QUOTE: Originally posted by SuperChiefFan QUOTE: Originally posted by Doggy I do support HIGH SPEED RAIL I got an idea GERORGE EL STUPIDO BUSH GIVE ALL the $87 Billion Dollars for IRAQ to HIGH SPEED RAIL from Chicago to St.Louis, Los Angeles via San Luis Obisbo to San Francisco, Chicago to MInneapolis, Dallas to Houston, Los Angeles to Phoenix, Chicago to Detorit, Cleveland to CInciattai via Columbas and Chicago to Cincattai I second that motion![8D][:D][:)][8D][:D][:)][8D]
QUOTE: Originally posted by Doggy I do support HIGH SPEED RAIL I got an idea GERORGE EL STUPIDO BUSH GIVE ALL the $87 Billion Dollars for IRAQ to HIGH SPEED RAIL from Chicago to St.Louis, Los Angeles via San Luis Obisbo to San Francisco, Chicago to MInneapolis, Dallas to Houston, Los Angeles to Phoenix, Chicago to Detorit, Cleveland to CInciattai via Columbas and Chicago to Cincattai
QUOTE: Originally posted by daveklepper Again, isn't all this billion to be spent on Fuelcell-Hydrogen research and development from Government funds both (1) extremely wasteful since hybrid technology can do the job faster cheaper and more efficiently, and (2) a direct subsidy to automotive interest that everyone would yelling ouch about if were directed to private railroads? Wouldn't the Billion over the five years proposed by the Government ( some handed to you know who already) do a lot for Amtrak and give us some practical, OK just 125 mph, corridors outside the northeast? If there were every hour departures for the 2-1/2 hour trip Chicago - St Louis and St. Louis - Kansas City, wouldn't people ride the train instead of flying? And freight service would get better because of the better track, also? Dave
QUOTE: Originally posted by TheAntiGates And REALLY, who wants to go coast to coast in 16 hours, if you can fly there in 4? I might do it once, just to say I did, after that it would seem Like 12 hours down the drain, and I suspect this would be a popular perspective, time being all valuable to most people, so after the novelty wears off, the public gets stuck with a high maintenance item that nobody uses? Seems like I've seen this scenario unfold once before, and private industry depended on a public bailout then, the only thing that's changed is we don't know who they are (yet, if ever) this time.
QUOTE: Originally posted by DTrainguy Germany, France, Japan and other countries with high speed rail are smaller than many of our states. The distances and time factors make air travel impractical for many trips. In the US, we make those trips in the car because there is no viable alternative. Start with the short corridors, keeping in mind that not everyone wants to go from one end to the other. It should be more convenient to board a high speed train than to get to an airport. A 2 hour schedule from Detroit to Chicago means little if one can only board in Detroit or Chicago. To be successful, the corridors must not only serve the core of major cities but must also provide convenient, hassle free access to the airline system for long distance travelers. This does not mean get off the train, haul your bags to the airline check-in counter and wait. Once the airlines see high speed rail as a feeder rather than a competitor progress will ensue.
QUOTE: Originally posted by brilondon Correct me if I am wrong but aren't the Fed's trying not to fund AMTRAK at all. Amtrak has to go hat in hand and grovel for its megre funding requests every year. Here in Canada we get all gaga over any additional money our government wishes to give it. It is planning to give VIA Rail a bone to the tune of 800 million CDN dollars over the next five years. Unfortunatly that is the ramblings of a senile old man who is our present king, I mean Prime Minister, who when he finally gets his butt out of our government will be sadly disapointed when the hier apparent Paul Martin come in and reverses everything Johnny Cruton has screwed up.
QUOTE: Originally posted by METRO Forget National! There are still plenty of short-haul lines that need work! The Chicago-Milwaukee-Madison-Twin Cities corridor has just started to run faster than a snail's pace. Even some turbo-trains would be an improvement over the P-42s we have, let alone some nice Acelas.
QUOTE: Originally posted by eastcoast Look, we all need to consider that the government IS NOT going to do this anytime soon. Amtrak is faltering as it is! Do you like paying taxes?? It will come straight out of OUR POCKETS!! And then, how much for tickets on thes trains? What about grade crossing collisions or do we seek MAG LEV?? THE ACELA HAS NOT BEEN WITHOUT PROBLEMS! It still has to deal with all kinds of restrictions and limits. Now, Disney Corp. is toying with the idea in Florida to boost tourism and to save the environment from all the vehicle exhaust.The solution? MONORAIL.MAGLEV.NO GRADE CROSSINGS.MAYBE BY 2025.[B)] KEN_ECR
QUOTE: Originally posted by donclark Yes, the price with a Saturday night layover is $356 from LA to Fort Wayne. But lets change that a little, say from Santa Barbara to Fort Wayne. Price is $632 without a Saturday night layover on the red eye flight, and $722 for a day flight.... Flying from or to major airports is cheap. Flying elsewhere isn't...... Amtrak beats this easily....hey, you might even want to plunge on a sleeper.....
Nothing is more fairly distributed than common sense: no one thinks he needs more of it than he already has.
QUOTE: Originally posted by raakone AntiGates......if there was Coast to Coast highspeed rail service.....you think most people would be riding coast to coast? Of course not.......it would be at the intermediate stops. One thing that's often forgotten about.....TRAINS ARE NOT LIKE PLANES.......with airplanes, it doesn't make economical sense to have them landing at multiple stops (which is why it's seldom done, except with certain longer routes that call at more obscure destinations) Trains, on the other hand, you don't have to spend all that money for landing fees and refueling at each stop. Sure, on corridor trains you'll find more end-to-end riders......but on longer routes, more people get on or off at intermediate locations. ~Ra'akone
QUOTE: Originally posted by Juniperhouse There is nothing to be gained by nay-saying negativism. I think we all agree the present transportation system is not adequate and has many limitations, in addition to making it very difficult for cities across North America to link up. Instead of fussing, endlessly, about what can't be done (all of which is nothing more than narrow-minded inside-the-box assumptions anyway), I suggest we take a larger look at matters. As for the population density issues, the demographers tell us the center of the US has been slowly emptying toward the coasts the last century. Building a new national HSR network would be one way to reverse that trend, and move people back to the more-accessible heart of the country (more accessible because of the arrival of HSR). Great public-works projects (like the original railroad lines) stimulate thousands of spinoffs, and bring business and population to places where it did not exist before, or in our US case, has gradually gone away. As for solving the problem by adding two cents to the federal gas tax, this is absurd. The rule of thumb is that one cent of gas tax generates a billion dollars in new revenue. Two billion dollars is not enough to even get into trouble, let alone get out of it on HSR. It will take hundreds of billions in financing, both public and private, and concerted cooperation between federal and state governments (like the building of the original RRs in the 19th century, we might add). We (our group, including transport engineers) have looked at the speed issue, and we believe we can cross coast-to-coast using off-the-shelf HSR equipment in 16 hours. This, of course, involves substantially higher speeds where possible to compensate for the slower speeds in urban environments and in mountainous terrain. Note that the French TGV has done 322 mph in test runs, and the German ICE trains over 250 mph in tests. Conventional HSR is now very close to maglev in speed capability, and we believe it can be improved still further. The USA has been famous in history for a can-do attitude. That built the railroads, and completed the Panama Canal when the French backed off. Americans love great engineering projects, and, I believe, will pitch in wholeheartedly once it gets underway. God knows the Bush program of overseas imperialism isn't drawing much enthusiasm, and the bloom is off the bush (no pun intended) for the space program. What else is there to stimulate a national re-awakening? HSR is the answer. J. Snyder
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