Sure, Amtrak is faster than driving between New York and Washington, and even the 10 hour run on the Vermonter between Baltimore and White River Junction is faster than driving. (I know, I've done both.) But I've just figured that there are more routes where this is true.
I had to calculate travel comp time from my recent work trip to Savannah. My boss is letting me use driving times as a benchmark for my non standard travel mode because the airline connections available on our corporate discount are so roundabout that you might as well drive.
On Saturday, my door to door time from Savannah to Baltimore on the Palmetto was 14:30. That included gassing up my rental car, driving to the airport to return the car, taxi transfer to Amtrak station, waiting around about 50 minutes before the train left, waiting on a freight train, numerous stops, including 2 smoke stops and a 55 minute layover in Washington, and some slowing just before we switched tracks in various places. Also, the run between Richmond and Washington was at very slow speed. Of a 350 to 400 mile stretch between somewhere in South Carolina and just south of Richmond, my GPS calculated an average speed of 62 mph (100 km/hr for the metric minded.)
According to Google Maps, the same door to door trip as a drive is estimated as being 10 hours. But my experience is that my personal drive time, including restroom and fueling stops, but not meal breaks, is about 1.4 times that given by google maps. Which means 14 hours. I don't know how Google maps figures drive times. Its not like I drive slowly or anything.
So it seems to me that the first steps to competitive rail travel times nationwide is not super expensive 200 mph HSR, but fixing rail corridors so that trains can travel 79 mph more of the time. Also rail corridors need to be realigned so that mileages between city pairs is the same as road mileage. Obviously, that's going to cost a lot.
I had to calculate travel comp time from my recent work trip to Savannah. My boss is letting me use driving times as a benchmark for my non standard travel mode because the airline connections available on our corporate discount are so roundabout that you might as well drive.
On Saturday, my door to door time from Savannah to Baltimore on the Palmetto was 14:30. That included gassing up my rental car, driving to the airport to return the car, taxi transfer to Amtrak station, waiting around about 50 minutes before the train left, waiting on a freight train, numerous stops, including 2 smoke stops and a 55 minute layover in Washington, and some slowing just before we switched tracks in various places. Also, the run between Richmond and Washington was at very slow speed. Of a 350 to 400 mile stretch between somewhere in South Carolina and just south of Richmond, my GPS calculated an average speed of 62 mph (100 km/hr for the metric minded.)
According to Google Maps, the same door to door trip as a drive is estimated as being 10 hours. But my experience is that my personal drive time, including restroom and fueling stops, but not meal breaks, is about 1.4 times that given by google maps. Which means 14 hours. I don't know how Google maps figures drive times. Its not like I drive slowly or anything.
So it seems to me that the first steps to competitive rail travel times nationwide is not super expensive 200 mph HSR, but fixing rail corridors so that trains can travel 79 mph more of the time. Also rail corridors need to be realigned so that mileages between city pairs is the same as road mileage. Obviously, that's going to cost a lot.