MBTA

New Orange Line Trains Back in Service

The MBTA said it removed all new cars from service out of an abundance of caution while crews worked to determine what caused the problem

BOSTON, MA – MARCH 26: Commuter Yensy Valerio, wearing a mask, waits for her Orange Line train at the MBTA State Station in Boston, MA on March 26, 2020. Valerio works in environmental services at Brigham and Women’s Hospital. Far fewer passengers and riders have been commuting using public transportation as hundreds of businesses in Boston have shuttered to prevent the spread of COVID-19. (Photo by Craig F. Walker/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)
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New Orange Line trains are back in service Monday morning after crews spent nearly four days investigating and inspecting the brakes.

Last week, all new Red and Orange Line trains were pulled off the tracks after one train experienced a problem in one of the train’s 48 braking units. The MBTA said it removed all new cars from service, "out of an abundance of caution," while engineers and technicians worked to determine what caused the problem.

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Preliminary findings indicate that one bolt in one of the car’s eight braking units had not been properly installed at the manufacturing plant. MBTA vehicle maintenance personnel started a fleet-wide process to verify that each bolt (24 per car, 144 per train) was properly installed.

The MBTA said in a statement that a new Orange Line train experienced a problem with its breaking units and went disabled yesterday at Wellington Station.

As each bolt on a six-car train passes inspection, the train is being returned to passenger service. To this point in the inspection process, the issue has not been found in any other braking units, the MBTA said.

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