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Genesee & Wyoming; April 2018 issue

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Genesee & Wyoming; April 2018 issue
Posted by Convicted One on Wednesday, March 7, 2018 6:27 AM

THOROUGHLY enjoyed reviewing April's "map of the month", well done...to whoever put that together. I didn't realize there were so few states in which G&W didn't not have some form of presence.

Looking at some of their segments, (Kyle and TPW, for instance, as well as TPW and CFE) if they could find some way to bridge between, they could become their own little  self contained "Alphabet route" of sports...which certainly is thought provoking.

 

Elsewhere in the April issue is reported CSX's strategy to shed various routes, one in particular  being the Cincinnati to Atlanta route.  Anyone think G&W might have any interest in this (or other CSX) route?  If G&W  did annex the Sudetenland, could they give NS serious competition in their busy "Rathole" corridor?

 

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Posted by David Lassen on Wednesday, March 7, 2018 9:05 AM

Thanks. Always nice to hear positive feedback on the map, since they tend to be monsters to edit. Primary credit goes to Bill Metzger, our mapmaker, with thanks to Mike Williams, VP of corporate communications at G&W, for reviewing it and providing some additional information.

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Posted by Murphy Siding on Wednesday, March 7, 2018 9:24 AM

Convicted One
..........If G&W  did annex the Sudetenland.......

 

 

Laugh


Given G&W's business model that seems to work for them as being a short line operator, would they want to compete with the big boys on the big ball field?

Thanks to Chris / CopCarSS for my avatar.

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Posted by Deggesty on Wednesday, March 7, 2018 11:00 AM

Murphy Siding

 

 
Convicted One
..........If G&W  did annex the Sudetenland.......

 

 

 

 

Laugh


Given G&W's business model that seems to work for them as being a short line operator, would they want to compete with the big boys on the big ball field?

 

 

I presume that the line from Cincinnati to Atlanta that CSX is considering shedding is really just from Latonia to Junta (above Cartersville)--and trackage rights would be granted to run from Cincinnati and to Atlanta.

Johnny

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Posted by Convicted One on Wednesday, March 7, 2018 5:45 PM

Murphy Siding
Given G&W's business model that seems to work for them as being a short line operator, would they want to compete with the big boys on the big ball field?

 

Good to hear from you MS, I was starting to think you might be mad at me.  (been a while).

In a way, the premise behind this thread kinda keys into your  "expanding or contracting?" thread. 

Rarely do we anymore hear of  end to end merger proposals where the intent is to expand territory. Seems  like most of what we hear is more in line with parallel mergers designed to facilitate rationalization/eliminate competing corridors. So perhaps that tells us how those running the railroads might be inclined to answer your thread?

 

My gut is that anything CSX does spin off will have some form of restriction built in limiting   the way any new operator might compete with CSX. Sort of like they did with C,F,&E when they leased out that line.

Nonetheless, the megalomanic expansionist that lurks deep inside me  was salivating while reading the map in question,  pondering just how hard it might be to relay the old Eel River line between Logansport and Columbia City, and have.... of all things, a workable bypass  around Chicago. 

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Posted by kgbw49 on Wednesday, March 7, 2018 10:41 PM

I’ve always wondered what G&W might be able to do if they could bridge the gap between their line from Columbus to the Buffalo and Pittsburgh cluster.

Doing so would give them a network that would include Buffalo, Pittsburgh, Columbus, Cincinnati, Detroit, Indianapolis, Chicago and Peoria, which would be quite the regional.

Granted it would be mainly 25 MPH track, but solid track and steady transit times would get them a lot of bulk business.

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Posted by M636C on Thursday, March 8, 2018 4:56 AM

As with all such references to G&W, The size of the British (and European) Freightliner operations and the Australian operations isn't clearly indicated.

I don't know the size of the Freightliner operation in the UK, but they own 126 of the 455 "class 66" JT42CWR locomotives in Britain, making them around the second largest freight operator in the UK.

By coincidence G&W Australia, after taking over the Australian operations of Freightliner and buying out the coal operation fleet of Glencore (which had always been run by Freightliner) G&W is the third biggest freight operator in Australia.

Peter

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Posted by CSSHEGEWISCH on Thursday, March 8, 2018 8:20 AM

The Australian operations make G&W one of the last operators of locomotives with a bulldog nose in mainline service.  The CLF/CLP class looks sharp in G&W orange and black.

The daily commute is part of everyday life but I get two rides a day out of it. Paul

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