Surfliner Push/Pull Configuration

Amtrak Unlimited Discussion Forum

Help Support Amtrak Unlimited Discussion Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

hmy1

Service Attendant
AU Supporting Member
Joined
Aug 9, 2010
Messages
137
Traditionally the Surfliner operates in pull configuration away from LA Union Station and in push configuration towards it. On my trips this weekend, I noticed at least two trainsets operating the opposite way, including mine. Anybody know why? This delays boarding significantly because business class and coach customers are staged at the opposite ends of the platform and have to hoof it to the right cars when the train arrives. These are the trains going north of IRV.

Not sure how long they've been doing this as my last trip was a few weeks ago, one of the very last bus shuttle trips before the tracks reopened in OC, and it wasn't like this.
 
could be a result of the new timetable and the sets just haven't been run to a wye to turn them

There should never be a need to wye a Surfliner under normal circumstances. A schedule change on that route wouldn’t change the way the trains operate. Unless there’s a trip that bypasses LA Union Station, that station itself acts as the “wye” to change ends.
 
Could have been a private car move somewhere in there. Can't really do cab-end operations when you have someone else's car in front. ;)
 
Could have been a private car move somewhere in there. Can't really do cab-end operations when you have someone else's car in front. ;)

I guess that makes sense, though I thought they typically sandwiched the PV between the loco and first coach.
 
I guess that makes sense, though I thought they typically sandwiched the PV between the loco and first coach.
Depends on the car and if they need to attach or unhook it mid-route. I know of at least one caboose based out of SAN.
 
There should never be a need to wye a Surfliner under normal circumstances. A schedule change on that route wouldn’t change the way the trains operate. Unless there’s a trip that bypasses LA Union Station, that station itself acts as the “wye” to change ends.
I should have explained a bit more, I'm wondering if they had to move a set as part of the change and therefore it didn't get get turned at LA union.
 
As mentioned above, the trains should always run in the correct direction during normal operations -- they would have to go out of their way to specifically wye a train around. The track closure in Orange County shouldn't matter.

Regardless, they're obviously not in a rush to fix the situation as I passed one trainset today that is still oriented in the wrong direction.
 
With through tracks at LA, there'd never been a reason for the trains to change directions.
It also depends on ones defintion of "wrong way". If every train in a particular track layout faces the same way, is that a wrong way simply because the facing direction is different from what occurred when there was a different track layout?
 
Back
Top