https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/f...sedgntp&cvid=1a8c52f0711a4b45bfcbec961a5a8a66
The UP is brought up as a bad example.
The UP is brought up as a bad example.
both of those require well planned timetables and sticking to them. With a computer controlled hump yard there is no reason a car should take 48 hours+ to go through itThis reminds me of a question I've been meaning to ask for a while:
How do we balance the timely shipping (and by extension delivery) of goods via rail with making sure that passenger rail service (as it is currently) isn't severely affected?
On the one hand, people want to take Amtrak and trust that it will be reliable. On the other hand people want to be sure that goods they have shipped out or are expecting as deliveries are transported on time.
Yeah, something like Precision Scheduled Railroading could become a concept.both of those require well planned timetables and sticking to them. With a computer controlled hump yard there is no reason a car should take 48 hours+ to go through it
Plan service first
Operation changes to get you closer
Finally concrete to deliver the needed investments
Both should be possible if the railroads run trains that will fit in sidings with adequate staffing and planning.This reminds me of a question I've been meaning to ask for a while:
How do we balance the timely shipping (and by extension delivery) of goods via rail with making sure that passenger rail service (as it is currently) isn't severely affected?
On the one hand, people want to take Amtrak and trust that it will be reliable. On the other hand people want to be sure that goods they have shipped out or are expecting as deliveries are transported on time.
it also helps to put enough power on trains, the current average is less than 1HP/T for most trains with only intermodal getting 1.5-2HP/TBoth should be possible if the railroads run trains that will fit in sidings with adequate staffing and planning.
How could this have been done so well 70-100 years ago with far more trains in service?This reminds me of a question I've been meaning to ask for a while:
How do we balance the timely shipping (and by extension delivery) of goods via rail with making sure that passenger rail service (as it is currently) isn't severely affected?
On the one hand, people want to take Amtrak and trust that it will be reliable. On the other hand people want to be sure that goods they have shipped out or are expecting as deliveries are transported on time.
wow, it's almost like PSR isn't so precision!!https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/f...sedgntp&cvid=1a8c52f0711a4b45bfcbec961a5a8a66
The UP is brought up as a bad example.
More trains in service. Missing the only train for the next 24h is a bigger deal than missing the third of five today, especially if all of them are shorter. PSR's big thing is consolidating trains to save on labor and capital expense, while moving the downsides of this to labor and customers.How could this have been done so well 70-100 years ago with far more trains in service?
How could this have been done so well 70-100 years ago with far more trains in service?
I would be interested to know how much of total overall freight train delay is caused, even indirectly, by anything to do with Amtrak.On the one hand, people want to take Amtrak and trust that it will be reliable. On the other hand people want to be sure that goods they have shipped out or are expecting as deliveries are transported on time.
How could this have been done so well 70-100 years ago with far more trains in service?
Reducing the property tax burden is one of the leading reasons for reducing the real estate footprint. many municipalities and counties thought they had found their piggy bank in railroads that passed through town, until they ceased to do so.There were more tracks back then. The RR's have removed and abandoned vast amounts of tracks making less room for short and long trains. They have diminished the amount of mainline and sidings all in the name ofprogressprofit.
Amtrak's take on that is detailed in their complaint about the Sunset Limited’s “abysmal” performance, which was referenced in the RPA 12/9 Hotline.I would be interested to know how much of total overall freight train delay is caused, even indirectly, by anything to do with Amtrak.
I expect other causes figure much more prominently.
Reducing the property tax burden is one of the leading reasons for reducing the real estate footprint.
It does reduce the tax paid aWhile this may apply to the tracks that were abandoned and have since become "rails-to-trails" ... discontinuing the second track still leaves the RR owning the ROW and may not reduce the tax paid - however, it supposedly reduces/eliminates the maintenance costs even though it ends the ability to use that track as a siding to allow trains to pass.
If I were to demolish my house, leaving a vacant lot, I believe my property tax bill would be greatly reduced. On the other hand, if I build an addition, making my house larger, I can expect an increase in my taxes. Either way, I still own the same amount of land.While this may apply to the tracks that were abandoned and have since become "rails-to-trails" ... discontinuing the second track still leaves the RR owning the ROW and may not reduce the tax paid - however, it supposedly reduces/eliminates the maintenance costs even though it ends the ability to use that track as a siding to allow trains to pass.
Remember, there are states with centrally assessed utilities, Colorado and Oregon being the ones I'm familiar with. Valuation is based on traffic on a line, rather than the number of tracks. The state professional figures the value of the entire operation in the state, divides it up by line classification and then distributes the assessment back to the county tax assessor who applies the mill rate and sends the tax bill.It does reduce the tax paid a
In most, if not all, jurisdictions, since that part of the land becomes undeveloped, from developed.
So something arriving across the Pacific that is going to say Chicago ( rather common thing for distribution to the Midwest), what large body of water would the truck take it to from the Pacific Port?Isn’t there some way for the shippers to get around the freights? For example, come into port from across the ocean, unload onto trucks, trucks take stuff to the nearest large body of water, unload onto boats that take the stuff to trucks at the other end, etc.?
The only stuff left would be the dangerous containers that can only go safely by rail. That I don’t have an answer for, but I am proposing the first as a serious solution. Just like a passenger might try to set up a plan to go from commuter rail to connecting commuter rail as a network if Amtrak shuts down.
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