.[14]

XE60

The articulated XE60 adds a second driven axle, using the ZF AxTrax AVE[15] on the middle axle. The AxTrax AVE (formerly known as the AVE 130)[16] uses two electric motors (one per wheel), each with a maximum continuous/peak output of 160/ and maximum continuous/peak torque of 6000/.[17] Each motor is an asynchronous three-phase AC motor operating on 650 VDC with an input current of 250 (continuous) to 340 (peak) amps, using a single-speed reduction gear ratio of 22.66:1. The complete axle assembly weighs 1250abbr=onNaNabbr=on[18]

The as-tested empty weight of an XE60 was 52070lb with a capacity of 120 (50 seated passengers + 69 standing passengers + 1 driver) for a total GVW of 70170lb. Compared to the diesel-powered equivalent XD60, the XE60 is heavier (XD60 GVW is 58600lb) and holds slightly fewer people (XD60 capacity is 123 people: 49 seated, 73 standing, 1 driver).[19] Depending on the driving route/style, the XE60 tested at Altoona had a predicted range of 145miles246miles.

The MBTA and NYMTA were the first to order the XE60, with the former ordering 5 and the latter ordering 15.

Xcelsior CHARGE NG

Xcelsior CHARGE NG is New Flyer's next generation battery-electric, zero-emission bus. It is lighter, simpler and has longer range with better energy recovery. It has a capacity of 32-61 passengers with 2 wheelchair locations. It is available in 35-, 40-, and 60-foot configurations. It has a Siemens ELFA3 traction motor, Lithium Manganese Cobalt (NMC) batteries, and electric roof-mounted HVAC(s).[20]

Xcelsior CHARGE H2

The CHARGE model can be equipped with a hydrogen fuel cell (model code XHE), which acts as an on-board charger to extend range.[21] Earlier New Flyer fuel cell buses were based on the preceding Low Floor chassis, designated H40LFR, and integrated by an outside vendor. In 2016, New Flyer received an order for 25 XHE40 buses under the California Air Resources Board Air Quality Improvement Program (AQIP).[22] The XHE40 uses a MAN SE model 1350 rear axle with a traction motor from Siemens; like the XE60, the XHE60 also uses a MAN 1350 rear axle as a pusher, but adds a ZF AxTrax AVE middle axle as a puller for traction-challenged conditions.

An XHE60 tested at Altoona weighed 49890lb empty; with a total capacity of 132 (1 driver, 50 seated, 81 standing), the estimated GVW was 69750lb. The fuel cell was a Ballard HD85 with an 85 kW output.[23]

Development of the electric fuel cell buses is centered in California, with AC Transit serving as the lead agency for one XHE60, and SunLine Transit Agency, AC Transit, and Orange County Transportation Authority testing several variants of XHE40.

Xcelsior AV

New Flyer and Robotic Research announced a partnership in May 2019 to develop automated bus technology.[24] In January 2021, New Flyer introduced the Xcelsior AV, New Flyer's first ever autonomous bus.[25] New Flyer claims the AV meets the SAE J3016 Level 4 of autonomy. The AV is based on the XE40 chassis, and uses Robotic Research's AutoDrive suite of sensors and AutoDrive ByWire mechanical actuators.[26] Project management was performed by The Center for Transportation and Environment (CTE) with support from the Federal Transit Administration, who provided a  million grant under the Integrated Mobility Innovation Program.

The first three Xcelsior AV buses are scheduled to be tested by CTtransit in 2021 on the CTfastrak bus rapid transit (BRT) line, over a dedicated right-of-way long, connecting New Britain and Hartford, Connecticut. The deployment on a BRT line is anticipated to test the vehicles' ability to perform precision docking at station platforms and platooning multiple vehicles.[27]

See also

External links

Brochures

Notes and References

  1. Starcic, Janna. Roman, Alex. Schlosser, Nicole. November–December 2008. Transportation's Green Future on Display at APTA EXPO. Metro Magazine. 20–50. December 10, 2018.
  2. Web site: Hubbard, David. March 1, 2009. Xcelsior gives a spirited ride. December 10, 2018. Bus Ride.
  3. News: . November–December 2014. Trolleynews [regular news section]. 164. Trolleybus Magazine. National Trolleybus Association. 318. UK. 0266-7452.
  4. News: . September–October 2013. Trolleynews [regular news section]. 136–137. Trolleybus Magazine. National Trolleybus Association. 311. UK. 0266-7452.
  5. News: . September–October 2017. Trolleynews [regular news section]. 197. Trolleybus Magazine. National Trolleybus Association. 335. UK. 0266-7452.
  6. Web site: New Flyer Industries. August 15, 2018. New Flyer Electric Buses. 24 December 2018. California Fuel Cell Partnership.
  7. MBTA leads Boston's evolution in transit with battery-electric buses from New Flyer. January 7, 2019. New Flyer Industries. 9 August 2019.
  8. First Zero-emission, Battery-electric Buses Join the MBTA Silver Line Fleet. July 31, 2019. Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority. 9 August 2019.
  9. Plachno, Larry . April 2018 . Charging Ahead with Electric Buses . 24 December 2018 . National Bus Trader . 16–25.
  10. Siemens electric Drive System to Power New Line of Transit Buses . October 28, 2014 . Siemens . 24 December 2018.
  11. Web site: Xcelsior CHARGE . October 2018 . New Flyer Industries . December 10, 2018.
  12. Web site: New Flyer Xcelsior CHARGE. New Flyer Industries . June 26, 2018 . American Public Transportation Association . 24 December 2018.
  13. Federal Transit Bus Test: New Flyer XE40 . July 2015 . The Thomas D. Larson Pennsylvania Transportation Institute, The Pennsylvania State University . 24 December 2018.
  14. Federal Transit Bus Test: New Flyer XD40 . November 2012 . The Thomas D. Larson Pennsylvania Transportation Institute, The Pennsylvania State University . 24 December 2018.
  15. Web site: ZumMallen, Ryan . September 19, 2018 . New Flyer and ZF Building 100 Electric Buses for U.S. . 24 December 2018 . Trucks.
  16. Thoma, Frank . December 11, 2018 . Electric mobility in size XL . 24 December 2018 . Vision Magazine . ZF.
  17. Federal Transit Bus Test: New Flyer XE60 . April 2019 . The Thomas D. Larson Pennsylvania Transportation Institute, The Pennsylvania State University . 9 August 2019.
  18. Web site: November 2018 . Product Overview: Axle & Transmission Systems for Buses & Coaches . 24 December 2018 . ZF.
  19. Federal Transit Bus Test: New Flyer XD60 . July 2013 . The Thomas D. Larson Pennsylvania Transportation Institute, The Pennsylvania State University . 24 December 2018.
  20. Web site: 2021-03-17. New Flyer Unveils its Most Advanced EV Bus. 2021-04-06. New Flyer North America's Bus Leader. en-US.
  21. Web site: Xcelsior hydrogen fuel cell-electric bus . October 2017 . New Flyer Industries . December 10, 2018.
  22. Web site: Zero-Emission Implementations . Warren, David . November 9, 2017 . California Transit Association . 24 December 2018.
  23. Federal Transit Bus Test: New Flyer XHE60 . August 2018 . The Thomas D. Larson Pennsylvania Transportation Institute, The Pennsylvania State University . 24 December 2018.
  24. New Flyer announces Robotic Research partnership to revolutionize public transit using automated bus technology . May 15, 2019 . New Flyer . 9 February 2021.
  25. Web site: Xcelsior AV™ . 2021-02-06 . New Flyer Industries . en-US.
  26. News: New Flyer Xcelsior AV Is America's First Autonomous Bus . Borrás, Jo . February 2, 2021 . Clean Technica . 9 February 2021.
  27. News: CTDOT scheduled to deploy first full-size automated transit bus in North America . Wanek-Libman, Mischa . June 24, 2020 . Mass Transit . 9 February 2021.