Do you have a link?It's all rather complex actually. If you have a spare 30 dollars to spend buy the game Train Dispatcher 3.5 and download all the territories then try keeping the trains on time.
Do you have a link?It's all rather complex actually. If you have a spare 30 dollars to spend buy the game Train Dispatcher 3.5 and download all the territories then try keeping the trains on time.
I think a lot of people are missing the point of the terrible Crescent changes. Atlanta, by far, has the most people wanting to go overnight to the NEC cities. Other places, like Charlotte are already late night for the Crescent and have multiple other choices to get to the NEC. ....
Padding schedules is not a solution, in my opinion. Freight companies have simply gobbled up the extra time with little change to Amtrak. The Sunset Limited has an absurd amount of padding, and it has trouble making time. Even if adding padding does improve on-time performance, the only real benefit is reliability. In the scope of travel time, a 2 hour delayed train is no different than an on-time train that has 2 hours of artificial schedule padding.If padding the schedule is the only way Amtrak has to placate the Freight railroads, then what about "corridor" trains? If the times are not comparable to driving then how successful will they be?
Padding schedules is not a solution, in my opinion. Freight companies have simply gobbled up the extra time with little change to Amtrak. The Sunset Limited has an absurd amount of padding, and it has trouble making time. Even if adding padding does improve on-time performance, the only real benefit is reliability. In the scope of travel time, a 2 hour delayed train is no different than an on-time train that has 2 hours of artificial schedule padding.
I doubt corridor trains will see much of this. They generally exist is places where the schedule can be maintained with some reliably accuracy. Their schedules aren’t padded much to begin with, and Amtrak knows that if travel times become too long on corridor trains, they’ll lose their share of the market. For the long distance trains, the mindset seems to be “these people don’t care if the trip is an extra few hours; they’re taking the train regardless”.
In general, some truth to that, except for what #tricia has pointed out.. For the long distance trains, the mindset seems to be “these people don’t care if the trip is an extra few hours; they’re taking the train regardless”.
Try circling for 2 hours over Yuma. On a flight scheduled for 2 hours, from Phoenix to San Diego.Indeed. I can't ever remember a train circling the station for an hour.
I think you're right about padding not being a solution, but wrong about passengers on LD trains not minding "an extra few hours." Remember that many passengers aren't travelling end-to-end (in effect using the LD train as a "corridor" between two midway destinations). Also the timing of those "extra few hours" can really matter a lot, even to end-to-end passengers. The new Crescent schedule, for example, now arrives in DC at around 1:30PM instead of around 10AM--that's a big difference if you're making plans to do anything in DC the day you arrive.
I hear you! Every frequent flyer has a bunch of those stories.Try circling for 2 hours over Yuma. On a flight scheduled for 2 hours, from Phoenix to San Diego.
Or waiting so long on the tarmac at JFK that your international flight to London had to leave the waiting line to *refuel* because they had run low on fuel while waiting in line to leave. We left 8 hours late.
Both of those happened to me.
http://www.signalcc.com/train3/downloads.htmlDo you have a link?
I have once circled over the Arabian Sea off the coast of India abeam of Vadodra on shore for almost an hour after a 15 hour non stop flight from Newark, awaiting a slot to land at Mumbai CSMIA (previously known as Santa Cruz Airport). What is an hour this way or that after 15 hours anyway? A testimony to the fuel capacity of a 777-300ER no doubt capable of carrying so much additional contingency fuel.I've never been stuck in a holding pattern for too long. I have been stuck waiting for an hour outside a train station.
Is there a frequent flier bingo card?I hear you! Every frequent flyer has a bunch of those stories.
I hear you! Every frequent flyer has a bunch of those stories.
Is there a frequent flier bingo card?
I'm still missing several spots like EOS, IME, GO, RTO, ALT, FAM, UTS, etc.
*oxygen drop, inflight medical, go-around, return-to-origin, alternate landing, air marshal, unscheduled tech stop, etc.
Indeed. I can't ever remember a train circling the station for an hour.
Oh the stories, oh the stories. If it wasn't the miles.............
Circle line in London ?
Not so much of a circle anymore.Circle line in London ?
Well you just have to hop off at Edgeware Road for the counterclockwise, and hop on at Edgeware Road for the clockwise. Just ignore the Edgeware Road to Hammersmith segmentNot so much of a circle anymore.
They face speed restrictions all the time on approach to larger airports, and sometimes even en route in order to maintain separation from slower traffic ahead at the same flight level, or same approach path.
Checking Amtrak Alerts today on Twitter, several of the 3-4 hour+ delays, were due, at least in part, to freight train congestion...
Sunset Limited/Texas Eagle Train 1/421 that departed New Orleans (NOL)/Chicago (CHI) on 5/5 / 5/4 is being delayed between Palm Springs (PSN) and Ontario (ONA) due to heavy freight train interference in the area.
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