I e-mailed IPRA, in hopes of getting confirmation as to the validity, and perhaps the source, of the statement. I have yet to receive a reply.A joint effort of California, Illinois, Michigan and Missouri led to an award to Nippon Sharyo, USA, for rail cars, with delivery expected to start in 2020.
There's nothing wrong with the Viewliner design.Maybe the solution lies in Amtrak abandoning the strategy of trying to find a manufacturer for the late eighties, early nineties Viewliner design? I have now pulled on my thrice charmed chain mail, for those that are familiar with D&D versions.
I believe this is inaccurate. I have been told that swapping a defective module in a Viewliner, while still an involved process, is much less involved than replacing anything in a Superliner sleeping car. The Superliner I retrofit program was cancelled because of the excessive cost, I am told, while Viewliner module replacement is still considered viable.In Viewliners there are some possibly unnecessary cost increasing features inherent in the design. One is the inherent lack of consideration for using modern sealed airconditioning units that can be swapped out easily, instead of tinkering around with different parts in different cabinets. But that could possibly be fixed somehow. I am also not convinced that the whole business about replaceable modules has really worked out. To date nobody has ever changed out a module successfully with any less effort than if they were just built using other techniques used in car building. So while theoretically a nice idea I am not sure how practical it is. The net result of all this is that instead of using standard mass produced body shells and furnishing them, we have to do these small orders of special stuff that is not off the shelf and consequently get to pay a lot extra for them. I am not sure we are getting anything in return to justify the extra cost and pain.
I have to agree here. I don't think CAF itself as a company is the real problem; location of the factory really is. Its unfortunate that the politics of job creation may well have made a viable and profitable contract the sluggish mess this has become.As noted before, the Viewliner design is fine. The problem is trying to build them in Elmira. (And I say this as someone who lives 60 miles from Elmira.) If you were trying to build a standard Siemens car in Elmira you'd have the same problems. If you were building the Viewliners in Sacramento they'd be fine.
I mostly agree, but CAF is to blame for not doing their homework on the Factory Location, for the Bid and now for the Delays,it sure isn't Amtrak's Fault this mess is never ending!I have to agree here. I don't think CAF itself as a company is the real problem; location of the factory really is. Its unfortunate that the politics of job creation may well have made a viable and profitable contract the sluggish mess this has become.As noted before, the Viewliner design is fine. The problem is trying to build them in Elmira. (And I say this as someone who lives 60 miles from Elmira.) If you were trying to build a standard Siemens car in Elmira you'd have the same problems. If you were building the Viewliners in Sacramento they'd be fine.
Hmm. I can't recall seeing 2020 as a delivery date anywhere else. I've also not read past issues of IPRA newsletters, so I'm not sure how well this issue has been covered in the past. The lack of any mention of the delays with this project really makes me wonder whether 2020 was just pulled out of, uh, let's say a hat.Just found a curious note in the July, 2017 newsletter from the Indiana Passenger Rail Alliance, which can be viewed/downloaded at the following URL - http://www.indianahighspeedrail.org/docs/2017/201707aai.pdf
If one scrolls down to page 7 of the newsletter, the following entry is found-
I e-mailed IPRA, in hopes of getting confirmation as to the validity, and perhaps the source, of the statement. I have yet to receive a reply.A joint effort of California, Illinois, Michigan and Missouri led to an award to Nippon Sharyo, USA, for rail cars, with delivery expected to start in 2020.
I posted this in hopes that someone on this board is either a member of IPRA or knows someone who is, just so we can find out whether the information comes from a reliable source, or whether the entry is coming from an overly optimistic railfan, or even just someone wishing to engage in a little chain yanking.
Thanks in advance.
Was doing a little nosing around and found something that might qualify as official information.I agree. Absent anything from any official source or a citation to one, this date quoted by IPRA is at best considered to be a figment of someone's imagination.
I disagree with that statement because Illinois successfully got an extension on the ARRA funding for the proposed Chicago-Quad Cities route, and is now seeking another one due to ongoing engineering and construction delays for that project. If Congress was willing to grant the Quad Cities route a funding extension due to the extenuating circumstances, they might be willing to grant an extension for the bi level equipment funding as well. All Illinois (the lead state in the order) has to do is ask Congress to do it.Blech. Given the state of Congress, there's no way the ARRA money will be extended to pay for those. California's cars were mostly coming out of state funds anyway, and Illinois was using a bundle of state funds as well (in addition to probably being able to reallocate funding between the cars and their often-state-funded track work), but the other Midwestern states... will pretty much just lose their grant money. Michigan, Wisconsin, and Missouri are unlikely to replace the lost grant funds with state funds and don't have a "fungible" state-funded contract to move the federal money to.
So if they ever come out, they really will be "Surfliner IIIs". They'll probably be owned entirely by California and Illinois.
I thought Mexico was paying for it....Guess you haven't heard. Congress is doing Nothing this year!
And now the Debt Ceiling and,Budget is looming and Herr Trumpff is threating to Shut down the Government if Congress doesn't heel and pay for his Wall!
It's not. So, let's get back on topic.How Is this rail related?
The $177 million HSIPR grant for the Chicago to Quad Cities corridor came from FY2010 funding, which does not have the Sept, 2017 deadline that the ARRA stimulus grants did. Congress, AFAIK, did nothing to extend a funding extension for the Quad Cities grant, it was done by the US DOT and the FRA within their administrative authority.I disagree with that statement because Illinois successfully got an extension on the ARRA funding for the proposed Chicago-Quad Cities route, and is now seeking another one due to ongoing engineering and construction delays for that project. If Congress was willing to grant the Quad Cities route a funding extension due to the extenuating circumstances, they might be willing to grant an extension for the bi level equipment funding as well. All Illinois (the lead state in the order) has to do is ask Congress to do it.
That is a very good question. We're not hearing the whole story, that much is obvious, and while not true in every case it is usually a bad sign when people (namely, the NGEC) stop talking. I've heard the '2020' date mentioned before, but took it as an unofficial "if we have to start over, it'll be 2020 before we see any cars". But are the states really going to fund the (revised) order on their own dime now?Where is the railroad industry trade press on this story? This is a major contract, if the states and the NGEC board are not talking, surely Trains Magazine, Railway Age, etc or even major Illinois or Southern California newspapers could investigate and report on what is going on with the N-S contract.
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