Ryan
Court Jester
Horizontal sign = speed limit now
Tilted sign = upcoming speed limit
Tilted sign = upcoming speed limit
Somewhat of an extrapolation of the old semaphore signal system:Blade vertical = clear, may run at full speedHorizontal sign = speed limit nowTilted sign = upcoming speed limit
Yes, it would seem the last of these extra trains is the one that left Bellingham southbound a few minutes ago.the extra cascades run has ended with the opening of the temporary bridge. the extra run seemed like a useless boondoggle from the start to me. poor scheduling, abysmal ridership, an idea that could in no way have helped the traffic congestion. kind of a black eye for passenger rail, imho
All Aboard Washington
Temporary extra train service between Seattle and Bellingham ends with the temporary I-5 span across the Skagit River reopeningThursday June 20. Wednesday, June 19. The extra train is available tomorrow (Wednesday) but not after that.
Temporary Seattle-Bellingham Amtrak Cascades service ends as I-5 reopens
MOUNT VERNON -- The Skagit River bridge on I-5 is slated to reopen Wednesday with slower speeds for vehicles and a ban on trucks hauling excessively large cargo like the one which caused it to crumble into the water.
A temporary four-lane span will open without fanfare just shy of a month after a semi-truck carrying an oversized load struck several of the bridge's overhead trusses, causing a 160-foot section to fall into the river.
...
Gov. Jay Inslee visited the site Tuesday as workers paved and prepared to stripe the roadway, a major artery for commuters and commerce that carries an average of 71,000 vehicles a day.
There will be some new rules when the bridge reopens.
The maximum speed will be 40 miles per hour, down from the 60 mph limit in effect before the collapse. That's because each of the four temporary lanes will be 11 feet wide, which is about a foot narrower than those on the section that fell into the water.
Nearly all cars, commercial vehicles and big rigs carrying legal loads allowed on the bridge before will be able to use it again, transportation officials said.
Tom Taylor says "Amtrak #515 rolls across the Skagit River, southbound to Seattle and into the history books. This train was initiated to help with the I-5 bridge collapse over the Skagit River in Mt. Vernon, WA, while traffic was so badly snarled. 71000 vehicles had to detour through town. It seemed like they were all trucks navigating through four square corners, through 11 lights, and two lane compressions. Thanks to Amtrak, WSDOT, Sound Transit, and BNSF for providing this train. The bridge opened today."
I wondered from the start why it was a morning nb and an afternoon sb. I realize there was probably technical reasons for that, but it would seem to me that this would be the reverse direction of most of the demand. And it doesn't make much sense to me to run it anyway, if you can't get a slot with a desirable timing. If it was for publicity only, a publicity train with no passengers ends up being bad publicity - and a deterrent to future service expansions on the line...the extra cascades run has ended with the opening of the temporary bridge. the extra run seemed like a useless boondoggle from the start to me. poor scheduling, abysmal ridership, an idea that could in no way have helped the traffic congestion. kind of a black eye for passenger rail, imho
Slanted sign is a 2 mile advance warning speed.what's the meaning of the slanted signs?
Um, was this meant to be a message for a tombstone?AMTK 512 & 515SEA-BEL BEL-SEA
May 31, 2013- June18, 2013
excellentUm, was this meant to be a message for a tombstone?AMTK 512 & 515SEA-BEL BEL-SEA
May 31, 2013- June18, 2013
Proposed eulogy:
"AMTK 512 & 515 did not spend much time on this planet, but the lives they touched were
innumerable. Well, actually, the number of lives it touched was numerable...a depressingly
small number. But the two trains (briefly) warmed the hearts of railfans and photographers
everywhere. Well, not everywhere, just along a certain section of track in northwest Washington.
Come to think of it, let's say 'Good Riddance' to these two mostly useless trains. May they
rest in peace, and may they live a better future life ferrying commuters in the south Puget
Sound...at least, until the next round of mudslides causes a bustitution."