Green Maned Lion
Engineer
The 25 year old cars? There are no national Amtrak cars that are about 25, except the Acela sets. V2s are 5-10, the V1s are about 30, the S2s are about 33. Replacement of these cars are not what this discussion is primarily about; they may choose to also replace the S2s and turn those into surge or expansion cars, but the Airo order is about replacing the ~49 year old Amfleet Is and this discussion is primarily about starting the roughly decade long process of replacing the ~47 year old S1s.Problem is, a new car with a 50 year life will need a couple of million dollars rehab when it’s 25. In other words, where the current cars are now. So it would seem that rehab isn’t a bad investment amortised over 25 years. Twenty five years is still a lot of service.
By the time they reach 60ish (just 4 years after this rather idealized time frame) some S1s, replacements or not, and regardless of vaguely sane economics and parts availability, are going to need to be taken off the road because of inherent structural fatigue failure that could only be repaired by jacking up the Amtrak stripes and driving a new car under it.