Riding Santa Fe's Super Chief in 1964 from KC to LA the track was very smooth and in western KS the speeds were especially fast but still smooth.
Since Amtrak’s Ocean View dome lounge retired, there are none left in service, other than some privately owned ones. The Santa Fe had some, as did the GN, CB&Q, and the MILW. The only other streamliner 12 wheeler’s I am aware of, was the Santa Fe Hi-Level diner’s. Even the Hi Level lounge car was an 8 wheeler.My roughest ride was on the Eagle when the engineer took a siding at twice the authorized speed. Missed a diverging signal. Have found that passenger cars with 6 wheel trucks at each end ride much better but do not hope for any.
In fact, I had assumed that the reason got bumpy in Kansas was because the train used the night time to speed up to catch up from being behind and also because it was now on flat stuff instead of climbing/descending mountains.
So the timetable speed is never less than the otherwise maximum allowable speed?Trains don’t “speed” to catch up from delays. Engineers will get fired for that.
A given train at a given location along the route will have a maximum allowable speed (the slower of: timetable speed, equipment restrictions, signal restrictions, slow orders, restrictions due to work crew on the tracks, dispatcher orders, and any other caveats I’m forgetting), and that maximum speed does not change because a train is on time or late.
So the timetable speed is never less than the otherwise maximum allowable speed?
Since Amtrak’s Ocean View dome lounge retired, there are none left in service, other than some privately owned ones. The Santa Fe had some, as did the GN, CB&Q, and the MILW. The only other streamliner 12 wheeler’s I am aware of, was the Santa Fe Hi-Level diner’s. Even the Hi Level lounge car was an 8 wheeler.
That’s it...The only lightweight cars I can think of off hat are these.
-Milwaukee Road Super Domes
-Budd Full Domes (ATSF, GN)
-Santa Fe HiLevel Diners
That’s it...
I suppose the Hi-Level diners are heavier than Superliner diners?
That’s it...
I suppose the Hi-Level diners are heavier than Superliner diners?
There is padding built into most schedules. At night, with no visual reference outside the window unless you are in a dark room in the sleepers, it sometimes feels like you are moving faster than you are. This fact plus padding in schedules leads people to believe that a train ran faster during night hours to make up time.
Iirc, the derailment involving Casey Jones was caused by his operating the train at speeds above the speed limit. He took a curve too fast and thus the derailment and a famous song.
So the timetable speed is never less than the otherwise maximum allowable speed?
I am not sure that there is one single uniform way in which time tabling is done on all railroads, and what the general practice is at Amtrak.So the timetable speed is never less than the otherwise maximum allowable speed?
Casey was going too fast but the derailment was caused by failure to see a brakeman's signal on a foggy night and running into a train ahead of him
What room # are you in? Wondering if you were over the wheels vs towards the center of the car which generally has a better ride.Is it just me or are track conditions deteriorating?
I’m on the northbound Silver Star and it’s been a rough ride. I have a roomette so as if trying to get some sleep. A few times last I was almost thrown out of bed, the lower berth. And a few time it seems like the wheels hit hard against something. It was so bad that I actually thought I better look for the emergency exit Instruction.
i’ve done this trip before but don’t remember it being so rough. Any insight from anyone?
Was there a lot of high wind?The roughest ride I ever remember on Amtrak (aside from the short stretch from the north portal of the B&P tunnel to Baltimore Penn Station) was on the Empire Builder westbound between St. Paul and Rugby. I could barely sleep, the train was rocking around so much. Funny, though, the eastbound trip wasn't as bad. That was back in 2007.
Was there a lot of high wind?
I was riding the CZ and in between Galesburg and Denver it was so stormy they detoured in parts of Nebraska.
There had been tornados and extreme lightning, hail and downpours in the area the entire week.
I think the detour was specifically to avoid high water, but I don't recall a detailed explanation. We were about a half day late pulling into Denver.Somehow I picture the tracks off the mainline as being in worse condition with slower speed limits.
When the winds are blowing over semi-trucks on the freeway - rail cars are likely to do the same out
on the unsheletered barren flat lands.
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