Months after SEPTA revealed that its entire Market-Frankford Line fleet needed repairs for cracking steel, the transit agency acknowledged that it had discovered yet another fault plaguing at least some of its workhorse El cars.
Sources told PlanPhilly in November that a similar problem had been detected on M-4 car chassis over the fall. Last week, Andrew Busch, a SEPTA spokesperson, confirmed that mechanics discovered in September that rust and corrosion had appeared on support beams beneath the entry door sills on an unspecified number of the trains.
“It’s not ideal, but we have to keep evaluating the issue. We wouldn’t call it a defect at this point,” Busch said. “But we also haven’t been able to take apart every car.”
Busch said the issue had thus far been detected on cars that were already in shop to fix the earlier issue with cracking steel using a special welding technique. SEPTA engineers working with engineering consultant LTK were working to check other cars for the issue and come up with yet another fix.
He said no cars have been taken out of service over the new issue — yet.
“It’s pretty early on,” Busch said. “It’s likely that will happen at some point.”
However, the spokesperson did acknowledge that the agency was dropping below the 138 serviceable train cars needed to operate the line at optimal peak hour service.
Out of its 220 90s era M-4 cars, Busch estimated that anywhere from 126 to 138 were operational on any given day. He said the shortage had not resulted in service interruptions because optimal service levels also include a number of spare cars to sub in if a breakdown occurs.
“These cars are about 23 or so years old. Compared to Broad Street Line [subway], they’re in and out of elements more,” Busch said. “Rust on body is not something that’s totally unexpected or rare.”
However, Joe Coccio, secretary-treasurer of the Transport Workers Union Local 234, which represents many blue-collar SEPTA employees, said officials had been aware of systemic metal defects within the fleet since the early 2000s.
“This has been a systematic problem since the cars first rolled into SEPTA’s yards,” said Coccio. “They strengthen and fix one area only for another to start failing.”
He said SEPTA was reaping the fruit of choosing cheaper trains during its decades-old procurement process, and was concerned that it was repeating this process with its current contract for new railcars.
“You get what you pay for. It’s the low-bid process that keeps shooting you in the foot,” Coccio said. “The only thing keeping these cars from killing someone is the round-the-clock maintenance.”