- Joined
- Oct 2, 2018
- Messages
- 124
At the current trajectory, the Superliners will wear out with no replacement on the horizon and the end of the LD trains in the west will be a fait accompli. Insert your boiling-the-frog analogy here as we slowly run these cars into the ground.
I’m trying to triangulate on how much it would cost to re-equip the Superliner fleet, and how long would it take.
The original SL1 order circa 1977 was for 284 cars at $250M, or $0.9M each (seems like a good deal, eh?). Adjusted for inflation that would cost $3.9M each today. The SLII order circa 1991 was for 195 cars @ $450M, or $2.3M each. Inflation brings that to $4.4M each today (ouch). A little averaging and 10% uplift means that the cost of new Superliner-like equipment would be ~$4.5M each today.
Amtrak originally purchased 479 cars, of which 430 are still on the roster (but not necessarily operational). If we targeted 479 cars at $4.5M each that’s $2.15B.
As a point of reference, the inflation-adjusted cost of the Viewliner IIs is $2.8M each.
Any thoughts on the accuracy of these numbers, and how long it would take to produce cars?
I’m trying to triangulate on how much it would cost to re-equip the Superliner fleet, and how long would it take.
The original SL1 order circa 1977 was for 284 cars at $250M, or $0.9M each (seems like a good deal, eh?). Adjusted for inflation that would cost $3.9M each today. The SLII order circa 1991 was for 195 cars @ $450M, or $2.3M each. Inflation brings that to $4.4M each today (ouch). A little averaging and 10% uplift means that the cost of new Superliner-like equipment would be ~$4.5M each today.
Amtrak originally purchased 479 cars, of which 430 are still on the roster (but not necessarily operational). If we targeted 479 cars at $4.5M each that’s $2.15B.
As a point of reference, the inflation-adjusted cost of the Viewliner IIs is $2.8M each.
Any thoughts on the accuracy of these numbers, and how long it would take to produce cars?