Thanks Jis for updating the info. What what i read Amtrak will be soliciting only manufacturers that have made Amtrak equipment. That would seem to narrow the field quite a bit but perhaps makes the award when issued have more substance.
Thanks Jis for updating the info. What what i read Amtrak will be soliciting only manufacturers that have made Amtrak equipment. That would seem to narrow the field quite a bit but perhaps makes the award when issued have more substance.
Where did you read that?Thanks Jis for updating the info. What what i read Amtrak will be soliciting only manufacturers that have made Amtrak equipment. That would seem to narrow the field quite a bit but perhaps makes the award when issued have more substance.
Where did you read that?
If true that would likely preclude Stadler from bidding.
Conspiracy or trade secret?So we the public may not get to see the technical details for a while yet. I am not sure at what point we will know who qualified either.
It is trade secret I believe, until a selection is made.Conspiracy or trade secret?
I can see why Amtrak would keep the details quiet. Less people complaining and filing lawsuits. Just not sure how they can justify it when using government funds.
Talk about a long drawn out process. With all the hype of the past year the “solicitation of interest” has just gone out now.RPA had put out this a week back when the RFP was issued. Contains some more information...
https://www.railpassengers.org/happening-now/news/blog/amtrak-issues-long-distance-rfp/
Apparently the RFP issued on 12/15 was in effect a solicitation of interest. The actual RFP will be provided today to those that are interested and qualify. So we the public may not get to see the technical details for a while yet. I am not sure at what point we will know who qualified either.
Anyway there is some more detail under:
https://procurement.amtrak.com/irj/...e5ddc1f8f8a91eae2c&InitialNodeFirstLevel=true
specially if you click through to the MS Word document pointed to.
With a one week deadline. The actual RFP apparently is due out today. Admittedly we are guessing to some extent as to what the two documents are about. Buth the Word document at least clarifies a bit.Talk about a long drawn out process. With all the hype of the past year the “solicitation of interest” has just gone out now.
Conspiracy...
Most of the cars coming back from storage this year are non revenue cars of various types (diners, lounge, bagagge cars), superliner transition sleepers, Viewliner 1 sleepers and Horizons. Most of the coaches and regular superliner sleepers that were in storage are already back out there. For the wreck repairs there’s cars from a number of different types both revenue and non revenue. A complete list of all the types is out there. Capacity is still not what it was prior to Covid due to a couple of wrecks that have occurred (Joplin MT, Chief in Missouri, and Coast Starlight earlier this year,) the need to have superliners on the Carbondale service which begin in 2019, and higher bad order shop counts due to supply chain, part lead times, and shop labor (so a higher amount of cars are kept out of rotation to account for bad ordered cars and preventative maintenance rotations in the shops).A back of the brain calculator says that 63 restorations will mean about 1-1/2 more superliners for each SL train set and about 1 additional car for each single level train set.
Something like 224+170=394 +/- a dozen or so maybe.Thought the original Superliner order was 279.
284+195=479 cars. How many of those cars are in service in now?
India manufactures about 7,000 passenger cars per year these days as they are in the process of replacing their entire old fleet of 40,000+ Schlieren cars by new LHB cars while growing the total number of cars significantly.Isn't "blockbuster order for more than 700 cars" this like what India orders and builds in a year (too lazy to go check out the threads we've had on India's RR equipment)?
“We believe in the future of our Long-Distance service,” said Amtrak Board Chair Tony Coscia.A bit of history of Superliners...
https://www.trains.com/ctr/railroads/passenger-service/genesis-of-amtrak-superliner-cars/
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