I live about 10 miles west of Philadelphia, PA. I was planning a trip to visit some friends from Central Connecticut. We arranged a get together at Pepe's Pizza, not too far from Union Station in New Haven. ( Best pizza in the world - honest ).
I did not feel like driving - traffic around New York and the CT Turnpike is brutal, and I recently had shoulder surgery. So, we decided to take the train from Philadelphia to New Haven.
I purchased our tickets well in advance, and got a good price on the Acela Express; with a scheduled run time of 2h59min from Philadelphia to New Haven. I knew that I could not drive there that fast, even if I tried.
The scheduled 2:39 PM departure left Philadelphia 14 minutes late last Saturday. No explanation for the delay was given, but I expected that we would later make up for lost time. I activated the odometer App on my Smart Phone. It showed the train traveling at over 135 mph on the straight section of track north of Trenton, NJ. Nice. We only had a 10 minute layover at NY Penn station, and there was a crew change in New York; so they could not make up any time in New York.
After leaving Penn Station, I turned the Odometer App Back on, as we went through Connecticut.
The train speed NEVER exceeded 70 mph. Even though we often went faster than traffic on the adjacent and saturated Connecticut Turnpike, this is not high speed rail. We managed somehow to loose a little more time, and arrived in New Haven 20 minutes late. Still no explanation for the delays.
We spent the night in Bridgeport with a relative, and took the Northeast regional train home from Bridgeport to Philadelphia, the next day ( Sunday - the train was packed - sold out - from NY to Phila.) I asked the conductor why the train was so slow in Connecticut, especially as compared to train speeds in New Jersey and even in Pennsylvania ( where we had some 120 mph running in Bucks County ). He replied that Metro - North owns the tracks from New York to New Haven, and that they impose a 79 mph speed limit. Sounded like a BS response to me - 79 mph is Amtrak's speed limit when running trains on non-owned and non-electrified freight tracks.
The line from New York to New Haven is fully electrified, and has no grade level crossings. Any ideas as to why the trains in the western part of Connecticut are so slow ? I have been on trains in Spain, Italy and France that run close to 200 mph. 70 mph on a major inter city route is 3rd world.
I did not feel like driving - traffic around New York and the CT Turnpike is brutal, and I recently had shoulder surgery. So, we decided to take the train from Philadelphia to New Haven.
I purchased our tickets well in advance, and got a good price on the Acela Express; with a scheduled run time of 2h59min from Philadelphia to New Haven. I knew that I could not drive there that fast, even if I tried.
The scheduled 2:39 PM departure left Philadelphia 14 minutes late last Saturday. No explanation for the delay was given, but I expected that we would later make up for lost time. I activated the odometer App on my Smart Phone. It showed the train traveling at over 135 mph on the straight section of track north of Trenton, NJ. Nice. We only had a 10 minute layover at NY Penn station, and there was a crew change in New York; so they could not make up any time in New York.
After leaving Penn Station, I turned the Odometer App Back on, as we went through Connecticut.
The train speed NEVER exceeded 70 mph. Even though we often went faster than traffic on the adjacent and saturated Connecticut Turnpike, this is not high speed rail. We managed somehow to loose a little more time, and arrived in New Haven 20 minutes late. Still no explanation for the delays.
We spent the night in Bridgeport with a relative, and took the Northeast regional train home from Bridgeport to Philadelphia, the next day ( Sunday - the train was packed - sold out - from NY to Phila.) I asked the conductor why the train was so slow in Connecticut, especially as compared to train speeds in New Jersey and even in Pennsylvania ( where we had some 120 mph running in Bucks County ). He replied that Metro - North owns the tracks from New York to New Haven, and that they impose a 79 mph speed limit. Sounded like a BS response to me - 79 mph is Amtrak's speed limit when running trains on non-owned and non-electrified freight tracks.
The line from New York to New Haven is fully electrified, and has no grade level crossings. Any ideas as to why the trains in the western part of Connecticut are so slow ? I have been on trains in Spain, Italy and France that run close to 200 mph. 70 mph on a major inter city route is 3rd world.