ParanoidAndroid
OBS Chief
I've never heard Philly say that . . .
My best suggestion for that leg is to ignore Cleveland. Run the train Pittsburgh - Youngstown - Akron - Greenwich on the old B&O, restoring service to Akron and Youngstown. Then Greenwich to Columbus on the Tri-C. TomIf you could figure out an effective way to go from Pittsburgh to Columbus, we can do NYP-PHL-PGH-Columbus-CIN-on the way to DAL via Louisville and Nashville. Otherwise, it's probably better to go through upstate New York.
That route wouldn't add any of the largest metros (Bristol, Knoxville, and Chattanooga metros all have less than 1 million people: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Metropolitan_Statistical_Areas).Another alternate route from New York to Dallas:
New York- Lynchburg-Roanoke-Bristol-Knoxville-Chattanooga-Memphis-Little Rock-Texarkana-Dallas...
Don't have a reference handy (at work) to predict running times...
For Tennessee, first comes the day train Memphis-Paducah-Carbondale-Champaign-Chicago.Knoxville <> Nashville. Not any through service since 1930s on the Tennessee Central and SOU with a thru sleeper NYP - Nashville. Sleeper then went by way of Chattanooga until about 1960 ? Line is now severed.
That route wouldn't add any of the largest metros (Bristol, Knoxville, and Chattanooga metros all have less than 1 million people: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Metropolitan_Statistical_Areas).Another alternate route from New York to Dallas:
New York- Lynchburg-Roanoke-Bristol-Knoxville-Chattanooga-Memphis-Little Rock-Texarkana-Dallas...
Don't have a reference handy (at work) to predict running times...
The advantage is there is a good route from NYP to Lynchburg already and the expansion to Roanoke is coming shortly and your route does add PHL and WAS to the route. I also like the Memphis to Little Rock-Dallas routing.
Could the train be routed via Nashville between Knoxville and Memphis instead of Chattanooga? That would add a much bigger market and still be on the way at least geographically (not sure any good tracks though)? In fact, if I could do on my proposed route Nashville-Memphis-Little Rock-Dallas that might be faster than going through Birmingham. Or once you get to Memphis, you might be able to do Jackson, MS-Shreveport, LA-Dallas on that portion of the Meridian Speedway.
The only way, since the early 1980's, to get from Knoxville to Nashville by rail is via Chattanooga anyway; That traces quite a long, zigzagged path through the state. It would have the advantage of passing through the four largest population centers in Tennessee, but such a long route would kill any chance of intrastate business. Though it misses Nashville, the Norfolk Southern line from Chattanooga to Memphis (through northern Alabama) makes much more sense.Knoxville <> Nashville. Not any through service since 1930s on the Tennessee Central and SOU with a thru sleeper NYP - Nashville. Sleeper then went by way of Chattanooga until about 1960 ? TC Line is now severed with ~20 Miles pulled up..
According the the map, there is no connection from the UP to the BNSF in Phoenix that would allow that, and there seems not to any room to build one either, unfortunately.Going with Palmetto's idea: What if we were able to do Los Angeles - Phoenix - Albuquerque? Would that be much longer in time than the current SWC route between LAX and Albuquerque? That would open up a huge market to the route.
Open up a rail map of Arizona + New Mexico, and the answer will become clear as night follows a day to anyone.Going with Palmetto's idea: What if we were able to do Los Angeles - Phoenix - Albuquerque? Would that be much longer in time than the current SWC route between LAX and Albuquerque? That would open up a huge market to the route.
One practical way to do it would be using the Deming - (Southwest Railroad Short Line) - Rincon - (BNSF) - Belen - (BNSF) - Albuquerque route. At least the riders will get a good grand tour of 2/3rds of New Mexico in the process, while they slowly meander along the Short Line I believe the BNSF line from El Paso to Belen, which this rotue would join at Rincon, is in very good condition, but BNSF may have a conniption if someone proposed running a passenger train on it. The connection to this route at El paso faces the wrong way for a train coming from Tucson.According the the map, there is no connection from the UP to the BNSF in Phoenix that would allow that, and there seems not to any room to build one either, unfortunately.
This is good news. Work incrementally to restore the service, and the commuter line is an excellent first step.The Arizona Department of Transportation and the Feds have just finalized a route for their proposed Phoenix-Tuscon commuter rail service. In my mind, this opens up the possibility of Amtrak once again serving Phoenix.
Previously I proposed L.A.-Phoenix-Tucson-El Paso-Albuquerque-Pueblo-Colorado Springs-Denver-Omaha-Des Moines-Quad Cities-CHI. (Jis, I know the problem at El Paso, but we'll have to find a way.) Don't worry about the distances between the major cities. Their residents have a different attitude about distances than you do back East.I don't think Phoenix-Albuquerque-Denver as a stand alone train is practical. Even if it is 750 miles or above, while Phoenix and Denver are large cities/metros it would be hard to justify an LD train without at least one really huge market, NYP, CHI, or LA. If you can't extend from Phoenix to Albuquerque the other option would be Denver-Chicago and you get a Chicago-Phoenix train. But what do you do in Phoenix without the ability to service the train?
A commuter feeder from Akron/Canton to Cleveland would be worthless when it comes to Amtrak unless they ran to connect to/from the LSL/CL and ran during the graveyard shift. Of course it would help in general for commuter traffic.I'll comment on Akron and Colorado Springs.
Akron, Cleveland, and Canton are all sort of wedged in together (about 60 miles from Cleveland to Canton), so I think they would be better served by a commuter service than by a longer Amtrak route.
Sorry if I wasn't clear. I meant it would be a good feeder if Amtrak hypothetically opened a daytime multi-frequency daytime route from Cleveland to Cincinnati.A commuter feeder from Akron/Canton to Cleveland would be worthless when it comes to Amtrak unless they ran to connect to/from the LSL/CL and ran during the graveyard shift. Of course it would help in general for commuter traffic.I'll comment on Akron and Colorado Springs.
Akron, Cleveland, and Canton are all sort of wedged in together (about 60 miles from Cleveland to Canton), so I think they would be better served by a commuter service than by a longer Amtrak route.
First item is for Amtrak to get their present trains and service in order. That includes enough equipment to meet demand on present trains.
[Yes!]
Then the next item is adding another train when equipment is available.
[Yes!]
The north <> south post statement seems to be the best. No slight intended to our western train proponents but there is not any route out west that can meet the possible population potential of a North <> South route in the east. [Yes! The Appalachian and Mid-South regions are very badly underserved.]
Although not this poster's first preference, here is a route
[Don't be a tease, tell us your true preference]
that should really cover big potential [markets]. Cleveland - Toledo ( connecting by having a Michigan train to come from Detroit and south Michigan to Toledo ) [and/or to Columbus, allowing a direct CLE-Columbus train to join/split at Columbus, or even at Cincinnati]- Columbus - Dayton - Cincinnati ( southbound connecting to Cardinal from CHI & West VA ) - Lexington - Knoxville ( 20mile drive ) [isn't there a second, more easterly route Cincinnati-Knoxville? maybe not in usable condition?] - Chattanooga - Atlanta ( southbound gets Crescent connection BHM & south ) - Macon - Jacksonville - and any number of various routes to Miami.
[The Virginia trains planners are looking ahead to Richmond-(maybe via Charlottesville?)-Lynchburg-Roanoke-Bristol-Knoxville-Chattanooga. Virginia knows how to get trains done, so I'm counting on this one. It could continue to ATL if that city ever builds an adequate station. Oh, well, the Ohio planners couldn't figure out how to have two routes (Cardinal and 3-Cs} meet at the same Cincinnati station! (That was another reason Gov Kasich was able to abort the 3-Cs.) Otherwise forget ATL. Chattanooga-Huntsville, AL-Decatur, AL-Birmingham-Montgomery-Mobile-New Orleans/Florida should work well enuff. Meanwhile this Virginia-backed route apparently anticipates connecting with a train Louisville-Frankfort-Lexington-Knoxville-Chattanooga. Where such a train might originate, could be Ohio, or it could run CHI-Indianapolis-Louisville, of course.]
Then when enough equipment [begin Kansas City or CHI] - STL - Louisville - Nashville - Chattanooga ( connecting to this CLE - MIA train ).
Gets the 3 C corridor running in Ohio and will open other possibilities as well.
[i'd also put a second train on the CoNO tracks CHI-Memphis, then head east to Birmingham-beyond. Not quite the route of the Floridian, but could be another Florida train. If a good route to Florida seems difficult, go Birmingham-New Orleans.]
[Of the cities mentioned, I guess Columbus is the biggest. But taken together the East Tennessee Three of Chattanooga-Knoxville-Bristol (Tri-Cities) are likely bigger than Columbus. And Louisville, Memphis, and Birmingham aren't chopped liver, while Indianapolis has the population to support another route or two.]
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