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SAN FRANCISCO (Map, News) - After a string of noise complaints from passengers and people who live near BART stations and raised tracks, the regional transit system is beefing up its stock of vehicles to reduce noise levels on the railways.
BART is planning to purchase a $4.4 million rail-grinding train with local and federal funds to smooth out wrinkles in the system’s rails that cause passenger trains to make high-pitched howling and rumbling sounds.
In a 2006 rider survey, noise level was one of the top four areas of customer concern. Riders also cited dirty trains, parking and uncomfortable seats. Passenger satisfaction with BART noise levels dropped 5 percent from 2004 to 2006, according to the survey.
The noise — which also sounds like screeching — is caused by corrugation on the tracks that could be a result of wheel slippage, rail experts say. Using special trains to grind down and smooth out the rails is one of the most common ways to reduce the deafening sound, make passenger trains run more efficiently and preserve the lifespan of the tracks.
“Once you start hearing the sound of the wheels hitting harder, it’s a good time to repair the corrugation,” said Gary Kohnert, a representative from Minnesota-based Loram Maintenance of Way Inc., which builds rail-grinding trains. “It’s kind of like a car going over a pothole.”
Bob Franklin, a member of BART’s board of directors, said the loudest noises occur on aerial railways, as there is no ground to absorb the sound, and in the Transbay Tube when the trains are operating around 70 mph to 80 mph.
BART bought its first rail-grinding train in the late 1980s for about $1.1 million, but it has since become unreliable, expensive to repair and slow — it can only grind about one mile of rail each night, Franklin said. With 104 miles of track in each direction, it could take more than six months to grind the whole system. The agency ordered a second train last year that arrived this summer after being specially built.
While rail grinding is often considered the fastest way to reduce noise levels, its efficiency is also constrained by the transit agency’s operating hours. Rail-grinding trains also cause sparks on the tracks and should not be used during fire season.
“In a time like this, we’re not going to do it along the [state Route] 24 corridor because it could start a fire. Sometimes we do it in the rain,” Franklin said.
The transit agency’s Board of Directors will vote on purchasing the new rail-grinding train at a meeting at 9 a.m. today at 344 20th St. in Oakland.



Comments from Examiner Readers
1:40 PM MST on Fri., Oct. 26, 2007 re: "BART goal: Stop SCREEECH!"
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3:13 PM MST on Thu., Oct. 25, 2007
re: "BART goal: Stop SCREEECH!"
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2:27 PM MST on Thu., Oct. 25, 2007
re: "BART goal: Stop SCREEECH!"
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11:05 AM MST on Thu., Oct. 25, 2007
re: "BART goal: Stop SCREEECH!"
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9:30 AM MST on Thu., Oct. 25, 2007
re: "BART goal: Stop SCREEECH!"
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Seven said:
I live in the Outer Sunset. What is this "BART" thing of which you speak? Oh yeah, it's that distant subway I help subsidize every month when I purchase my Muni fastpass.
129 agree | 127 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
The loudest place that I have heard noise while riding Bart, is from the inside of Bart cars, and while the cars are in the inside of tunnels. I have to plug my ears because the noise is so deafening.
131 agree | 114 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
The last time I wrote to BART regarding noise and delays in service, a customer service agent wrote back it was the voters fault for backing a single track system back in the 1960's. I'm waiting to see how they might spin this situation?
96 agree | 137 disagree
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Alarm Dude said:
If any of the places where I work were one half as noisy as the inside of a BART car, OSHA would be there demanding an end to the noise or making employees wear double hearing protection. BART is so loud, it's dangerous!
142 agree | 139 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Reminds me of the London Underground Tube but their screeching noises from their trains are not that loud and annoying, and even deafening as BART's.
127 agree | 105 disagree
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