Philly Amtrak Fan
Engineer
Someone in Amtrak is thinking about it ...Did we miss the Crescent Star?
http://news.wabe.org/post/amtrak-considering-one-new-and-one-old-southern-route
Someone in Amtrak is thinking about it ...Did we miss the Crescent Star?
This is one that has a couple of strong individuals, Senators and Congressmen batting for it. Talked to one while I was on the Hill with the NARP folks the other week.Someone in Amtrak is thinking about it ...Did we miss the Crescent Star?
http://news.wabe.org/post/amtrak-considering-one-new-and-one-old-southern-route
Probably why my initial inclination was to list corridor expansions/improvements and Thruway connections, rather than anything related to long-distance trains.It's been a while since I've entertained the idea of any long distance expansion projects. Now I simply hope for continued service and perhaps some better scheduling of the routes which still exist. At this point if we don't lose any more long distance routes that would be an amazing an unexpected success in my book.
Admit it. Just too far to be a day train, Atlanta-Dallas.Someone in Amtrak is thinking about it ...Did we miss the Crescent Star?
http://news.wabe.org/post/amtrak-considering-one-new-and-one-old-southern-route
With the schedule you propose Woody customers from the NEC will have to spend almost all day in Atlanta to wait for this train. Could we have it leave Atlanta earlier in the day and arrive in Dallas earlier?Admit it. Just too far to be a day train, Atlanta-Dallas.Someone in Amtrak is thinking about it ...Did we miss the Crescent Star?
http://news.wabe.org/post/amtrak-considering-one-new-and-one-old-southern-route
Starting with the current Crescent in ATL at 8:30 a.m. It is scheduled to arrive in Meridian at 3 pm Central (4 p.m. Eastern), so, 7 hrs 30 min later. Then another 7 hrs (taken from the Thruway Bus schedule) gets it into Shreveport about 10 p.m. and into Dallas at 3:40 a.m. Not viable for the Big D.
Starting with the fabled Atlanta day train, leave ATL around 9 pm. Then 7 hrs 30 min passing thru Anniston (116,000 metro), Birmingham (1,146,000 metro), Tuscaloosa (240,000), and Meridian (105,000) in the dark of night. Then another 1 hr 30 min or so to Jackson, MS (579,000 metro) for a 6ish arrival time. Then daylight thru small cities -- Vicksburg (57,000)-Monroe (179,000)-Ruston (48,000 LA Tech U)-Shreveport (444,000 riverboat gambling)-Marshall (67,000)-Longview (218,000)-Dallas-Ft Worth -- to arrive in Dallas in the evening, 7ish, and Ft Worth 8ish. Worth doing.
I'm always skeptical of long Long Distance trains, with big anchors at the end but too thin in the middle. Like the Southwest Chief CHI-L.A., supported, barely, by "intermediate destinations" Kansas City and Albuquerque, but dust bowl desert empty aside from that. And end-to-end passengers comprise less than 15% of the total ridership.
This Meridian Speedway route has big anchors, ATL-DAL. But how we gonna fill this train, if only 15% of the riders going between the anchor cities? After all, the trip will take all night and all day.
Suppose we don't get many riders from Anniston, Birmingham, Tuscaloosa, and Meridian due to their dark-of-night service. (Their total pop. is 1.6 million, so we'll get some riders.) But adding up those small-city figures from Jackson thru Longview, well, 1.5 million looks like a population base to work with.
As a bonus, the route would create the beginning of a corridor Ft Worth-Dallas-Longview/ Shreveport, because the Texas Eagle already uses the tracks Dallas-Longview/and offers a Thruway bus for the 62 miles to the riverboat casinos in Shreveport. Then to the two LDs, add a corridor train over the 220 miles Ft Worth-Shreveport and it's a strong start.
The advantage of through cars is that you could keep sleeping at the godawful hours that the westbound trains come through Toledo.Ditto from the LSL. Actually, even a connecting train would be prefereable to waiting the Ambus.How about through cars from the Capitol to Detroit/Ann Arbor? I sure hate having to get up early to get off in Toledo and wait for the Ambus.
Same reason through cars are needed from the CL in PGH to the Pennsylvanian. Or better yet, a separate train that can go from CHI through Michigan to CLE-PGH-PHL-NYP as All Aboard Ohio proposes. Kill two birds with one stone. Pittsburgh and Toledo have to be two of the worst required transfers in the entire Amtrak system. What other cities require transfers during the graveyard shift?The advantage of through cars is that you could keep sleeping at the godawful hours that the westbound trains come through Toledo.Ditto from the LSL. Actually, even a connecting train would be prefereable to waiting the Ambus.How about through cars from the Capitol to Detroit/Ann Arbor? I sure hate having to get up early to get off in Toledo and wait for the Ambus.
Norfolk Southern, except for the northern end which is actually still Conrail (now a joint venture between NS and CSX -- so much for competition). It's mostly NS-dispatched.There used to be the Lake Cities for that purpose.
http://www.timetables.org/full.php?group=19941030n&item=0021
http://www.timetables.org/full.php?group=19941030n&item=0019
Instead of turning north to Pontiac it went south to Toledo and passengers could transfer to the LSL (the eastbound 352 missed the CL and the westbound 351 arrived about 5 hrs before the CL). It looked like 56 miles and 1:40 each way. The train is marked with Conrail tracks, who owns that track now?
So let's say we can get a third CHI-NEC train that completes its run within 24 hours (I'll call it the Philly train). We go to NS and say would you rather we run the Philly train on your tracks between Porter and TOL (TOL to South Bend is 150 miles already) along with the LSL and CL or run the Philly train on your tracks between DET and TOL (56 miles)?Norfolk Southern, except for the northern end which is actually still Conrail (now a joint venture between NS and CSX -- so much for competition). It's mostly NS-dispatched.There used to be the Lake Cities for that purpose.
http://www.timetables.org/full.php?group=19941030n&item=0021
http://www.timetables.org/full.php?group=19941030n&item=0019
Instead of turning north to Pontiac it went south to Toledo and passengers could transfer to the LSL (the eastbound 352 missed the CL and the westbound 351 arrived about 5 hrs before the CL). It looked like 56 miles and 1:40 each way. The train is marked with Conrail tracks, who owns that track now?
It's an interesting situation; a pair of NS/Conrail tracks are sandwiched between a CN track to the west and a CN track to the east.
http://knorek.com/RR/SAA/SAAIndex.htm
Ideally Michigan and/or Toledo could purchase the affected tracks from CP West Detroit to Toledo, but it might be possible to just cut a deal with NS.
If this was being asked for as a third train, I can make an educated guess regarding the response -- NS says "FFS, before you run any more trains, please do something about the bottleneck from Porter to Chicago".So let's say we can get a third CHI-NEC train that completes its run within 24 hours (I'll call it the Philly train). We go to NS and say would you rather we run the Philly train on your tracks between Porter and TOL (TOL to South Bend is 150 miles already) along with the LSL and CL or run the Philly train on your tracks between DET and TOL (56 miles)?
Good Morning,
I just thought I'd post a thread where people can post theoretical routes for Amtrak (without a quick shutdown of "there is no money"). Just a place for dreamers to dream, I guess, but also where there can be serious conversation.
My theoretical route is called the "Ohio Zephyr"
It runs between Chicago, IL and Columbus, OH, with intermediate stops. Major stops include Chicago, Gary, Valparaiso, Warsaw, Fort Wayne, Toledo, Findlay, Marion, Dublin, and Columbus.
Thoughts?
Moderator Note: The topics have been merged.Thirdrail7 is correct this thread needs to be moved and combined.
All Aboard Ohio has a proposal for it: http://freepdfhosting.com/cf26514bc8.pdfGood Morning,
I just thought I'd post a thread where people can post theoretical routes for Amtrak (without a quick shutdown of "there is no money"). Just a place for dreamers to dream, I guess, but also where there can be serious conversation.
My theoretical route is called the "Ohio Zephyr"
It runs between Chicago, IL and Columbus, OH, with intermediate stops. Major stops include Chicago, Gary, Valparaiso, Warsaw, Fort Wayne, Toledo, Findlay, Marion, Dublin, and Columbus.
Thoughts?
I will be going to their meeting in a few weeks.All Aboard Ohio has a proposal for it: http://freepdfhosting.com/cf26514bc8.pdfGood Morning,
I just thought I'd post a thread where people can post theoretical routes for Amtrak (without a quick shutdown of "there is no money"). Just a place for dreamers to dream, I guess, but also where there can be serious conversation.
My theoretical route is called the "Ohio Zephyr"
It runs between Chicago, IL and Columbus, OH, with intermediate stops. Major stops include Chicago, Gary, Valparaiso, Warsaw, Fort Wayne, Toledo, Findlay, Marion, Dublin, and Columbus.
Thoughts?
AAO's proposal connects Fort Wayne to Columbus via Lima, which is shorter and seems more straightforward. Other than making it more convenient for you to ride (nothing wrong with that if you're dreaming), are there advantages to routing it through Toledo?All Aboard Ohio has a proposal for it: http://freepdfhosting.com/cf26514bc8.pdfMy theoretical route is called the "Ohio Zephyr"
It runs between Chicago, IL and Columbus, OH, with intermediate stops. Major stops include Chicago, Gary, Valparaiso, Warsaw, Fort Wayne, Toledo, Findlay, Marion, Dublin, and Columbus.
Thoughts?
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