Mark Meyer
QUOTE: Originally posted by PNWRMNM Dave, The Ports will support your proposal as a reflex action because they think it is in their interest. Their support tells you nothing of terminal issues. The Ports are not running the terminals. Somebody in the Port of Tacoma would know the capacity situation in Tacoma since it is their facility on the Muni. BNSF operates SIG in Seattle. Going to Tacoma you have to use the Muni to get to the IM terminal(s). I am not familiar with operational details there but I really doubt that the muni will work for free. Your answer is long on generalities and short on fact which confirms my point that you do not have the information, data, or facts to support your conclusion that open access is the solution to your problem. You have not convinced me you know what the problem really was. If you are familiar with railroad's general statements they admit that short haul intermodal does not work for moves of less that 500-800 miles. I believe the reason for that is that it takes that much of the rail's linehaul advantage to overcome the costs of terminals and drays, which are major cost components that the trucker does not have. The BNSF is not stupid. They would not turn down profitable business, so I can only conclude your move was not profitable regardless of what your third party told you. BNSF is disciplined enough not to do dumb stuff like take business that does not pay. Mac
QUOTE: Originally posted by dehusman Other than possibly Amtrak, I would say that 300+ mile crew districts are certainly no the norm. A closer figure would be 200-250 miles for and interdivisional run. Dave H.
QUOTE: Originally posted by PNWRMNM Dave, Clearly the BNSF did not think the traffic was "good money" for them. Your third party logistic outfit probably used some sort of standard cost estimation program. I suspect it grossly underestimated terminal costs, which as I tried to illustrate dominate the economics of this move. If you were running the terminals at the Port, and were anywhere near capacity, you would sure want to be paid well for your lifts. Remember you are competing for space with transcontinental traffic. Not taking low paying short haul business to keep capacity for the transcontinental traffic makes all kinds of sense to me. When you are capacity constrained, you must be very careful about what business you handle. I suspect that and the drays is what killed your deal, not the line haul costs. How much detail did your logistics outfit share and did you sit in on talks with railroad? "Thank you" to the several others who corrected your misstatements about crew issues. I could have but wanted to concentrate on more basic issues. Mac
Dave H. Painted side goes up. My website : wnbranch.com
QUOTE: Originally posted by VerMontanan futuremodal continues: "And just for the record, I have driven from Kennewick to Umatilla in under 15 minutes." ** Glad I wasn't along. The Rand McNally atlas shows the distance as 28 miles. And since you did it in less than 15 minutes, that's in excess of 112 MPH. Though, I don't see your point in mentioning this as your original claim was driving Hinkle to Pasco in 20 minutes, and Hinkle's another 7 or so miles beyond Umatilla.
QUOTE: Originally posted by VerMontanan Futuremodal stated: "My understanding of BNSF operations in the PNW is that they do route empty grain shuttles back over Stampede, and (correct me if I'm wrong) I believe they do manage to run from Tacoma to Pasco in one trip. For UP to shuttle a crew between Hinkle and Pasco would only take 20 minutes or so, so there would be no need for increasing crew costs." You are wrong. Train crews run from Seattle or Tacoma only to Ellensburg where crews are changed for the run to Pasco. As for the UP to drive a crew from Hinkle to Pasco in 20 minutes: Unlikely, since it's 35 miles one way.
QUOTE: Originally posted by PNWRMNM Dave, Had to attend to life for a couple of days so could not respond to yours of 29th until now. As I read that post you conclude that BNSF wants an exhorbitant rate over Stampede Pass because you could not get a low enough rate to do intermodal from Yakima to the ports of Seattle and Tacoma. I do not think the facts support your conclusion, and here is why. I assume you are looking at import-export traffic, which would be mostly export from Yakima. That is a one way load. Yakima to Seattle and Tacoma is about 150 one way highway miles, 300 round trip. I suspect truckers would do this move for $1.25 per mile or $375 per round trip. You have to offer shippers two discounts, one for slower service, and one to use you versus somebody else. I can not imagine that less than 20% would do it, so your maximum rate becomes $300 per box round trip. You have two drays, one at the port and one in Yakima. If you got them for $75 each, round trip I would be surprised. That is $150 per box. Terminals are not free either. If you gould get on and off for $50 per lift you have $200 in terminal costs. Considering there is no terminal in Yakima, I guess you figured to build your own and recover the operating and capital costs at $100 per box. If so, you are a braver man than I. The problem is we are to $350 in costs before we get to linehaul issues. There are some minor complications here. First you have to use single stack equipment because double will not fit thru Stampede. That makes your business a lot less attractive in the terminals at Seattle and Tacoma because your equipment takes twice as much track space as double stack equipment. Another issue is that your traffic is split between the ports so you go to them on differend days or have two small blocks each day. How you would get to the intermodal terminals is also a puzzle as the trains now being operated do not go to SIG nor the Tacoma dock yards which are on the Muni. Implies either very small, hence expensive, dedicated trains or set out blocks and a lot of switch engine hours to get from the setout points to the intermodal yards. Switching to and from the dock yards adds cost, transit time and unreliability to your system. My point is that even if BNSF was willing to do the linehaul for free, the teminal costs and issues kill you. Open access is not the solution to your problem. BNSF was simply smart enough not do do something that does not make economic sense. Mac
QUOTE: Originally posted by arbfbe So please explain how your idea of 'open access' differs from the current rules of interchange. How will this 'open access' increase capacity and make it better for a) the railroads and b) the shippers. I am not sure your idea of stacking yet another loaded container over a shared truck of a stack car will not lead to overloading of the weight limits of that truck. Those 20' boxes can get really heavy. I see a problem in trying to load it on the intermediate platform if the wells on both sides are designated to have both a lower 48' box and an upper 53' box loaded.
QUOTE: Originally posted by GMS-AU The other point of reducing axle weights yet putting more axles on the rail via 6 and eight axle wagons. Its all weight the loco's have to pull and that cost's money. G M Simpson
QUOTE: Originally posted by M.W. Hemphill No trouble is gone to, G.M. Have you seen what U.S. wages consist of? Think of the repack center as a hump yard for toys, clothes, and consumer electronic goods. The major reason containers are repacked stateside is to take solid containerloads of one commodity and distribute those contents among dozens of containerloads of mixed commodities. Those containers can then move straight to the retail store dock or to a local distribution center, rather than to a regional distribution center inland that would do the exact same thing! (Moreover, it greatly increases the rail share of the haul.) It's a very intelligent relocation of the distribution center as far upstream as possible, to eliminate duplicate mileage as you move the goods to a distribution center inland, sort to the final destination, then move back over some of the same route to final destination. Since there is no land west of Los Angeles, only ocean, that's the logical place to put the repack center. You'd still have the repack centers even if the 53' container didn't exist. But since they do, why repack into a smaller container than necessary?
Our community is FREE to join. To participate you must either login or register for an account.