Talking about the Siemens Venture procurements and their 48" level boarding height has got me thinking about the future of the Superliners and the Amtrak LD fleet.
A similar topic was discussed in this thread, but it was derailed by the idea of making the bilevel stock able to run on the NEC, which I fundamentally don't think is worth the design tradeoffs of the restricted loading gauge.
So, let me propose some alternate criteria. Is it possible to create a bilevel Superliner replacement that has high-level boarding and full inter-car accessibility from the first floor (so no steps to move between cars in order to satisfy modern ADA-compliance rules, but steps for second-floor access are fine), while fitting within the existing Superliner loading gauge (AAR Plate F, I believe).
A similar topic was discussed in this thread, but it was derailed by the idea of making the bilevel stock able to run on the NEC, which I fundamentally don't think is worth the design tradeoffs of the restricted loading gauge.
So, let me propose some alternate criteria. Is it possible to create a bilevel Superliner replacement that has high-level boarding and full inter-car accessibility from the first floor (so no steps to move between cars in order to satisfy modern ADA-compliance rules, but steps for second-floor access are fine), while fitting within the existing Superliner loading gauge (AAR Plate F, I believe).
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