After SOAC 
      finished its run in New York CIty, it toured the 
      nation. 4  © 2000 by The Composing Stack Inc. Not responsible for typographical 
      errors. The Third Rail and The Third Rail 
      logo are trademarks of The Composing Stack 
      Inc. Return to The Third Rail Online Home Everything on this site is copyright © 2000 by The Composing 
      Stack Inc., except as otherwise noted. Last updated 
  
  
     
       
 
       
          
                    
      SOAC Visits Boston (The Third Rail, November 
      1974)
    
      
     
      After completion of its New York tour, the State-of-the-Art car 
      (SOAC) moved on to Boston, home of America's oldest subway.  
     Monday, August 19, 
      [1974] marked the beginning of revenue service for the two-car train on 
      the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority's "Red" Line, operating 
      between Harvard Station and the light rapid transit extension at Ashmont 
      in Dorchester, and between Harvard and Quincy Center onthe new South Shore 
      Line.
     Its bugs worked out, SOAC showed 
      its stuff on the extension, where it operated at 70 mph speeds, MBTA 
      officicals found that SOAC's operation provided an unexpected benefit: it 
      enabled them to test features of their control procedures not possible 
      with the line's regular trains.
     The 
      one-month Boston tour of DOT's advanced rapid transit train concluded with 
      a September 14 excursion attended by 150 rail buffs. Proceeds from the 
      fantrip were donated to the Jimmy Fund, a popular Boston 
      charity.
     SOAC now moves on to 
      demonstration stays in Cleveland, Chicago and 
      Philadelphia.
      A Home for SOAC in South Jersey  
      (The Third Rail, July-September 
      1975)
      
Some small relief for 
      the Lindenwold high-speed line's car shortage is in the cards, thanks to 
      U.S. DOT and its State-of-the-Art Cars (SOAC), which are slated to see 
      service on the Delaware River Port Authority's line. 
           SOAC was developed by 
      the DOT's Urban Mass Transportation Administration (UMTA) to showcase 
      innovative ideas in modern rail car design and technology 
           Revenue 
      demonstrations of SOAC cars took place in five U.S. rapid rail cities—New 
      York, Chicago, Boston, Cleveland, and Philadelphia—where thousands of 
      riders enjoyed the opportunity to see transit's latest. 
           In 1971, UMTA let a 
      contract to the Boeing Vertol Company of Philadelphia to construct and 
      demonstrate a rail car representative of the current state-of-the-art in 
      rail rapid transit. Besides demonstrating technological innovation, the 
      cars were used in actual revenue service to provide passengers with an 
      opportunity to sample equipment designed to make rail transit riding more 
      attractive. 
           The unique two-car SOAC 
      unit, 150 feet long, was built by the St. Louis Car Division of General 
      Steel Industries, and underwent extensive testing at the Rail Transit Test 
      Track at DOT's Transportation Test Center in Pueblo, 
      Colorado. 
           In addition to standard 
      acceptance tests, the SOAC vehicles underwent a series of engineering 
      tests that produced a standard test procedure for future vehicle programs 
      and a strong baseline set of data against which actual performance could 
      be measured. 
           SOAC was then put into 
      simulated revenue service at the Test Center, making "station stops" 
      during 3,000 miles of operation around the ninemile transit test track. 
      Before leaving the Test Center, SOAC had logged 20,000 miles of 
      operation. 
           The cars then went on 
      the road, where they operated on the Eighth Avenue "A," Brighton "D," 
      Queens "E," and Sea Beach "N" lines of New York's NYCTA; the Boston area 
      on MBTA's Cambridge-Dorchester and 
      South Shore "Red" lines; the Cleveland Transit System's Airport 
      service; the Chicago Transit Authority's Skokie Swift; and SEPTA'S Broad 
      Street Line in Philadelphia. 
           The cars operated 104 
      total revenue service days in the five cities, carrying 312,500 passengers 
      over 19,595 miles. Passenger reaction was decidedly positive; applause 
      greeted the cars when they first entered Boston's Park 
      Street
        
        
      
      
           
             
          
             
          
             
          
             
          
             
     
       
      Return to 
      rapidtransit.net Home
Materials 
      with other copyrights are used by permission.
All 
      rights reserved