anir dendroica
OBS Chief
- Joined
- Jan 2, 2009
- Messages
- 507
Service to Grand Forks, Devils Lake, Rugby may end within 24 hours.
http://www.kfyrtv.com/News_Stories.asp?news=48515
http://www.kfyrtv.com/News_Stories.asp?news=48515
It has been running badly late all month, due to the flooding. It was 119 minutes late yesterday and was averaging 170 minutes late all April. However, once the flooding recedes in North Dakota it should improve. If they do reroute via the Surrey Cutoff and New Rockford, due to Devil's Lake, that shouldn't have a negative impact, because that is a shorter route.Is Empire still running late going into Chicago? We only have two hours between both our trains and will be traveling back around the twenty second of May.
Following the EB re-route threads that pop up here from time to time, I've seen mixed arguments on the effects of the Surrey Cutoff routing on times at CHI. Some have said that it's a shorter route, so it'll be quicker, and others have said that it's a more congested route, increasing the possibility of delays. Is there a consensus on this issue?It has been running badly late all month, due to the flooding. It was 119 minutes late yesterday and was averaging 170 minutes late all April. However, once the flooding recedes in North Dakota it should improve. If they do reroute via the Surrey Cutoff and New Rockford, due to Devil's Lake, that shouldn't have a negative impact, because that is a shorter route.Is Empire still running late going into Chicago? We only have two hours between both our trains and will be traveling back around the twenty second of May.
You can get up to a 4 week history of the timekeeping of any Amtrak train into any station at:
http://www.amtrakdelays.onlineschedulingsoftware.com/
Following the EB re-route threads that pop up here from time to time, I've seen mixed arguments on the effects of the Surrey Cutoff routing on times at CHI. Some have said that it's a shorter route, so it'll be quicker, and others have said that it's a more congested route, increasing the possibility of delays. Is there a consensus on this issue?It has been running badly late all month, due to the flooding. It was 119 minutes late yesterday and was averaging 170 minutes late all April. However, once the flooding recedes in North Dakota it should improve. If they do reroute via the Surrey Cutoff and New Rockford, due to Devil's Lake, that shouldn't have a negative impact, because that is a shorter route.Is Empire still running late going into Chicago? We only have two hours between both our trains and will be traveling back around the twenty second of May.
You can get up to a 4 week history of the timekeeping of any Amtrak train into any station at:
http://www.amtrakdelays.onlineschedulingsoftware.com/
Been there, done that, only for me it was Spokane to SEA. As long as the buses aren't crowded, and don't play children's movies involving high pitched animals, or try to leave you at the scheduled rest stop (I kid not), it'll be a fun adventure. Someday I'll actually get to ride Amtrak the whole way to a destination west of the Mississippi, but this dashes my hopes even further.We just received a call about a bustitution tomorrow from SEA to Spokane.
Due to high water at Churchs Ferry, the Empire Builder will begin operating via New Rockford beginning with train 8-29 arriving Minot tonight, April 30. The train is only about a half an hour late, but due to the problems with the blizzard in the Williston/Minot area, the train will likely be delayed en route.
I have no information that this will be the start of the permanent routing of the train via New Rockford, only that it is logical to assume that the level of the lake will continue to rise.
It's ironic that the Empire Builder may return permanently to the Surrey cutoff just a day short of exactly 40 years since the train was pulled off the Surrey cutoff to route via Rugby, Devils Lake, and Grand Forks due to the advent of Amtrak, which caused a routing change.
The last regularly scheduled Empire Builder via New Rockford was BN train 32, which originated in Seattle on April 30, 1971. I don't know if it was on time, but its schedule would have called for an 855 PM May 1 departure from Minot, arriving in Fargo at 1225 AM May 2, ending passenger service to New Rockford and Hannaford, the only intermediate stops between Minot and Fargo. Train 31, which originated in Chicago on April 30, 1971, traversed the route earlier in the day. The next day from Chicago and Seattle (May 1), Amtrak trains 31 and 32 would operate via Devils Lake and Grand Forks.
The Surrey cutoff used to be a speedway. The last BN train 31, the westbound Empire Builder, averaged 67.21 MPH between Fargo and Minot with a flag stop at Hannaford and 5-minute scheduled stop at New Rockford. The last BN train 32, the eastbound Empire Builder, averaged 66.57 MPH between Minot and Fargo with the same two intermediate stops. The eastbound Empire Builder was carded for 3 hours, 30 minutes between Minot and Fargo, compared to 5 hours, 45 minutes for the Western Star via Grand Forks (which had 9 intermediate stops, and back then the passenger trains still backed out of Grand Forks to the junction west of town, unlike now).
We'll see how things develop.
--Mark Meyer
Yes, snow fell this weekend where we live west of Billings, MT. 35 degrees with 25+ mph winds. Welcome to the "high line." Empire Builder rides just south of the Canadian border along the top of Montana. Northeast Montana received over 100 inches of snow this season - the most in memory. Snow doesn't stop the train; it's the power outages which affect signalling and switching, that stops the train.Blizards? Like snow? Gad, it is May tomorrow.
The track in question isn't 10 mph because it's decrepit, but because of curvature and being located in a relatively densely developed, industrial area. Aside from that, the freight trains that ordinarily travel on it are either coming from or going to a yard where they have to stop, so the "get back up to speed" part of your comment doesn't really apply. I'm sure you could throw some money at the situation and raise the speed limit a bit, but based on how BNSF has historically used the track, 10 mph is sufficient.Also, 10 mph track?! That's pathetic! How can freight companies afford a piece of rail so decrepit that it slows trains down to sub-bicycle speeds?! It can not be economical for a huge, hulking freight train to have to slow to 10 mph, and then get back up to speed again. If they weren't using this piece of track that much prior to the lake rising issue, why on Earth didn't they replace this piece of track as a forward-thinking measure?!
I am not familiar with the track layout in Fargo, but it certainly seems something happened since the BN merger. Amtrak uses the GN station site, and both the route to Devil's Lake and the Surrey Sub were GN lines hosting passenger trains, right up to Amtrak day. The Western Star went up via Grand Forks, and the Empire Builder took the Surrey Sub. Was that 10 mph connection always used to get to the Surrey Sub, or was there was some track "rationalization" that removed a better connection, after the merger and Amtrak?The track in question isn't 10 mph because it's decrepit, but because of curvature and being located in a relatively densely developed, industrial area. Aside from that, the freight trains that ordinarily travel on it are either coming from or going to a yard where they have to stop, so the "get back up to speed" part of your comment doesn't really apply. I'm sure you could throw some money at the situation and raise the speed limit a bit, but based on how BNSF has historically used the track, 10 mph is sufficient.Also, 10 mph track?! That's pathetic! How can freight companies afford a piece of rail so decrepit that it slows trains down to sub-bicycle speeds?! It can not be economical for a huge, hulking freight train to have to slow to 10 mph, and then get back up to speed again. If they weren't using this piece of track that much prior to the lake rising issue, why on Earth didn't they replace this piece of track as a forward-thinking measure?!
This idea comes up often now with the Montana congressional delegation, but the stumbling block is always the number of riders and money.Maybe consideration should be given to the old Northern Pacific route.....it's further South....lol!
I would think the ridership would be at least the same.....that line serves several of the larger Montana communities...plus Fargo, Jamestown, Bismarck and Dickinson in North DakotaThis idea comes up often now with the Montana congressional delegation, but the stumbling block is always the number of riders and money.Maybe consideration should be given to the old Northern Pacific route.....it's further South....lol!
Interesting that Amtrak is still allowing for the possibility of the EB returning to the GFK route. It always sounded as though once the lake rose aboveThis morning's post from the Grand Forks Herald on-line newspaper. Empire Builder reroute in effect; not sure how long. Bustitution to Devils Lake, Rugby, Grand Forks.
http://www.grandfork...icle/id/202157/
This idea comes up often now with the Montana congressional delegation, but the stumbling block is always the number of riders and money.Maybe consideration should be given to the old Northern Pacific route.....it's further South....lol!
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