west point
Engineer
best overnight train? Leave LAX late get to San Jose split train and put SFO cars onto rear of Caltrain to SFO rest of train to Oakland. This might not be possible if all Caltrain become EMU.
If you like windmills the hills are full of them.Is the Tehachapi detour particularly scenic or anything or is it just that it's a rare detour so people get hyped up about it?
Ditto the Sunset route east of LA, but usually in the dark.If you like windmills the hills are full of them.
Is Tehachapi busy 24/7? Or could a over night amtrak train sneak through in the early hours either way?
Yes Tehachapi Pass is busy 24/7/365.
-UP, Whenever there is the prospect of a passenger train.
In areas with higher passenger traffic, the freights often run during the overnight hours only.
It's still a single track bottleneck near Tunnel 9 up to the loop and I believe it's ~25 mph. It's shared with BNSF due to an earlier SP-era trackage rights agreement. It's still UP's (and BNSF's) main link between SF and the Pacific Northwest and the southern transcontinental routes. FRA crossing data suggests 30 trains a day. Knowing how CTC dispatchers "fleet" groups of trains running in the same direction before switching the running direction of the line, I imagine they could get 2 Amtraks a day through, but Amtrak wouldn't be happy with timekeeping performance. If Amtrak's the fifth westbound to arrive and the line's set for eastbounds, Amtrak will have to wait for all the eastbound to pass and then follow the 4 westbounds until a passing opportunity may open up. Also I've heard some rumblings that they don't run trains during the hottest parts of the day.The railways have been dragging their collective feet over using Tehachapi Pass since the state started pushing to expand Amtrak California back in the 90s. And it's in an unpopulated comparatively speaking. Yeah their might be traffic, but rail traffic is declining thanks to us burning less coal. So it's not beyond reason to wonder if the railways aren't lying when they say literally every line in the country is at 150% of capacity and growing or whatever they are saying.
That still doesn't mean we should just take the railroad's word for it when they have show to be intransigent. I wish California was a bit more logical and would just threaten the railways with eminent domain to get better deals on upgrading the line. I doubt UP and BNSF would be willing to let that happen vs allowing the state into a fairer deal for added passenger trains.
Doesn't have to be Tehachapi, if Amtrak can run along the Coast Starlight/Pacific Coast route overnight, it works for me. It's ridiculous there's only one train between Los Angeles and the Bay Area (can't even say San Francisco because there are ZERO trains between Los Angeles and San Fran).
. Unfortunately, the bus company mentioned in the OP (Cabin) has gone out of business.
It's still a single track bottleneck near Tunnel 9 up to the loop and I believe it's ~25 mph. It's shared with BNSF due to an earlier SP-era trackage rights agreement. It's still UP's (and BNSF's) main link between SF and the Pacific Northwest and the southern transcontinental routes. FRA crossing data suggests 30 trains a day. Knowing how CTC dispatchers "fleet" groups of trains running in the same direction before switching the running direction of the line, I imagine they could get 2 Amtraks a day through, but Amtrak wouldn't be happy with timekeeping performance. If Amtrak's the fifth westbound to arrive and the line's set for eastbounds, Amtrak will have to wait for all the eastbound to pass and then follow the 4 westbounds until a passing opportunity may open up. Also I've heard some rumblings that they don't run trains during the hottest parts of the day.
If you really want to know how active the line is, watch the live cam. It has 12 hour rewind so you only need to visit twice a day and skim the footage rather than watch all day.
I agree that some host railroads may want too much in the way of improvements for additional passenger trains but sometimes it's warranted. CSX wants full double tracking between Springfield and Worcester for any expansion beyond 448/449. I thought this was bunk until I actually looked at the symbol guide and realized there were a lot more daily trains than I thought. CSX also wants a third track on Long Bridge (DC-VA) before additional trains are added. I'll partially agree with that one although I do believe there are more train slots, just not during daylight hours.
I've read that they have started double tracking part of the Tehachapi over the last 7 years. Since the state pays for part of the upgrade, wouldn't it make sense to allow passenger trains on that route that could connect up with the future high speed rail in Bakersfield?
Here's the link to the articleDo you have a citation or link for that upgrade project? I was unaware that the state was funding any sort of capacity expansion in that area.
The title of this thread should read: Amtrak should re-instate The Spirit of California. I forget how long that train ran, but it was pretty short-lived.
It was there for about two years (spread over three FYs). It went away because...well, bluntly, Jerry Brown was a dolt and decided to try to become Senator instead of staying as Governor.
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