... Now ... on the topic of improving the Sunset's schedule, it should become a daily run. Tri-weekly operation is inconvenient for passengers and costly for Amtrak.
I don't think there is a person on this board who doesn't think that the Sunset (and the Cardinal) should be daily.
This!
... I'd much rather hear about future success with better scheduling and service availability for major population centers rather than relatively minor improvements in overall speed along specially designated corridors.
What this connection in L.A. needs is relatively minor improvements on the Surfliner route, Santa Barbara-L.A. Even 20 minutes saved might be enuff to make the Starlight-Sunset connection "safe" again.
Next look for easily 20 minutes, and maybe an hour, to be saved from more relatively minor improvements San Luis Obispo-Santa Barbara. And finally, the San Jose-San Luis Obispo segment could yield two hours in time savings. Taken together, these and other relatively minor improvements all along the Coast Starlight route (Redding-Sacramento, anyone? Portland-Eugene?) could move the L.A. arrival time from 9 p.m. now to, say, 7 p.m. or even 6 p.m. Then you could have a "safe" connection to San Diego, arriving there before midnight.
I'm looking to see an on-going series of relatively minor improvements along this LD route, and almost all of the others, as the only practical way to upgrade the existing LD system.
I can't imagine Congress voting, say, a Billion to upgrade the Starlight's route end to end, much less the Empire Builder's. And if Congress did such a thing, frankly, I don't think the FRA, the states, or Amtrak could pull it off. Just trying to spend a Billion or two between St Louis and Chicago has been a fearsome mess. (And the Midwestern order for bi-level coaches looking like the biggest FUBAR since the Acela order).
So I'm very happy to take 15 minutes off the Starlight's timetable Seattle-Portland, thanks to upgrades done on the specially designated Cascades corridor. Next I'll look for more time savings from California's planned work on the Surfliners, and still more from corridors across the country.