All trolleybuses use trolley poles, and thus trolley poles remain in use worldwide, wherever trolleybuses are in operation (some 315 cities ), and several manufacturers continue to make them, including
Kiepe,
Škoda and
Lekov. However, on most railway vehicles using overhead wire, the trolley pole has given way to the
bow collector or, later, the
pantograph, a folding metal device that presses a wide contact pan against the overhead wire. While more complex than the trolley pole, the pantograph has the advantage of being almost free from dewiring, being more stable at high speed, and being easier to raise and lower automatically. Also, on
double-ended trams, they eliminate the need to manually turn the trolley pole when changing direction (although this disadvantage can be overcome to some extent through the use of trolley reversers). The use of pantographs (or bow collectors) exclusively also eliminates the need for
wire frogs (switches in the overhead wiring) to make sure the pole goes in the correct direction at junctions. The trolley pole with a shoe at its tip is problematic for longer modern streetcars that draw more electricity than older streetcars. In Toronto, the
trolley pole shoe contains a carbon insert to provide electrical contact with the overhead wire and to lower the shoe to clear overhead wire hangers. Carbon inserts wear out and must be periodically replaced. The trolley shoe inserts on Toronto's modern
Flexity Outlook streetcars quickly wear out in rainy conditions, lasting as little as eight hours instead of the expected one to two days for shorter older streetcars. The extra current draw shortens the life of the carbon insert. A worn-out carbon insert would damage the overhead wire, stopping streetcar service. Apart from
heritage streetcar lines, very few tram/streetcar systems worldwide continue to use trolley poles on vehicles used in normal service.
Compatibility with pantographs in Toronto: Two runners for pantographs flank the trolley pole frog. Trams or
light rail cars equipped with pantographs normally cannot operate on lines with overhead wiring designed for trolley-pole collection. For this reason, these systems and a few others worldwide retain use of trolley poles, even on new streetcars, in order to avoid the difficulty and expense of modifying long stretches of existing overhead wires to accept pantographs. However, the
Toronto Transit Commission, with the impending replacement of its legacy
CLRV and
ALRV with new
Flexity Outlook cars, converted its overhead power supply to be compatible with both trolley poles and pantographs on an interim basis, as the CLRVs and ALRVs use only trolley poles while the Flexity fleet is equipped for both trolley poles and pantographs. Large portions of San Francisco's
surface network are also set up to handle both trolley pole and pantograph operation in order to allow for compatibility both with Muni's
current fleet of light rail vehicles (pantograph only), as well as Muni's
historic streetcar fleet (trolley pole only). ==Cultural references==