Acela150
Super Buff
Currently there are 6 sets on property. 5 of which are production units. The other is the test bed.
5 production sets would allow for one at SSYD, one at Ivy City & one in PHL for back ups. Then run 2 NYP <> WAS to look for the unexpected problems.
Anything new to report in Acelaville?
You think at some point someone involved in writing up these deal terms would include penalties for missing timelines by half a decade. A year late is one thing but Amtrak should be getting a free trainset or two out of this.Nope. If I hear anything that I can say publicly I'll post as soon as I can. But it seems that the hold up is on Alstom side from my understanding. *This is NOT confirmed*
It is not amtrak but Alstom who seemed to have though that, they worked on the first aclea and seems to have forgotten everything. Amtrak if it wasn't for a series of political moves would have gone with a new Pendilino based platform.As a preface I think the Acela is a ton of wasted effort and I would have rathered Amtrak put the resources into having 18 car NER‘s run every 20 minutes between New York and Washington, so consider this biased, but… It seems that Amtrak thought all they had to do was buy new European equipment and toss it on old US tracks and they’d be golden and then realized that was a totally naive approach. To me it seems to be on them. On the other hand, SEPTA had no trouble getting late fines added to the contract for the Silverliner V and let me tell you Rotem did a much better job reupholstering old cars than they did building new ones. If Amtrak didn’t put it in, shame on them.
If the problem arises due to Jacobs trucks for example then this claim is unsustainable since they could not possibly have had experience with Jacobs trucks on NEC trackage from Acela Is. The Acela 21s are a vastly different beast from the Acela Is, in almost every aspect of the train..It is not amtrak but Alstom who seemed to have though that, they worked on the first aclea and seems to have forgotten everything.
Could you provide credible evidence that this was the case? Or is this just your opinion? What specific "political moves" do you allude to here?Amtrak if it wasn't for a series of political moves would have gone with a new Pendilino based platform.
I agree.You can argue amtrak should have gone for the entire fleet being EMUs or Bi mode trains but no way amtrak wasn't going to keep some premium service on the corridor.
This shows a misunderstanding about who speced what. Amtrak did not do a full technical spec. Thankfully it has gotten out of the business of trying to design railcar platforms for which it has no expertise. All that they did was stated requirements and reviewed what Alstom proposed to meet those requirements, and it was upto Alstom to deliver the spec that they put together, meeting the operational requirements specified by Amtrak, and they are having difficulty doing so. That is why it is primarily Alstom's problem, not Amtrak's this time around.I would never deny the merits of premium service, but if a typical consist were 2 45 seat first class cars 3 60-seat business cars with their own lounge, and then 10 coaches with their own cafe, and that ran every 20 minutes on an NER schedule that wasn’t sandbagged, AMTRAK would be able to do a lot more with flexibility for premium fare passengers, maybe even old TWA-style walk up service. Coaches could become unreserved again. Amtrak on Amtrak overtakes (which cause havoc for poor defenseless commuter passengers) could be eliminated (or greatly reduced). All I’m trying to do is observe significant trade offs are made to maintain the Acela and those might not be the best for the railroad as a whole. In any case though, I think it is wholly unfair to blame Alstom. Amtrak pushed the FRA for Tier III crashworthiness, which in theory is fine, but they went and ordered off the shelf equipment from someplace with totally different infrastructure, as far as I know without ever having brought a foreign set over for testing on the NEC. If things are really that way, the analogy is needing a Phillips screwdriver, asking the guy at the hardware store for a flathead, and then blaming him when you can screw the screw in. It seems clear something was off in Amtrak’s specs and nobody seems to know what to do. If Alstom simply weren’t building to spec, I’m sure we would have heard just like we heard about lead plumbing, dangerous magnets, flunked 800,000 pound tests et al. in previous orders.
I agree the trains are widely different but the track is notIf the problem arises due to Jacobs trucks for example then this claim is unsustainable since they could not possibly have had experience with Jacobs trucks on NEC trackage from Acela Is. The Acela 21s are a vastly different beast from the Acela Is, in almost every aspect of the train..
Best thing I can point to was the planned joint order with CASHR and Chucks push for the liberty over talgo offering. Its been so many years and discussion about liberties I can't find my sourceCould you provide credible evidence that this was the case? Or is this just your opinion? What specific "political moves" do you allude to here?
TIII is only a requirement for trains above 125mph its EU high speed train crash standards, TI alternative is what Caltrain, Arrow, Sliver line is using for KISS/FLIRTs and allows units complying with normal EU crash standards to mix with TI-III at upto 125mph. Both require some modifications when it comes to meeting interior and window standards.Tier III was pushed primarily by large commuter agencies in addition to Amtrak, and by almost every passenger rail advocate. Tier III is what is making Brightline, Caltrain EMUs, and indeed the whole set of Siemens orders possible. Tier III introduced standardized collision energy management in US passenger railcars, replacing a standard (Tier I and Tier II) which did not allow any deformation of anything in collisions.
It is not amtrak but Alstom who seemed to have though that, they worked on the first aclea and seems to have forgotten everything. Amtrak if it wasn't for a series of political moves would have gone with a new Pendilino based platform.
You can argue amtrak should have gone for the entire fleet being EMUs or Bi mode trains but no way amtrak wasn't going to keep some premium service on the corridor.
Actually, the Acela for New York to Baltimore and Washinton is about 30 minutes faster than the Regionals. And Boston to Washington or Baltimore is about an hour faster on the Acelas than the Regionals. If they could do something to speed up the New Haven to New Rochelle segment, that would only make things better.They should have just ordered some super fancy versions of the current order for the regional trains, go all out for a premium trim for the Acela type service. Upscale interiors and cafe cars etc. These Acela cars are a joke, billions of dollars to arrive 15 minutes quicker.
Less stops and scheduling.Actually, the Acela for New York to Baltimore and Washinton is about 30 minutes faster than the Regionals. And Boston to Washington or Baltimore is about an hour faster on the Acelas than the Regionals. If they could do something to speed up the New Haven to New Rochelle segment, that would only make things better.
Any scuttlebutt on whatever it is that they were trying to fix? Have they found a fix, or is it still all up in the air?Are they trying to figure out public statements of why these trains will not operate too fast? Or is it about to get certified?I’ve been hearing some rumblings that the prototype set that is in Philly will be going to Hornell as early as Monday the 28th for interior completion.
Any scuttlebutt on whatever it is that they were trying to fix? Have they found a fix, or is it still all up in the air?Are they trying to figure out public statements of why these trains will not operate too fast? Or is it about to get certified?
The fact that they are sending the prototype for fixup suggests that they are getting close to a conclusion, whatever it is....
Was the original Acela procurement on time?When was the last time Amtrak procured cars and put them into service based on the original timeline? Viewliner 1? Superliner 2? Regardless of whose fault this particular problem is Amtrak has an abysmal record/luck with acquiring new cars.
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