Perhaps this is the thread to raise the question, ewhat should be done about wheel profiles on the modern ubiquitous low-floor "trams," streetcars," light-rail" cars ior whatever you wish to call them. All strikingly modern in appearance and passenger and operator amenities, but mechanivcally simply the old "two-rooms-and-a-bath" design multiplied. In other words, a bunch of four-wheel fixed-truck cars linked together by body sections suspended between them. With the multiplied forces on flanges and rail edges and screech on curves without flange oilers (as compared with cars with swivaling trucks). Any opinions on the optimum wheel profile?
daveklepperTapered-tread, "conical" wheels are supposed to reduce flange wear and wear of the inside of curved rails. i believe most "cylindrical" wheels stilll have a very slight taper. The North Shore for example...
Remember that the issue involved here is not curve guiding, or radial steering, it is the hunting produced by oscillating 'miscorrection' of true wheelset following whether on straight track or curved. Note also that there is an implied 'mating taper' on the inside railhead that assists the coned wheels in staying centered in the nominal gauge.
For the cylindrical tread profiles (which do in fact have a very shallow 'centering' taper) it is assumed that the root profile of the tread, or in fact actual flange-area contact, will be necessary either for lateral force displacement or curving force accommodation. Unsurprisingly, for true LGV, we're talking about minimum designed curve radii on the order of 12 miles, with spiraling taking account all the way down to lock in the position derivatives. We're also probably talking about profoundly damped truck rotation or actual alignment control to make the cylindrical flanges effective, whereas at lower speeds the dynamics work as Wickens indicated to 'self-steer' the frame and thereby allow very low pivot and side-bearing friction -- something VERY desirable for interchange cars that may go an extended time between receiving maintenance of those areas. (As an interesting aside, there is a long history of 'independent wheels' on wheelsets being "innovated", including the original Talgo and Train X systems and at least one patent dividing a three-piece truck wheelset so the halves independently rotate. Guiding on these is vastly inferior to solid axles (again as Wickens somewhat surprisingly concluded) and it will pay you to comprehend why.
Now, the more interesting question -- and the one of most relevance to this thread -- is where the high-speed design benefits begin to outweigh the coned-tread ones. In my opinion (which should not be relied on) this may be well below the 125mph peak speed in the PRIIA spec that will likely define Amtrak service outside the NEC for the foreseeable future.... but it might not be even for 110mph peak. I also suspect that the (enormous) number of miles this equipment would run on freight-optimized track and geometry, where there are fairly obvious disadvantages to high-speed wheeltread profiles, might be significant.
Tapered tread, conical wheels, are supposed to reduce flange wear and wear of une inside of curvede rails. i beleve most "cylindricle" wheels stilll have a very slight taper. The North Shore for example,
16 year old thread back from the dead.
BaltACDAmtrak spills water and derails
Note the open escape hatch on the locomotives roof. Nice feature I did not know existed until now.
Amtrak spills water and derails
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2023/06/28/amtrak-train-derails-in-moorpark-california/70366552007/
Never too old to have a happy childhood!
Not a surprise the French Turboliners road well. They had cylindrical wheels rather than conical wheels. All of the high speed French trains do. So did the North Shore interurbans back in the day. As did the high speed equipment on the ATSF.
Conical wheels will always hunt at a certain speed (varies with conical ratio and wheel diameter). The Japanese had hunting problems too until they went with a 1:100 conical ratio (1:20 to 1:40 is typical in US).
We continue with the 1:20 to 1:40 because well we always did it that way. Guess we can't seem to learn from others who do it better.
Perhaps the paternalistic attitude that trainmen take toward passengers goes back to the Southern Rwy days? On a number of occasions in the 1970s I rode what was then called the Southern Crescent; you may recall that W. Graham Claytor kept it under Southern's aegis and out of Amtrak. Claytor also rehabbed the train -- even promoting it briefly in Washington and Atlanta media. Except for one waiter (in a real dining car), no one was ever rude to me, but I definitely experienced excess handling in terms of sit here, no you can't sit there.
One possibility raises itself: everyone mentions the "sea change" the Crescent undergoes at Charlottesville. Northbound, it changes from the Washington, D.C.-bound overnite train from Atlanta; after it hits Charlottesville it becomes a day train, the daily C'ville shopping and culture special. Southbound something of the same thing happens in reverse; above C'ville it's all about long-distance commuting; after Charlottesville it turns into the Atlanta overnite.
Is it possible that the conductor or trainmen were trying to hold some space available for Charlottesville riders, even if it meant packing the behind coaches a little? What I've heard above rings true to what I remember from the tail end of the Crescent's pre-Amtrak days. I'm not trying to make excuses for the employees, but it almost sounds as though they themselves are going to extra trouble to inconvenience the passengers. There is almost always a good reason for that type of behavior. Don't NEC passengengers sometimes experience a lot of body-shifting to accommodate the crowd wanting out or in at Philadelphia 30th St?
As for Amtrak in general, seems every journey I've had has been like death by a thousand cuts: the "missing" diner, the delays, the cruddy Amfleet coaches whose footrests don't even work, missing or otherwise malfunctioning HVAC, fatigued and dingy seating material, hustling us up to the platform at Newark - Penn with a false "All Aboard" when the train wasn't even in the station yet -- and all this "luxury" costing nearly a dollar a mile. OTOH these defects are glaringly not in evidence on VIA, at least on the two transcon and several corridor trips I've taken. Up there, they act as though they care. (Apparently no one told them a federal service had to be shoddy.) - a. s.
Let's talk about the icky:
The icky: the Amfleet I bathrooms. There were in working order, but hardly kept clean and supplied by the coach attendent. I had to hunt up a new pack of paper towels in the one bathroom. On the design side, they are totally inadequate for overnight travel. No real place to change, should you care to, without dropping you stuff all over the floor. No cups that have a bottom to them, should you care to brush your teeth. Bad design, bad supplies, bad cleaning. Ick!
I rode a LOT of trains this summer. The LD trains (29, 5, 6, 3) were fine bathroom-wise. We had pretty decent attendents all round and, almost as important, either 5 or 6 restrooms per car. I don't know, maybe people were more conscientious, too.
The Amfleets (97, 98, 50), on the other hand, were horrible. On 2 of the 3 trains, several cars had restrooms that weren't working. There was a maximum of three per car (in some cars there were only two), and the attendants did little to keep them either clean or stocked. On one of the trains we had to argue with the attendant to get him to post a sign saying "out of order" on the bathroom door so people would stop trying to use it!
http://www.charmeck.org/Departments/CATS/Rapid+Transit+Planning/Gateway+Station/CGS+Project+Description.htm
The gateway station of which I spoke.
Dave
Lackawanna Route of the Phoebe Snow
I just wish Atlanta was as forward looking as Charlotte!
I also wish SC and GA would pony up some money and extend the Carolinian down to Atlanta. We could use a day train through the Piedmont to the northeast. I know quite a few people who would use it.
-Don (Random stuff, mostly about trains - what else? http://blerfblog.blogspot.com/)
I live in Charlotte, NC.
I have never ridden the Crescent, it comes through Charlotte at 2 AM, but Amtrak partnered with NCDOT runs two trains that originate in Charlotte and go to DC and back. Every Amtrak employee with whom I have had contact has been very friendly and helpfull.
That said, the train station looks like a bus station and is in a bad neighborhood, however, the City of Charlotte is about to build a new intermodal teminal in city center that will put Amtrak, Charlotte Area Transit (CATS) Linx commuter rail, Greyhound, Shortline, The CATS buses, and the CATS trolley all in the same building complex. The CATS bus will connect the terminal with the Charlotte Douglas Airport (10th busiest in the US, USAirways biggest hub) and the CATS Trolley will go to the convention center, The Carolina Panthers NFL stadium, The Charlotte Bobcats NBA arena, and the new NASCAR Hall of fame.
Ham549 wrote: I no longer suport them they scrap there F40PH's (I saw a used one go for over $100,000 but what is $100,000 when you get a cople of bil from my pockets. instead of rebuilding the F40PH like VIA they waste there money on Genesh*ts and wonder where all the money has gone when they want new or updated cars.
I no longer suport them they scrap there F40PH's (I saw a used one go for over $100,000 but what is $100,000 when you get a cople of bil from my pockets. instead of rebuilding the F40PH like VIA they waste there money on Genesh*ts and wonder where all the money has gone when they want new or updated cars.
Maybe you don't remember, but the F40s weren't surplused until Gunn killed Amtrak's frt and express business. Amtrak purchased all those GEs so they'd have enough power to run the expanded network and longer trains. Once Gunn pulled the plug, Amtrak had a lot of surplus locomotives. They kept the best (that is, the ones with highest value and lowest operating cost) and sold/scrapped/leased the rest (F40s and early Genesis). The cash rasied by doing this helped them scrape by and live to fight another day.
Despite their troubles, the P42s are really pretty good, fuel efficient long distance passenger locomotives and the F40s were hardly trouble free.
Took an Amtrak trip in August: JAX-NYP #98, NYP-CHI # 49, CHI-KAL # 352, KAL-CHI # 365, CHI-WAS # 30, WAS-JAX # 97.
Silver Meteor was hour late out of Jax due to a problem with a passenger detraining in Palatka, 2:08 late into NYP-sleeping car attendant top rate-dining car staff a near zero but the food was excellent. Lake Shore Limited pretty fine trip overall. # 352 had engine trouble in Hammond-Whiting, Indiana: we sat for over an hour while they tried to get the locomotive running on a consistent basis. No announcements from the train crew as to cause of delay. # 365 going back, every time there was even the slightest pause-the crew was "on the horn explaining the delay. Capitol Limited best food and service of whole trip 0:45 late into DC. Silver Meteor from Washington to Jax was late into DC and never made up the time. Dining car good, food excellent, sleeping car attendant had no clue. I had to break up a conversation between her and the attendant for the next sleeper to even board the train!!
Mel Hazen
Jacksonville, FL
Mel Hazen; Jax, FL Ride Amtrak. It's the only way to fly!!!
I take back some of what I said about the ANF-Frangeco/Rohr Turboliners being lightweight equipment.
I have developed a kind of technical/modeling interest in the TurboTrain, Talgo, and single guided axle trucks in general, and Jason Shron at Rapido Trains has posted pictures of an HO model he is developing that shows a different arrangement of the axle guidance arms on the TurboTrain than I am familiar with. He speaks of a change in the design in response to testing during development of the prototype TurboTrain, so I have been doing engineering citation database searches on TurboTrain or Turbo Train to see what had been documented.
I turned up W. H. Gregory "Decision Nears on Turbine Train Award", Aviation Week and Space Technology, June 24, 1974. Ordinarly, Av Week is not your go-to place for information on trains, but they do cover the aerospace industry, especially when two firms (Rohr with their French partner for the Turboliner, Sikorsky for the TurboTrain) are competing for orders. Apparently, when Amtrak bought the Turboliner, serious consideration was given to a United Aircraft Sikorsky Division TurboTrain 2.
I go confused because those wacky aerospace writers were quoting weight per wheel instead of weight per axle -- railroad people always talk about "axle loading" and never give car or train weight on a per wheel basis. A 5 car Turboliner and a 6 car TurboTrain are compared, each carrying 300+ passengers, comparable to a current-day Amtrak corridor train of 4 Horizon or Amfleet cars. The Turboliner train came in at about 300 tons while the TurboTrain 2 came in a little under 200 tons. The Turboliner takes 5 carbodies to carry the seats of 4 Amfleet cars, but half of each power car is taken up with the locomotive part of the train. The TurboTrain has its Power Dome Cars where there are seats perched up above the propulsion machines, but its cars are somewhat shorter.
By comparison, 4 Amfleet cars weigh in at about 55 tons each or 220 tons, but there is another 120 tons of P42 plus 120 tons of ballasted F40 cabbage car for a total train weight of 460 tons. So a Turboliner is about 2/3's the weight of a Diesel corridor train, largely be virtue of the heavy weight of a Diesel locomotive and the ballasted weight of what they use for non-revenue cab cars, and a TurboTrain 2 would have been less than half the weight of the Diesel train. So the Turboliner is only lighweight because the use of turbine power cars with half revenue seats dispenses with heavy locomotives or cab cars, while the TurboTrain 2 had additional weight reduction owing to its guided axles and aluminum construction.
July 1967 issue of Railway Cars and Locomotives (we have back issues at our college engineering library) gives the original New Haven 3-unit Turbo train as weighing 70 tons (empty) with 54 tons "on drivers" (the 4 axles under the Power Dome Cars), leaving 8 tons each for the two guided axle trucks. At 70 tons for 150 seats, you are getting into the light weight range of intercity motor coaches and short range jet aircraft - this is about half the weight of the Turboliner or one third the weight of the Amtrak Diesel corridor trains. But maybe TurboTrain 2 grew in weight to meet concerns of the TurboTrain design.
If GM "killed the electric car", what am I doing standing next to an EV-1, a half a block from the WSOR tracks?
Paul Milenkovic wrote: Talking about the Rohr Turboliners (Americanized version of the French Turboliner), wasn't there some kind of deal where New York State put up a bunch of money to rebuild them, but aren't they in storage because someone has "issues" with them? Is it fuel consumption? I looked up an article in June 1974 Aviation Week where they were giving fuel consumption numbers, and they were talking 60 gal/hour at 60 MPH -- about a gallon per mile -- is this much different than Diesel corridor trains? While turbines are inherently thirstier, especially at part load, these are streamlined lightweight trains so perhaps some of the fuel use balances out, and the French trains are supposed to use a pair of turbines to accelerate but idle one turbine at cruise to cut down on fuel use.Or was it more a question of some bureaucratic wrangling? Or something to do with bringing them into Grand Central or Penn Station?
Talking about the Rohr Turboliners (Americanized version of the French Turboliner), wasn't there some kind of deal where New York State put up a bunch of money to rebuild them, but aren't they in storage because someone has "issues" with them? Is it fuel consumption? I looked up an article in June 1974 Aviation Week where they were giving fuel consumption numbers, and they were talking 60 gal/hour at 60 MPH -- about a gallon per mile -- is this much different than Diesel corridor trains? While turbines are inherently thirstier, especially at part load, these are streamlined lightweight trains so perhaps some of the fuel use balances out, and the French trains are supposed to use a pair of turbines to accelerate but idle one turbine at cruise to cut down on fuel use.
Or was it more a question of some bureaucratic wrangling? Or something to do with bringing them into Grand Central or Penn Station?
NY was paying to have them rebuilt and upgraded at Super Steel in Schenectady. The first one completed had lots of trouble during acceptance testing - I don't recall exactly what. Finally, three were completed but I don't think any were accepted. NY and Amtrak never really were on the same page about the rebuild program and their use afterward, apparently. There must have been some nasty words, because Amtrak found they held the title to them, and towed them down to Wilmington, where they still sit.
I did hear through the RR grapevine that they were in much worse structural shape than was expected and really weren't worth the effort to rebuild in the first place. The carbodies were all carbon steel.
Wonder if a JetTrain locomotive with some Acela coaches wouldn't be better suited to the Hudson line? Maybe NY should have spend their money on some new equipment.....
Paul Milenkovic wrote: I guess inquiring foamer minds needs answers to questions about bathrooms.Back in the late 1970's when the family was moving from Chicago to Detroit, we were taking the Amtrak Michigan trains a lot. Initially they had the French RTG Turboliners (by the way, these are lighweight trains although with conventional trucks, and they were the smoothest riding train cars I have ever been on in terms of controlling bumps, side sway, and truck hunting). Some time in this they started phasing in Amfleet cars with F40PH locos in place of Turboliners. The Amfleet cars rode OK, better than a lot of swing-hanger streamliner cars unless you like the swing-hanger side sway, but they were a bit firm, and not as silky smooth as the Turboliners.Most of the time you got the corridor high-density seating, but I remember one time being on a low-density Amcoach that must have been new to the fleet. Besides the fewer seats and more leg room, something tells me it had a somewhat bigger bathroom than the typical Amwatercloset. Are we talking about the same thing? Or have they remodeled Amfleet II's to give them smaller bathrooms?
I guess inquiring foamer minds needs answers to questions about bathrooms.
Back in the late 1970's when the family was moving from Chicago to Detroit, we were taking the Amtrak Michigan trains a lot. Initially they had the French RTG Turboliners (by the way, these are lighweight trains although with conventional trucks, and they were the smoothest riding train cars I have ever been on in terms of controlling bumps, side sway, and truck hunting). Some time in this they started phasing in Amfleet cars with F40PH locos in place of Turboliners. The Amfleet cars rode OK, better than a lot of swing-hanger streamliner cars unless you like the swing-hanger side sway, but they were a bit firm, and not as silky smooth as the Turboliners.
Most of the time you got the corridor high-density seating, but I remember one time being on a low-density Amcoach that must have been new to the fleet. Besides the fewer seats and more leg room, something tells me it had a somewhat bigger bathroom than the typical Amwatercloset. Are we talking about the same thing? Or have they remodeled Amfleet II's to give them smaller bathrooms?
I agree with you about the turboliners. The NY State version was very smooth riding and quiet and the cars were a bit wider than the French version. Also like those big windows, particularly for the scenery along the Hudson.
The Amfleet I cars typically came with 84 seats, but Amtrak modified a bunch for Metroliner service and reduced the pitch to 60 seats. The Amfleet II cars came with 60 seats and have the leg rests that hinge up from the seat cushion as well as the pedal operated foot rest.
The Amfleet I cars came with a pair of tiny restrooms - I'm not sure what Amtrak has done to make them ADA compliant. The Amfleet II car I was just on had a large ADA compliant room and a smaller non-compliant room. Not sure if the smaller one was larger than that std Amfleet I room or not. If it was, it wasn't by too much. Something makes me think that the Amfleet II cars might have been delivered with two small restrooms and a changing area and the changing area was sacrificed to make an ADA restroom.
Paul Milenkovic wrote: I think I am with Don Oltmann on this one. There is that natural been-around-railroads outlook that whatever is done on a railroad operation is optimal and the best of all possible worlds, and that a "civilian" (like Don!) couldn't possibly have any ideas of how to improve the operation.First, the large guy. Yeah, yeah, people that heavy should be expected to pay for two seats and so on, but what is with exercising a little coach-attendant discretion and giving the fellow a break? Don was on the scene and I would defer to Don whether there was room to accomodate this passenger or not.Second, this business of the platform. I suppose wanting to stand on the platform is a railfan thing, but again, and yes, there are hazards getting swept off on to a train, but can't goodwill and letting people stretch their legs be balanced against making everyone stay inside a not-well-kept station?Third, the truck hunting. Many of my rail-travelling friends have complained about stretches of "bad track", but I have been wondering if sometimes it is a case of worn wheels or perhaps worn rails. The wheel profile together with the rail profile provide the steering control (flanges are only a backstop), and the experience in England is that worn wheels (also worn journal guides and other truck hardware) can cause a bad ride at speed. It is not a matter of flat spots; it is a question if the wheel has the right "cone taper" after it is in service long enough. Talgo has on board technicians with data pads keeping track of when wheels need reprofiling -- perhaps something low-tech like conductors or coach attendants writing up that a coach rides rough and then doing the maintenance on that car could help.Finally the bathrooms. I always wondered about the tradeoff between airliner style bathrooms and the rather large Men's and Women's rooms on the chair cars of old streamliner equipment, and I guess if you need to change, the closet-sized bathroom is an issue. I also experienced some time ago the long-distance version of Amfleet coaches with the lower seating density, and I remember somewhat larger bathrooms than airline water closets that had changing tables.New equipment would be sure nice, but maintaining and keeping clean the equipment they have would also go a long way.
I think I am with Don Oltmann on this one. There is that natural been-around-railroads outlook that whatever is done on a railroad operation is optimal and the best of all possible worlds, and that a "civilian" (like Don!) couldn't possibly have any ideas of how to improve the operation.
First, the large guy. Yeah, yeah, people that heavy should be expected to pay for two seats and so on, but what is with exercising a little coach-attendant discretion and giving the fellow a break? Don was on the scene and I would defer to Don whether there was room to accomodate this passenger or not.
Second, this business of the platform. I suppose wanting to stand on the platform is a railfan thing, but again, and yes, there are hazards getting swept off on to a train, but can't goodwill and letting people stretch their legs be balanced against making everyone stay inside a not-well-kept station?
Third, the truck hunting. Many of my rail-travelling friends have complained about stretches of "bad track", but I have been wondering if sometimes it is a case of worn wheels or perhaps worn rails. The wheel profile together with the rail profile provide the steering control (flanges are only a backstop), and the experience in England is that worn wheels (also worn journal guides and other truck hardware) can cause a bad ride at speed. It is not a matter of flat spots; it is a question if the wheel has the right "cone taper" after it is in service long enough. Talgo has on board technicians with data pads keeping track of when wheels need reprofiling -- perhaps something low-tech like conductors or coach attendants writing up that a coach rides rough and then doing the maintenance on that car could help.
Finally the bathrooms. I always wondered about the tradeoff between airliner style bathrooms and the rather large Men's and Women's rooms on the chair cars of old streamliner equipment, and I guess if you need to change, the closet-sized bathroom is an issue. I also experienced some time ago the long-distance version of Amfleet coaches with the lower seating density, and I remember somewhat larger bathrooms than airline water closets that had changing tables.
New equipment would be sure nice, but maintaining and keeping clean the equipment they have would also go a long way.
The handicap bathroom has enough space, but lacks sufficient hooks, seat and shelving. And since the floor was alway a bit wet around the sink/toilet area, you would be kind of reluctant to let anything drag on the floor....
How about a fold down seat and a couple of hooks? Also, replace the "cone" drinking cups with flat bottomed cups and that woud be a big help, too.
oltmannd wrote: I'm not following your logic why I should have felt compelled to offer up my seat instead of the crew who are being paid to see to my safety and comfort. The trainmen's duty area is the train - not a couple of seats they put a sign over. Their "duty" includes standing if no space is available for them. No passengers = no job.
I'm not following your logic why I should have felt compelled to offer up my seat instead of the crew who are being paid to see to my safety and comfort. The trainmen's duty area is the train - not a couple of seats they put a sign over. Their "duty" includes standing if no space is available for them. No passengers = no job.
Simple. All your "solutions" are the modern "someone else should be inconvenienced so I'm not" attitude, but offers no practical solution. Stick 'em in a seat with a smaller guy, but not you. BTW, did either of the large guys complain, or is it just you?
You are correct is saying that the Trainman's duty station is the entire train, but the Coach Attendants and Sleeping Car Attendants are assigned to a particular car, which would be their duty station, not the entire train.
As far as crew members sleeping on the job, did you mention it to the Conductor?
TomDiehl wrote: oltmannd wrote: In the interest of customer service, you give the fat guy one of the two pair you've roped off for the trainmen and have them squat in the lounge car - which is empty all night any way. Or seat him in your "local" coach, which will be nearly empty until morning. There is likely always a certain number of passengers who really should be seated next to anyone - either charge'm double or allow for it in your booking. You don't penalize some other "regular" sized passenger!But when there's no known available seat to give the "fat guy" two seats, they should block off extra seats "just in case" there's one or two guys that fit that description? My sympathy for them went out the door after a flight from Philly to Chicago had me crammed into a seat with my right shoulder against the inside of the fuselage and my left shoulder behind his right. I, as a "regular sized passenger," was penalized by the airline because I was unlucky enough to get that seat. Should airlines set aside a seat for clearance of this size passenger, too? For airlines, busses, or trains, I fully support the old rule, if you take up two seats, you pay two fares.PS, I noticed you didn't volunteer to take the seat next to the "fat guy," in your original or rebuttal, but you're all for relocating the crew members away from their duty area.
oltmannd wrote: In the interest of customer service, you give the fat guy one of the two pair you've roped off for the trainmen and have them squat in the lounge car - which is empty all night any way. Or seat him in your "local" coach, which will be nearly empty until morning. There is likely always a certain number of passengers who really should be seated next to anyone - either charge'm double or allow for it in your booking. You don't penalize some other "regular" sized passenger!
In the interest of customer service, you give the fat guy one of the two pair you've roped off for the trainmen and have them squat in the lounge car - which is empty all night any way. Or seat him in your "local" coach, which will be nearly empty until morning. There is likely always a certain number of passengers who really should be seated next to anyone - either charge'm double or allow for it in your booking. You don't penalize some other "regular" sized passenger!
But when there's no known available seat to give the "fat guy" two seats, they should block off extra seats "just in case" there's one or two guys that fit that description? My sympathy for them went out the door after a flight from Philly to Chicago had me crammed into a seat with my right shoulder against the inside of the fuselage and my left shoulder behind his right. I, as a "regular sized passenger," was penalized by the airline because I was unlucky enough to get that seat. Should airlines set aside a seat for clearance of this size passenger, too? For airlines, busses, or trains, I fully support the old rule, if you take up two seats, you pay two fares.
PS, I noticed you didn't volunteer to take the seat next to the "fat guy," in your original or rebuttal, but you're all for relocating the crew members away from their duty area.
There should be some sort of "fat guy" strategy. An couple of hours in a plane isn't quite the same thing as 14 hours on the train when you're trying to get comfortable to sleep. Whether it's punative (charge'm double) or a "service" (hold a couple of seats out), depends on what you can afford vs. your public image.
Here's another one, the trainman in my car north of DC though taking a nap was a perfectly good way to discharge her duty between stations, since there were no fares to lift! Nice public image (and safety rule violation, to boot!)
DMUinCT wrote: It does look like Amtrak has problems! Amfleet Cars, based on the Budd Metroliners, were designed for high speed, short haul service in the Northeast Corridor. Many have been displaced by the 20 Acela Bullet Trains in the corridor. In other uses, lots of stops on a long haul train will tend to flatten the wheels, also, few use bathrooms when on short haul trains. While the aging Amfleets might be on the end of a train for local passengers, AMTRAK NEEDS NEW LONG HAUL CARS! At least you got a seat, unlike the airlines, Amtrak does not "over book". I sure the enemies of our country will want to know of the complete lack of Security at Gainesville. Wake up Amtrak!
It does look like Amtrak has problems!
Amfleet Cars, based on the Budd Metroliners, were designed for high speed, short haul service in the Northeast Corridor. Many have been displaced by the 20 Acela Bullet Trains in the corridor.
In other uses, lots of stops on a long haul train will tend to flatten the wheels, also, few use bathrooms when on short haul trains. While the aging Amfleets might be on the end of a train for local passengers, AMTRAK NEEDS NEW LONG HAUL CARS! At least you got a seat, unlike the airlines, Amtrak does not "over book".
I sure the enemies of our country will want to know of the complete lack of Security at Gainesville. Wake up Amtrak!
Actually, there was some security at Gainesville. It just wasn't very pretty!
The equipment I'm taking issue with is the 60 seat, Amfleet IIs, which were long distance adaptations of the Metroliner shell Amfleet I's and are the mainstay of the all the eastern LD trains. They should have a changing room/sink only area like the older LD coaches did. I never realized that the Amfleet IIs, which only have one vestibule, actually are built with two, but have electric lockers in the blind end rather than exterior doors.
And, I'm OK with the "no platform" edict, generally, but the station was sooo shabby. They really need to blackmail Gainesville into better accomodations. Perhaps have Buford and/or Duluth GA compete for the stop. Most of the Gainesville riders are coming from the northern ATL suburbs anyway. Just another case of Amtrak not paying attention to business. When Amtrak took over the Crescent from SOU, there were 50,000 people in Gwinnett Co., a similar number in neighboring north Fulton and just about nobody in adjacent Forsyth. Gainesville was the next logical place to stop north of Atlanta in 1960 and maybe even 1980, but now there are over 600,000 people in Gwinnett alone, with similar growth in Fulton and Forsyth. Helloooo Amtrak? Anybody home? A million people who are within 10 miles of the route but who would have to travel 45 minute or more to the nearest station. Who's minding the store?
It ain't rocket science.
You give the passengers the option. You either let them pick their own seats when they book ala the airlines or you designate the cars by destination and let folks pick their own seat when they board. The seat checks are plain enough to make sure you get the right folks up for their stop. You just might have to walk a whole TWO coaches rather than one, though.
The train didn't fill out until the breakfast-time AM stops in Lynchburg and Charlottesville - lots of options for the overnighters w/o jamming them all in the rear car. Just takes a bit more creativity and customer focus other than "this is how we always do it". (I rode the Cresecent in the early 80s a few time and it was the same way, then, too)
And, I missed another, minor irritant. The car attendent did pass out pillows, but rather than just collecting them and stripping off the disposable pillow cases, he made an general anouncement and had the passengers strip off the pillow cases and throw them away. It's not like the guy was so busy cleaning the bathrooms.... What's next? We get to buss our own tables in the diner?
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