Related Terms
A list of trips operated by the same vehicle. The second trip in the block cannot be operated before the first trip is completed (plus usually a layover).
A set of transit vehicle trips serving transit stops using a specified schedule.
A grouped pattern of transit service. For example, the 24-Divisadero.
Maximum number of people that can physically get on a transit vehicle.
Maximum number of people that a transit vehicle is designed to carry safely.
The time between when a vehicle opens and closes its doors at a bus stop (or is available to open/close them in the event the driver is conserving energy because of weather). This is the time window that a passenger can board or exit the vehicle.
Number of seats on a transit vehicle including seats that can be raised and lowered.
The time lost by a transit vehicle based on having to service a stop. This includes deceleration, dwell time, accelerating and merging (if applicable).
Which way a specific trip on a route is going. For example, inbound, outbound, northbound, southbound, clockwise, etc. Should be consistent throughout a system.
A single departure of a transit route going a specific direction. For example, the 24-Divisadero (inbound) that departs at 8:24 AM. This is expressed in GTFS as the trip_id.
The item that conveys passengers along a Transit Route. There is one transit vehicle per transit vehicle trip. A single transit vehicle can be compound in nature (i.e. a five-car train). Each vehicle has a capacity, and method of propulsion, acceleration, top-speed, and deceleration capabilities.