Here's the thing: the entire "LD" thinking is ****. New York - Chicago trains are just as viable as Boston - Washington trains. So if Boardman or Amtrak management is ignoring "LD" trains, it's because they're allowing a legal classification to override common sense.
Jis, if you do have the right contacts... how can we tell them not to be *money-wasting fools*?
If they'll release sufficient "confidential" information to make proper cost and revenue estimates, I'm willing to do the work for them to present a business plan to prove that they're leaving money on the table if they don't plan for through cars in 2018.
I understand not making improvements which cost money, but improvements which *make* money? Pennsy-Cap through cars were calculated to have a net cost $0.7 million/year in the PIP using *2009* ridership and ticket yields. Recalculate with 2018 ridership and ticket yield numbers and they will definitely be profitable.
Across the system, ticket yields are up from 24.58 cents/passenger-mile in 2009 to 32.00 cents/passenger-mile in 2015, a 30% increase.
We can start with the PIP numbers ($3.9 million in added revenue, $4.6 million in added operating costs) and escalate to the present day, adding 30% to ridership and increasing costs by 2% annually to account for inflation ($5 million in added revenue, maybe $5 million in added costs).
This isn't right, though. I'm pretty sure the PIP is using a ridership estimate which is too low for present-day operations. We have 22386 people making the appalling middle-of-the-night waiting-room-sucks connection from the CL to the Pennsy right now. The PIP estimate would have that go up by 20,400. This is... low. I'd expect ridership on the connection to increase by 22000, at least. This adds another 10% ($0.5 million) to revenue.
The sale of sleeper tickets rather than coach tickets should also increase the ticket yield, though I don't know how to estimate that.
And ridership/revenue should continue to grow faster than costs going into 2018, if only thanks to all the upgrade projects finishing in 2017, many of which are on the Keystone route and some of which are in Chicago.
It just looks to me like this is a profitable move, at least in 2018, which is the earliest it can be done in any case due to the Viewliner delivery schedule.
The LSL schedule switch can't be done before 2018 anyway, because most of the major delay-inducing construction on Poughkeepsie-Albany, Albany station, Albany-Schenectady, Schenectady station, Rochester station, Springfield station, PTC installations, Indiana Gateway, and preferably even MBTA Worcester Line improvements, need to wrap up before it's worth trying to negotiate a new schedule with the host railroads. By 2018, the Empire Builder mega-delays really should have cleared up as well (BNSF's upgrade plans are supposed to be finished end of 2016).
For ADA purposes, it would be a lot better if the CL were switched to single-level equipment. Consider this with the Pennsy through cars as a *baseline*:
This would require:
-- 3 (3 * 1) single-level dining cars -- ORDER MORE VIEWLINERS
-- 9 (3 * 3) single-level coaches -- with seating rearrangment, this should be available when the Horizons become spare
-- no additional cafe cars over the baseline
-- no additional baggage cars over the baseline
-- 9 (3 * 3) or 12 (4 * 3) sleeping cars (Load factors on the CL are persistently low so you probably don't need to replace the full current capacity.) -- ORDER MORE VIEWLINERS
This would free up enough bilevel sleepers and lounges to keep the money-sucking Western trains creaking along.
But hey, there doesn't seem to be a long-term planning department at Amtrak. The connections between the "NEC and branches", Amtrak's best-performing region, and the "Chicago Hub", Amtrak's third-best performing region, should be prioritized for their network effects alone. (California is the second-best-performing region, but it's hard to improve the connections from California to anywhere else.)
OK, this is rail advocacy forum. How can we put together a serious advocacy push to make Amtrak take the "Northeast-Chicago nexus" seriously, along with the "Northeast-Florida nexus"? These trains are completely different animals from the West-of-Chicago situation. They go through areas with more population density than France, and they are held back *entirely* by lack of investment.