I recall and I might be wrong that the hi-Level Cars are shorter the the SL. It not by much but enough that it floors do not match. If that is true the not want them in the middle of a train due to the liability issues. Did Amtrak have some years ago have trans-coaches or dorm coaches which were HL? Is the HF using Hi-level cars or SL cars? I thought it started with HI-Level cars? What is it current Consist?
They are slightly shorter, but the diaphragms meet up- they were designed to since the beginning and made to when the HLs were converted to HEP. Budd built them. You refurbish them right, they'll give another 30-40 years of service. I hope Kansas has the intelligence far to few states do and rebuild old equipment for running them.
Too many states waste their money buying all-new equipment. You need all-new equipment for certain kinds of service, I admit it. With NJTs 400k daily riders, stops every five minutes, and intentions of 125mph service, not to mention the fact that they run something like 400 trains- more than Amtrak - a day, they need new equipment. They need a lot of equipment- a lot more than you can find on the used market - and it needs to be fully compatible for their needs.
But on the other hand, take Wisconsin. What is the Hiawatha going to actually do? What do they need? Crikey, they are running for an hour and a bloody half. You don't need a few new Talgo sets for that. You don't even need Horizons. Buy themselves 2 dozen retiring Comets or convert some Silverliners to trailer service. Lease some old F40s- or buy NJTs soon to be retired GP40s. Buy 4 of them. Make sure that 4 of the comets are cab-cars. Not only can you run the Hiawatha more adequately and buy your own equipment, but with that service they can comfortably double the number of trains they run. For half the price of those two new Talgos. Less than half.
Heck, OMR has 4 ex-Metra Budd Gallery cab cars for $180k each, and 25 trailers for $140k each, all of which are roadable and Amtrak HEP compatible. And I think the going rate for an overhauled F40 is $500k.
So for $6.22 million they'd have 4 trainsets of 7 cars each, complete with engines, and a spare car, with a capacity of 1050 passengers a set. You could outfit the cars to American Orient Express levels for the $40 million they've just saved. Or outfit them with Horizon-level accomodations for well under $20 million and spend the other $20 million on paying the operating expenses of doubling service frequency for many years.