TylerP42
Conductor
The proposed Toledo - Detroit route.
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I have to ask... Butte Special?
Well, MBTA has restored Boston to Cape Cod weekend service during the summer. Been quite successful I gather.That being said, if I couldn't get another Pennsylvanian or Broadway Limited, I would bring back the Gulf Breeze, The Montrealer or the Cape Codder.
The Panama Ltd./The City of Everywhere/The 20th Century Ltd./The Texas Special/ The Texas Chief /The Coast Daylight/El Capitan/The International etc. etc. etc.Since we're dreaming.....how about a list of the most unlikely RR routes ever to return to passenger service....such as, The Wabash Cannonball from St. Louis to Detroit....?
Or....The Butte Special? Texas Zephyr? Rocky Mountain Rocket? Olympian Hiawatha? Erie Limited? Aztec Eagle?.......this is fun.....
Too often, I think the Desert Wind and the Pioneer are unfairly lumped together as the two discontinued western trains that went through a lot of nothing (and therefore aren't worth restoring).The Desert Wind and Pioneer should not come back any time soon. Amtrak needs to concentrate on routes with population.
- The only intermediate population on the Desert Wind route is Las Vegas, and for Vegas service, it's better to support the High Speed Rail proposal. With California HSR getting built via Palmdale (and at this point I think this will really happen), the Vegas-California HSR ("XPressWest") becomes plausible. (The connection would probably be done as part of the "High Desert Corridor" highway project.)
- There's even less intermediate population on the Pioneer route -- and travel from Denver/SLC to Portland/Seattle in general is minimal. It's simply not worth having this route. People who really want to take the train from Denver/SLC to Portland/Seattle can change trains in Sacramento, and that's OK.
I would think a FIRST Chicago/Pitt/Keystone Service (Horseshoe Curve) direct train should take precedence over a SECOND NYP-CHI via BUF train. Why duplicate a direct service you already have when you can add a direct service you don't have?Whee, more discussion of restoring trains...
Basically, to restore a given LD route you're probably looking at $500m-1.5bn, depending on the route, length of route, practical needs in terms of improvements (e.g. restoring track, adding sidings, improving MAS, etc.) and equipment (two sets of single-level equipment vs. up to six of bilevel equipment). Stations and so on are another, if smaller, consideration.
While I know the price seems steep, bear in mind that:
(1) Using $2.5m/single-level car and $4.0m/bilevel car, equipment for six eight-car bilevel sets (plus locomotives, baggage cars, and spares) can easily get close to $300m. For two sets of single-level equipment, on the other hand, you might only be looking at $50-60m.
(2) Some routes involve re-upgrading track in bad condition if not putting track in that was pulled up years ago (Boise comes to mind here). This is really aside from any railroad-demanded improvements (the two are not unrelated, though).
(3) Then the railroads are going to want money for slots, probably aside from (2).
(1) can run up to about $300m. (3) probably caps out around the same level for serious requests, though obviously this depends on conditions on a given line when a request is made. (2) is the wild card, for the most part since a route which is all Class IV/V track won't need as much as a route using lots of Class II track or in need of rebuilding.
That said...
-I think the Sunset East has a real shot of happening, particularly if/when AAF extends to Jacksonville (since that'd add scads of potential connecting traffic).
-I think extending a second train NYP-CHI via BUF has a real shot of happening in the medium term.
-I think a revived Broadway, in some form, has a real shot of happeng as well.
However, I see these as being decade-long projects more than anything. I can see a St. Louis Cardinal happening as well (as a split on the Cardinal), and that might be very cheap in the scheme of things...but I can't see a National Limited (for aforementioned reasons).
It adds service along a route that does not have any service right now. It would re-establish a connection with Florida and the Gulf Coast with Texas, California, and the Southwest. It would bring back train service to Tallahassee, Pensacola, Mobile, and Biloxi. I believe Amtrak doesn't even serve Tallahassee or Pensacola (not even a Thruway bus).Why do people keep bringing up the Sunset East when we can't even manage a daily Sunset West? :wacko:
I wonder why they keep calling it Sunset East. From what I have been seeing at least at the Florida end, there is very little support for an unreliable extension of the Sunset. There is way more support for a separate regional train timed for local convenience between NOL and Orlando or at least JAX. Since the feds seem unlikely to fund such a thing as things stand, the only way it will happen is if sufficient political will develops in Florida to at least do a Pensacola - JAX service with local funding while someone figures out how to do a NOL Mobile train at the other end and then try to hook the two together somehow to close the missing piece in between.Why do people keep bringing up the Sunset East when we can't even manage a daily Sunset West? :wacko:
Your numbers list the population of the cities alone.Population 49,188I think HarrisburgPopulation 59,325LancasterPopulation 45,796AltoonaPopulation 198,100AkronPopulation 65,184Youngstown
How about irrelevant meaning any town with less than 100,000 people living within a 20 mile radius of it?
Pennsy/Cap through cars. Boom, done. Then the question becomes do you run 2x daily trains via Pittsburgh or Buffalo. The LSL has always been the strongest of the East Coast to Chicago trains, why would you not route a train over the more successful route? Also if the adjective "deserving" is being thrown around, New York State has been more willing to fund trains than Pennsylvania, shouldn't they be rewarded? Also what I don't think has been mentioned is that another train via Philly means somehow pushing another train along the NEC and the Hudson tunnels, versus the Hudson line, which if you time a train to not go through Metro-North's rush hour is more flexible.I would think a FIRST Chicago/Pitt/Keystone Service (Horseshoe Curve) direct train should take precedence over a SECOND NYP-CHI via BUF train. Why duplicate a direct service you already have when you can add a direct service you don't have?
In reality if you want 2 LSL's (CHI-Empire Service) you can just split the LSL into two separate trains and have one go exclusively to NYP and the other exclusively to BOS and stagger the times enough to make service at reasonable times to all major cities involved. This way, you no longer have to worry about connecting the two trains at Albany going westbound and if the two trains run parallel instead of together a delay on one run between CHI and ALB going eastbound would only delay one of the lines and not both. You can keep the LSL name for the NYP route and call the new CHI-BOS route something with a Boston theme (Beantown Limited?)Pennsy/Cap through cars. Boom, done. Then the question becomes do you run 2x daily trains via Pittsburgh or Buffalo. The LSL has always been the strongest of the East Coast to Chicago trains, why would you not route a train over the more successful route? Also if the adjective "deserving" is being thrown around, New York State has been more willing to fund trains than Pennsylvania, shouldn't they be rewarded? Also what I don't think has been mentioned is that another train via Philly means somehow pushing another train along the NEC and the Hudson tunnels, versus the Hudson line, which if you time a train to not go through Metro-North's rush hour is more flexible.I would think a FIRST Chicago/Pitt/Keystone Service (Horseshoe Curve) direct train should take precedence over a SECOND NYP-CHI via BUF train. Why duplicate a direct service you already have when you can add a direct service you don't have?
This may sound good on paper, but the NEC could handle it better than the Hudson line. While there is merit in the concept of North River Tunnel congestion, that pales in comparison the the congestion in NYP. Even if you time the train to avoid Metro-North's rush hour, you are still stuffing a train through a single track tunnel into a station that has a grand total of 5 tracks ( and depending on the length of the train it may be 4) available for this train.Also what I don't think has been mentioned is that another train via Philly means somehow pushing another train along the NEC and the Hudson tunnels, versus the Hudson line, which if you time a train to not go through Metro-North's rush hour is more flexible.
So, you want to add to the expenses of the LSL by running two train the entire length of the trip. I'm sure CSX will love that! :giggle:In reality if you want 2 LSL's (CHI-Empire Service) you can just split the LSL into two separate trains and have one go exclusively to NYP and the other exclusively to BOS and stagger the times enough to make service at reasonable times to all major cities involved. This way, you no longer have to worry about connecting the two trains at Albany going westbound and if the two trains run parallel instead of together a delay on one run between CHI and ALB going eastbound would only delay one of the lines and not both. You can keep the LSL name for the NYP route and call the new CHI-BOS route something with a Boston theme (Beantown Limited?)
I think we can all agree service to CLE and TOL at more reasonable hours (not overnight) would be a great improvement and would cause a large gain in service in both cities (not to mention the Thruway connection at TOL for Detroit). You could certainly try to schedule one of the two split LSL's to do this as long as it doesn't drastically affect the time at the endpoint (NYP or BOS). If one of the trains hits the Empire Service stations in the middle of the night, passengers at the affected area could still take the other train to CHI (although if the station is not normally staffed at that time it becomes an added expense). If you have some sort of CHI-PHL-NYP route, you can even schedule the NYP leg of the LSL to get into NYP after hours since they could still take the CHI-PHL-NYP route to arrive at a reasonable time. I doubt Amtrak wouldn't want to do that though because they want the LSL to be the first (if not only) service between CHI and NYP.
I was merely responding to keelhauled's suggestion of "2x daily trains via Pittsburgh or Buffalo".So, you want to add to the expenses of the LSL by running two train the entire length of the trip. I'm sure CSX will love that! :giggle:In reality if you want 2 LSL's (CHI-Empire Service) you can just split the LSL into two separate trains and have one go exclusively to NYP and the other exclusively to BOS and stagger the times enough to make service at reasonable times to all major cities involved. This way, you no longer have to worry about connecting the two trains at Albany going westbound and if the two trains run parallel instead of together a delay on one run between CHI and ALB going eastbound would only delay one of the lines and not both. You can keep the LSL name for the NYP route and call the new CHI-BOS route something with a Boston theme (Beantown Limited?)
I think we can all agree service to CLE and TOL at more reasonable hours (not overnight) would be a great improvement and would cause a large gain in service in both cities (not to mention the Thruway connection at TOL for Detroit). You could certainly try to schedule one of the two split LSL's to do this as long as it doesn't drastically affect the time at the endpoint (NYP or BOS). If one of the trains hits the Empire Service stations in the middle of the night, passengers at the affected area could still take the other train to CHI (although if the station is not normally staffed at that time it becomes an added expense). If you have some sort of CHI-PHL-NYP route, you can even schedule the NYP leg of the LSL to get into NYP after hours since they could still take the CHI-PHL-NYP route to arrive at a reasonable time. I doubt Amtrak wouldn't want to do that though because they want the LSL to be the first (if not only) service between CHI and NYP.
True, I forgot the connection only serves a few tracks. So what you're saying is the entire idea of throwing another long distance train into NYP is moot? I suppose I can't really argue with that, given capacity constraints I doubt you could make the case for prioritizing long distance travel over NEC traffic, all else being equal.This may sound good on paper, but the NEC could handle it better than the Hudson line. While there is merit in the concept of North River Tunnel congestion, that pales in comparison the the congestion in NYP. Even if you time the train to avoid Metro-North's rush hour, you are still stuffing a train through a single track tunnel into a station that has a grand total of 5 tracks ( and depending on the length of the train it may be 4) available for this train.Also what I don't think has been mentioned is that another train via Philly means somehow pushing another train along the NEC and the Hudson tunnels, versus the Hudson line, which if you time a train to not go through Metro-North's rush hour is more flexible.
That is hardly what I call flexibility.
I wouldn't say throwing another long distance train into NYP is moot. It depends on the timing. Obviously, you wouldn't want a long distance train arriving near the commission hour.True, I forgot the connection only serves a few tracks. So what you're saying is the entire idea of throwing another long distance train into NYP is moot? I suppose I can't really argue with that, given capacity constraints I doubt you could make the case for prioritizing long distance travel over NEC traffic, all else being equal.
The single-track tunnel is definitely a problem, but as for the platforms: the LSL, and probably the Empire Service, should be using the wide "diagonal platform", which should be rehabilitated for this purpose.This may sound good on paper, but the NEC could handle it better than the Hudson line. While there is merit in the concept of North River Tunnel congestion, that pales in comparison the the congestion in NYP. Even if you time the train to avoid Metro-North's rush hour, you are still stuffing a train through a single track tunnel into a station that has a grand total of 5 tracks ( and depending on the length of the train it may be 4) available for this train.
I will say that I strongly support the "Front Range Rail" projects -- Denver-Boulder-Longmont-Lakeland-Fort Collins-Cheyenne (via BNSF), which would serve the southern Wyoming and Fort Collins passengers with several-times-a-day service.The ridership potential for the pioneer doesn't come from people traveling between Denver and Portland. It comes from:
-People in Ogden visiting family in Boise
-The 200,000+ people in southern Wyoming who may need to fly out of Denver International Airport (a major hub which will soon be connected to Amtrak by commuter rail)
-Residents of eastern Oregon who need to spend a day in Portland to take care of business
-Foreign tourists who would fly into Seattle and take an overnight train to visit national parks
-Residents of Salt Lake City who would never board a Denver-bound train at 3:00 AM, but would gladly board one in the evening and arrive in Denver the next morning
-College students in Ft. Collins who want to spend a weekend in Denver
-People in Idaho Falls attending LDS (mormon) General Conference in Salt Lake
-Etc., etc., etc.
I wish I could disgaree with you here but sadly logic won't allow it.I do really believe that there will not be any significant growth of the LD network in decades to come.