Seaboard92
Engineer
It's not that two night out time cards are the line in the sand but rather more time span for stuff to go wrong. Especially between eastern and western railroads because you have to connect in terminal areas that are very congested.
Congestion can cause delays, and if a train isn't dependable along its line it loses ridership. So likely it won't work for that reason.
Had an experiment been done in the 50s with the private railroads I would probably think differently. But they didn't see it as feasible. Even Young who took out ads to say "pigs can cross Chicago without changing trains but you do" didn't attempt to route something across Chicago.
Historically railroads have worked well with each other to run passenger service. The Florida trains PRR-RFP-SAL/ACL- FEC(ACL only, later SAL). The Chicago Florida trains PRR-L&N-ACL-FEC/SAL of IC-CofG-ACL-FEC/SAL. So the precedent of railroads running thru services was there so why didn't they employ them. Especially larger roads like the ATSF, NYC. Even though at different terminals it could have easily been done by using the NYC branch to Joliet bypassing Chicago. Which likely would have been a foolhardy move.
Could also have routed NYC (NYG-STL) Wabash (STL-KCY), ATSF (KCY-LAX or a myriad of other routings. The point is they didn't chose to run a transcontinental service. The market just isn't there then and today for a train of that length of route.
The two night out trains do well because of the intermediate work just as much as the thru work.
Congestion can cause delays, and if a train isn't dependable along its line it loses ridership. So likely it won't work for that reason.
Had an experiment been done in the 50s with the private railroads I would probably think differently. But they didn't see it as feasible. Even Young who took out ads to say "pigs can cross Chicago without changing trains but you do" didn't attempt to route something across Chicago.
Historically railroads have worked well with each other to run passenger service. The Florida trains PRR-RFP-SAL/ACL- FEC(ACL only, later SAL). The Chicago Florida trains PRR-L&N-ACL-FEC/SAL of IC-CofG-ACL-FEC/SAL. So the precedent of railroads running thru services was there so why didn't they employ them. Especially larger roads like the ATSF, NYC. Even though at different terminals it could have easily been done by using the NYC branch to Joliet bypassing Chicago. Which likely would have been a foolhardy move.
Could also have routed NYC (NYG-STL) Wabash (STL-KCY), ATSF (KCY-LAX or a myriad of other routings. The point is they didn't chose to run a transcontinental service. The market just isn't there then and today for a train of that length of route.
The two night out trains do well because of the intermediate work just as much as the thru work.