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Automobile as excess baggage on all passenger trains

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Automobile as excess baggage on all passenger trains
Posted by Jerry from Kuna on Thursday, December 6, 2012 11:50 AM

The Auto Train is a great idea, but why can't all passenger trains have a single level auto carrier (box car) to carry a personal auto as excess baggage to passengers holding tickets for travel?  I would take the train if I could have my car to get around once I got to my destination, either for work or vacation.  (I'm a freelance cameraman, video).

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Posted by Phoebe Vet on Thursday, December 6, 2012 1:11 PM

Unless you are going for an extended length of time, it is cheaper to rent a car at your destination than it would be to ship your own.  The dwell time at each station to load and unload vehicles would be a major drain on the schedule.

Now if there is something special about your vehicle that makes you need that vehicle at the destination, that would be different.

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Posted by BaltACD on Thursday, December 6, 2012 1:25 PM

The B&O in the late 60's tried transporting autos in regular passenger service - with a remarkable lack of success.

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Posted by henry6 on Thursday, December 6, 2012 2:52 PM

You'd need a car carrier for every pairing of stops and have to break the train at each stop the number of times you have pairings.  How loud can you scream "nightmare"?  It might work with enough cars between maybe three or four city pairs over a 1000 mile distance, but it really would be a logistical and operating headache.  Every stop would be at least a half hour for switiching out or unloading/loading.  Marketablity shot before you start.

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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, December 6, 2012 5:29 PM

Passengers on the Overland between Melbourne, Victoria, and Adelaide, South Australia, can take their personal vehicle on the train. The train runs three times a week in both directions. The cost ranges from $142 to $191 AUD. Vehicles can only be carried from end point to end point. The car carrier is located at the back of the train.

Passengers on the Ghan, which runs once or twice a week, depending on the season, between Adelaide and Darwin, can take their car from Adelaide to Alice Springs or on to Darwin and vice versa.  Prices range from $204 to $1,067 AUD.  The train stops in Alice Springs for more than four hours, so there is ample time to off load vehicles bound for the Springs and load cars for Darwin or Adelaide.

Passengers on the Indian Pacific, which runs from Sydney to Perth, can take a personal vehicle from Sydney to Perth or Adelaide; Adelaide passengers can take a personal vehicle from there to Sydney or Perth and vice versa.  The Indian Pacific runs once or twice a week depending on the time of the year. The cost ranges from $235 to $1,135 AUD depending on the distance and size of the vehicle. This train lays over in Adelaide for more than three hours, so there is plenty of time to off load and load vehicles.    

The Great Southern Railway, which is investor own, receives some subsidies from the Australian federal government. It has been offering the option to transport personal vehicles on its premier trains since at least 1999. Apparently it generates enough revenue to make the effort worthwhile.  

The Great Southern Railway is not a government operation. This is one of the reasons for the innovation. And one of the reasons for only running the trains when there is a demand for them rather than for political reasons.  

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Posted by John WR on Thursday, December 6, 2012 7:19 PM

When Auto Train was a private company they tried a second Auto Train between Chicago and Florida.  It didn't pay.  Amtrak never tried it.  While carrying private vehicles would probably not work between every station there could be cities where it would not be impossible.  

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Posted by Paul Milenkovic on Thursday, December 6, 2012 7:57 PM

Take a look at US Patent 3285194 "Combination Railway and Passenger Automobile Transportation Systems" invented by Deodat Clejan of General American Transportation Corporation  http://www.google.com/patents/US3285194 (you have undoubtedly seen GATX on the side of tank cars and other railway cars).

Clejan, a Roumanian emigre (Web references mistakenly give his origin as France), was the inventor of one of the systems of truck trailer piggyback on railroad flatcars.  RRollway, an HSR auto ferry was supposed to be the next big thing after that.  He died in a small plane crash -- I remember when Dad came into the kitchen with that sad news -- and I guess the dream died with him.

The key feature of RRollway is a purpose-built wide-gauge wide-body railroad line and train cars that allow random access at stops by driving cars on and off sideways.  If you are building an HSR from scratch, why stop at standard gauge and why be constrained to the usual loading gauge?  Also, an electric HSR will have so much power that Interstate-type grades are not a problem.  The idea is to follow the terrain instead of worrying about "water-level railway lines", and I think the French do some of that with their TGV.

Among the documents I have from  Dad's garage are dimensions of 1960's era automobiles.  I immediately knew what that was about -- the RRollway project and how wide to build the train.

The other "vintage" aspect of RRollway was saving space by allowing entry/exit from only one side of your automobile.  Back then, bench seats were common place.  Nowadays you can pretty much slide in and out of one side for the back seat, but the fashion is for bucket seats and between-seat consoles.  I think it is really hard for the driver to enter a car from the passenger side.

After Clejan's passing, Dad (V. Milenkovic) patented concepts for a car ferry using standard-gauge rails.  One concept was for a wide-body side-loading car ferry but with a low center of gravity, where the car bays would be between the wheels of an articulated train with shared trucks between train cars.  Another concept was for a double deck end-loaded car carrier, but the auto bay was on a Flexi-van style turntable, that allowed access to autos on individual rail cars without having to switch cars in and out of the train.  I think there was a "What's New" feature in Popular Science/Popular Mechanics depicting that auto carrier.

My contribution to "the dream" was to go with smaller and especially much shorter cars, mainly to allow drive-on drive-off side loading of a railway auto ferry, without going overboard on expanding the loading gauge.  I was an avid reader of Popular Mechanics and Popular Science and had seen depictions of the hatchback style automobile in the concept stage.  I still have a balsa wood car model that looks remarkably like a VW Rabbit (now Golf) that I built, maybe as much as 7 years before that car was sold in the U.S..  

My car design was a lot wider than the subcompact hatchback design that came to the market some years later.  The idea was for a 6-passenger "family car" but one that was short rather than being strictly a small car.  That car model, by the way, was an expression of my interest in railroad trains, if you are following my reasoning back then.

If GM "killed the electric car", what am I doing standing next to an EV-1, a half a block from the WSOR tracks?

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Posted by V.Payne on Friday, December 7, 2012 8:43 PM

That is pretty neat that you have that connection. I remember seeing some of your dad's designs in a Google search, neat ideas. I agree that you need to let the passengers load their own cars to make shorter distances possible. I also like this design, check out the tail fins!  http://www.google.com/patents/US3149583?pg=PA10&dq=Rail+automobile+car+carrier&hl=en&sa=X&ei=VajCUL6zLojYywHG54CIAg&ved=0CEMQ6AEwAg

I have some corresponce from IRM where people were writing in to Pullman back in the 1950's asking for the service.

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Posted by n012944 on Sunday, December 9, 2012 8:13 PM

John WR

When Auto Train was a private company they tried a second Auto Train between Chicago and Florida.  It didn't pay.  Amtrak never tried it.  While carrying private vehicles would probably not work between every station there could be cities where it would not be impossible.  

Auto Train's second train was from Louisville to Florida, not Chicago.

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Posted by John WR on Monday, December 10, 2012 5:53 PM

n012944
Auto Train's second train was from Louisville to Florida, not Chicago.

Right.  But on the current Auto Train does not draw its riders from the greater Lorton metropolitan area; many come from the greater New York metropolitan area.  Louisville is a 5 hour drive from Chicago and Chicago is a large city.  I understand that Chicago was considered and important source of riders.  

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Posted by BaltACD on Monday, December 10, 2012 6:25 PM

John WR

n012944
Auto Train's second train was from Louisville to Florida, not Chicago.

Right.  But on the current Auto Train does not draw its riders from the greater Lorton metropolitan area; many come from the greater New York metropolitan area.  Louisville is a 5 hour drive from Chicago and Chicago is a large city.  I understand that Chicago was considered and important source of riders.  

 

The existing Auto-Train does not draw it's business from a single area but the entirety of the cities in the Northeast - New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington and all their surrounding suburbs.

Likewise the Louisville terminal was positioned to draw from Chicago, Indianapolis, Cleveland, Columbus, Cincinnati as well as Louisville and probably St. Louis.  Have no idea of the cause for the end of this service, however, I suspect that the precarious financial position of the original Auto-Train company didn't permit adequate promotion of the service.  There is also the fact that even when there was through Chicago-Florida passenger service there wasn't enough business to support the three premiere trains 'The City of Miami, The South Wind and The Dixie Flagler' on more than a alternating day basis so that the three ended up providing daily end point to end point service.  On the East Coast, there was sufficient business for the legacy carriers to have multiple daily schedules to both coasts of Florida from New York.

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Posted by henry6 on Monday, December 10, 2012 6:39 PM

The most important successful part of Auto Train was the marketing decision that people would drive so far and take the overnight portion aboard the train.  Amtrak has been smart enough to keep that intact as Lorton VA is 5-10 hour drive from Maine to NY to Buffalo.  A mid west train would have to be at a central location with a 10 hour population pattern similar to Lorton.

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Posted by Paul Milenkovic on Tuesday, December 11, 2012 10:14 AM

henry6

The most important successful part of Auto Train was the marketing decision that people would drive so far and take the overnight portion aboard the train.  Amtrak has been smart enough to keep that intact as Lorton VA is 5-10 hour drive from Maine to NY to Buffalo.  A mid west train would have to be at a central location with a 10 hour population pattern similar to Lorton.

Missing from this equation are the Alleghenies and the Smokies and whatever mountain ranges need to be crossed, going from the general direction of the Upper Midwest to Florida.

The thing about an automobile ferry is that you are moving a lot of tonnage -- not only the passengers but their automobiles plus the tare weight of the auto carrier plus the weight of railroad coaches, sleeping cars, and related amenities for overnight train travel.  The Midwest is at a disadvantage of (more) of a mountain range to carry that weight.

Jim Hediger, Senior Editor of Model Railroader, wrote (maybe more years ago than he or I want to remember) one of the definitive articles on the original private-company Auto Train, "This Highway is not on any Oil Company Map", dating the article as to what oil company or gas station gives out maps anymore?  In it, he reported on Auto Train's claim that their operation achieves substantial fuel savings over driving.  Whether a rail auto ferry service can ever get enough market share to make a dent in the national fuel consumption picture is disputable, but were the Auto Train to be comparable to auto fuel usage at especially today's oil prices, that would be a major contributor to cost.  On the other hand, cars have gotten more fuel efficient since the inception of Auto Train and the Amtrak Auto Train service.

By the way, the RRollway proposal as well as the stillborn auto train service proposed as part of the Metroliner and TurboTrain projects that preceded Auto Train, those services would have people ride in their own automobiles, where the passengers would be permitted to "get up and walk around" to visit cafe cars and other on-train amenities.  That plan saves on the weight and fuel and cost of providing coaches and sleepers for the passengers, but I imagine that an airconditioned autocarrier with smooth-riding trucks would be heavier and more expensive than a bare autocarrier car, even with high-speed trucks.

We can argue the merits of ride-in-your-car vs park-the-car-and-ride-in-a-coach-seat.  I suppose many people here think that railroad cars that are somewhat roomier than many private autos and the conductor may seat you next to Don Oltmann's proverbial overweight person who in a perfect world would be accomodated by giving them the pair of seats, many of us think that a railroad car is the perfect mode of transportation and why would anyone want to sit for the whole distance in their car.

But Auto Train corporation went with the park-the-car mode as the most pragmatic and easiest to implement.  The type of enclosed, smooth riding, enclosed, airconditioned auto carrier rail car does not exist.  Loading requires the passengers driving themselves into what are tight parking spaces, and I guess it was cheaper to pay workers to park customer autos in auto carriers (ex CN "boxcar" autocarriers, originally, when CN has the idea of the passenger auto as "excess baggage").

The other thing Auto Train did was buy those full-length dome cars and stuff them with coach seats, and there was no sleeping cars originally.  The idea was that the trip was a single overnight, and their plan was to keep the passengers entertained with movies and cabaret musicians and the like.  Trains Magazine's John Kneiling claimed that the only successful passenger operations were "selling entertainment", and he used Auto Train and the steam-powered Cumbres and Toltec, both being "start up" enterprises in the day, as examples.

Again, Auto Train "underpowered" the consist, using only a pair of "U-boats" on the longish passenger consist (did they switch in and out a 3rd locomotive unit on a more hilly portion of the route?), stopping only for crew changes and locomotive service (fuel, steam generator water), maybe running the train at "intermodal" speeds instead of full "passenger train" speeds, partly because of the long train and the auto carriers, partly to save the cost of fuel.  It seems the Kentucky Auto Train required more locomotive units. 

If GM "killed the electric car", what am I doing standing next to an EV-1, a half a block from the WSOR tracks?

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Posted by oltmannd on Tuesday, December 11, 2012 12:17 PM

Paul Milenkovic

henry6

The most important successful part of Auto Train was the marketing decision that people would drive so far and take the overnight portion aboard the train.  Amtrak has been smart enough to keep that intact as Lorton VA is 5-10 hour drive from Maine to NY to Buffalo.  A mid west train would have to be at a central location with a 10 hour population pattern similar to Lorton.

Missing from this equation are the Alleghenies and the Smokies and whatever mountain ranges need to be crossed, going from the general direction of the Upper Midwest to Florida.

The thing about an automobile ferry is that you are moving a lot of tonnage -- not only the passengers but their automobiles plus the tare weight of the auto carrier plus the weight of railroad coaches, sleeping cars, and related amenities for overnight train travel.  The Midwest is at a disadvantage of (more) of a mountain range to carry that weight.

Jim Hediger, Senior Editor of Model Railroader, wrote (maybe more years ago than he or I want to remember) one of the definitive articles on the original private-company Auto Train, "This Highway is not on any Oil Company Map", dating the article as to what oil company or gas station gives out maps anymore?  In it, he reported on Auto Train's claim that their operation achieves substantial fuel savings over driving.  Whether a rail auto ferry service can ever get enough market share to make a dent in the national fuel consumption picture is disputable, but were the Auto Train to be comparable to auto fuel usage at especially today's oil prices, that would be a major contributor to cost.  On the other hand, cars have gotten more fuel efficient since the inception of Auto Train and the Amtrak Auto Train service.

By the way, the RRollway proposal as well as the stillborn auto train service proposed as part of the Metroliner and TurboTrain projects that preceded Auto Train, those services would have people ride in their own automobiles, where the passengers would be permitted to "get up and walk around" to visit cafe cars and other on-train amenities.  That plan saves on the weight and fuel and cost of providing coaches and sleepers for the passengers, but I imagine that an airconditioned autocarrier with smooth-riding trucks would be heavier and more expensive than a bare autocarrier car, even with high-speed trucks.

We can argue the merits of ride-in-your-car vs park-the-car-and-ride-in-a-coach-seat.  I suppose many people here think that railroad cars that are somewhat roomier than many private autos and the conductor may seat you next to Don Oltmann's proverbial overweight person who in a perfect world would be accomodated by giving them the pair of seats, many of us think that a railroad car is the perfect mode of transportation and why would anyone want to sit for the whole distance in their car.

But Auto Train corporation went with the park-the-car mode as the most pragmatic and easiest to implement.  The type of enclosed, smooth riding, enclosed, airconditioned auto carrier rail car does not exist.  Loading requires the passengers driving themselves into what are tight parking spaces, and I guess it was cheaper to pay workers to park customer autos in auto carriers (ex CN "boxcar" autocarriers, originally, when CN has the idea of the passenger auto as "excess baggage").

The other thing Auto Train did was buy those full-length dome cars and stuff them with coach seats, and there was no sleeping cars originally.  The idea was that the trip was a single overnight, and their plan was to keep the passengers entertained with movies and cabaret musicians and the like.  Trains Magazine's John Kneiling claimed that the only successful passenger operations were "selling entertainment", and he used Auto Train and the steam-powered Cumbres and Toltec, both being "start up" enterprises in the day, as examples.

Again, Auto Train "underpowered" the consist, using only a pair of "U-boats" on the longish passenger consist (did they switch in and out a 3rd locomotive unit on a more hilly portion of the route?), stopping only for crew changes and locomotive service (fuel, steam generator water), maybe running the train at "intermodal" speeds instead of full "passenger train" speeds, partly because of the long train and the auto carriers, partly to save the cost of fuel.  It seems the Kentucky Auto Train required more locomotive units. 

The whole "bring your car with you" deal involves where the break-even point is vs. renting for the consumer.    Florida works because people often take extended trips there - snowbirds, family vacations, etc. or those in FL have roots back in the northeast.

Rental cars are fairly cheap so you'd have to stay for more than several days for the $$ to work out.

I've always thought there was money to be made moving snowbird RVs between the NE and midwest and Florida and the SW.  These things consume mass quantities of fuel and would do a lot better by rail, so there should be a real edge in fuel cost.  Better, if you could figure out a way to have the people live in their RV's during the trip.  Lots and lots of safety and equipment issues to work through.  I'm not sure is solvable, but would be interesting to try...

Some sort of reinforced and FRA glazed, ventilated uni-level with electric "hook up"?  People would not be allowed out of their RV while the train was moving?  Fire suppression?  Tie downs?  Ride quality?

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Posted by Paul Milenkovic on Tuesday, December 11, 2012 12:34 PM

oltmannd

I've always thought there was money to be made moving snowbird RVs between the NE and midwest and Florida and the SW.  These things consume mass quantities of fuel and would do a lot better by rail, so there should be a real edge in fuel cost.  Better, if you could figure out a way to have the people live in their RV's during the trip.  Lots and lots of safety and equipment issues to work through.  I'm not sure is solvable, but would be interesting to try...

Some sort of reinforced and FRA glazed, ventilated uni-level with electric "hook up"?  People would not be allowed out of their RV while the train was moving?  Fire suppression?  Tie downs?  Ride quality?

I wonder if that is part of the thing with a Kentucky Auto Train.  There are "snow birds" in the Upper Midwest, but there seems to be more volume of this kind of thing between the Northeast and Florida owing to population density and history of where people from one region looked to vacation in another region.

FRA glazed, ventilated, fire suppression, you got it pegged in terms of the problem of any kind of ride-in-your-car-or-SUV-or-RV Auto Train -- the sort of thing that take a 50 thousand dollar freight car and turn it into a 5 million dollar passenger train car.  The other thing is that the auto carrier is a kind of garage -- suppose some wise guy turns on their motor -- is there enough ventilation that people don't choke?

With respect to ride-the-train let-your-car-ride-too, truckers do quite the business transporting cars to and from Florida, for the snow birds, for folks wanting to buy a Florida car that hasn't seen a Northern  winter, and so on.  Maybe not same-day-service, but I heard there are "Auto Train" like deals of get your car shipped and take a bus?

Forget about the mixed passenger and auto carrier train.  Is there a market for a kind of fast "intermodal speed" train giving overnight delivery of your car, serving the snowbirds and serious vacationers, and the customers takes the train, bus, plane, or even just a car if they are shipping a trailer or an RV?  Yeah, you have to worry about scratching a person's car, but truckers who do this tally up the dents and scratches on your shipped car (I did this once to buy a family member's vehicle for a second car -- the trucker joked that people usually use his service to ship newer cars with many fewer scratches and dents).

Cars, SUV's, small trucks, RV's and even camping trailers?  The trucker who delivered my car said a customer used his service to ship a power chair.  So yes, power chairs!

If GM "killed the electric car", what am I doing standing next to an EV-1, a half a block from the WSOR tracks?

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Posted by schlimm on Tuesday, December 11, 2012 12:48 PM

Another factor to consider in regard to a Midwest to Florida auto-train is that many snowbirds in the Midwest  go to Arizona.  Also the routes from Louisville south would not permit a schedule as quick as the east coast route.  From Chicago to L'ville, the route is very slow.

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Posted by Jim200 on Tuesday, December 11, 2012 3:05 PM
I was trying to figure out why it would take so long to disconnect one set of autoracks and reconnect another set. With two yard locomotives could this be done in 5 minutes? With one yard locomotive in 8 minutes? With only the train locomotive and a reverse to setout, and a forward & reverse to connect to the second set of autoracks - in 5 minutes? This probably depends on rules (of which I am unfamiliar), air brake system, and number of autoracks. At www.railway-technical.com/brake2.shtml , Al Krug does a good job of explaining air brake systems and their pitfalls. Getting brake pipe pressure up to 80 - 100 psi and checking for leaks and release wouldn't take too long for just 2 autoracks, but 20 would be another story. Would you be allowed to retain the brake pipe pressure from the yard locomotive and use the End Of Train device for pressure verification? This would speed things up. //Keeping track of autorack destination for 3 cities is not a problem, but after that you are going to need special autoracks and side loading looks interesting. Added complexity, however, increases your modes of failure. Finally there is the money angle, new more expensive autoracks, new terminal facilities, more personnel, more marketing, and empty backhaul logistics. I say lets do it.
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Posted by Phoebe Vet on Tuesday, December 11, 2012 3:42 PM

The first hole in your argument is that all the cars on  the autorack would have to be going from the same city to the same city.  The second is that it would add AT LEAST ten minutes to each stop.  Multiply that by the number of stops.  Then there is the purchase cost and crew cost for the yard engine at each stop.  Last but not least, not every stop has a place to store the two autoracks, the one being dropped and the one being picked up.

Transporting autos must be limited to end points or at least crew change / refueling stops.  Any other plan would be too complicated to be practical.

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Posted by henry6 on Tuesday, December 11, 2012 4:26 PM

Jim200
I was trying to figure out why it would take so long to disconnect one set of autoracks and reconnect another set. With two yard locomotives could this be done in 5 minutes? With one yard locomotive in 8 minutes? With only the train locomotive and a reverse to setout, and a forward & reverse to connect to the second set of autoracks - in 5 minutes? This probably depends on rules (of which I am unfamiliar), air brake system, and number of autoracks. At www.railway-technical.com/brake2.shtml , Al Krug does a good job of explaining air brake systems and their pitfalls. Getting brake pipe pressure up to 80 - 100 psi and checking for leaks and release wouldn't take too long for just 2 autoracks, but 20 would be another story. Would you be allowed to retain the brake pipe pressure from the yard locomotive and use the End Of Train device for pressure verification? This would speed things up. //Keeping track of autorack destination for 3 cities is not a problem, but after that you are going to need special autoracks and side loading looks interesting. Added complexity, however, increases your modes of failure. Finally there is the money angle, new more expensive autoracks, new terminal facilities, more personnel, more marketing, and empty backhaul logistics. I say lets do it.

5 minutes!!! Two switchers!!! Maybe on the Lionel Lines but on two rails 4 ft 8 1/2 inches apart, no.  

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Posted by oltmannd on Wednesday, December 12, 2012 4:36 PM

The trick isn't to switch the cars, it's figuring out how to do "live" roll - on, roll - off.

The time wouldn't be terrible.  They used to do 5 minute engine changes in NH. A head-end pick up or set off is no different by rule (as long as the pick up block had an air test ahead of time)

But, then, a certain freight RR I know has trouble doing step-on, step-off intermediate crew changes in 15 minutes.

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Posted by passengerfan on Thursday, December 13, 2012 7:19 PM

Back in the late sixties or possibly the early seventies the CN ran cars on the rear of the Super Continental between Toronto and Edmonton that one could travel with there auto. The problem with the experiment was you had to serender your car to CN the day before your trip and pick it up the day after arrival. They used the same double deck enclosed auto carriers that were used on the original Auto-Train as they were purchased from CN anyway. It was my understanding that only a single auto carrier was carried on the rear of the Super Continental and that it was booked solid even with the timeline involving the car. I don't know why CN limited the service to just a single car per train as from what I have been able to learn they could have filled two or three or even more on many days. I do not remember what the charge was for a car but that was when they were promoting Red-White-Bllue fares for passengers. I know of another attempt that was made for passengers to take a train from Toronto to Florida changing trains in Chicago and for passengers wanting to take there car to Florida there was  a car carrier that would load your car in Toronto and and deliver it to you in Florida in time for your trains arrival. This was before Amtrak and the US and Canadian customs did not look kindly on this operation for whatever reason. To bad it might have been successful. A Rail-Truck operation that held much promise in the beginning. 

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Posted by jclass on Thursday, December 13, 2012 8:55 PM

What about something like the drive-on drive-off Chunnel trains?  Is there a potential market somewhere in the US or Canada? 

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Chargement_voiture_Eurotunnel.jpg

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Posted by Jerry from Kuna on Saturday, December 15, 2012 4:26 AM

In the movie "The Italian Job" they load a number of cars in just seconds.  Pie in the sky Hollywood treatment but if there is a will and it is profitable, there would be a way.  Even one station in every state, the driving time would be more acceptable than driving hundreds, thousands of miles to get to a destination.  Restrictions like 14 day advanced reservation or next day or two delivery to your destination city where the auto transport freight car would be moved by freight train consist and to a nearby siding.  Has anyone like AAA or travel agents asked the question, done a survey, about taking your car with you on vacation?

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Posted by henry6 on Saturday, December 15, 2012 10:51 AM

You can probably pull such loading and unloading on Lionel Lines and Basement HO RR...but reality of geography and technicalities and practicalities of time make the idea unreliable and unusable at this time.

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Posted by Paul Milenkovic on Saturday, December 15, 2012 11:41 AM

henry6

You can probably pull such loading and unloading on Lionel Lines and Basement HO RR...but reality of geography and technicalities and practicalities of time make the idea unreliable and unusable at this time.

Those of us who are active in model railroading know 1) Lionel does not make HO scale, and 2) there is a "prototype" for everything -- see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eurotunnel_Shuttle

If GM "killed the electric car", what am I doing standing next to an EV-1, a half a block from the WSOR tracks?

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Posted by henry6 on Saturday, December 15, 2012 2:50 PM

You miss my point...and I do know Lionel no longer makes HO.  And anything can happen and be on some railroad at some time.  Yes.  

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Posted by Paul Milenkovic on Saturday, December 15, 2012 3:22 PM

The only reason to mention "Lionel" in the context of a discussion of real-world transportation policy is to be demeaning or belittling of what someone is proposing.  

Once derided as "toy" or "child's" trains by serious scale model train enthusiasts, Lionel and other brands of large scale, toy, or "hi-rail" model trains are enjoying a resurgence, among collectors of the older trains as well as hobbyists operating for recreation the current Lionel and other large scale offerings.

Someone proposes a drive-on drive-off railway auto ferry as a service, someone else responds to that proposal with ridicule, I point to the Chunnel Shuttle doing the just the thing being proposed (along with side loading to avoid expensive switching moves), and I am missing a point?

And while we are on a model-railroading-as-not-real-railroading metaphor, did I mention that the Chunnel Shuttle turns its trains with a reversing loop?

If GM "killed the electric car", what am I doing standing next to an EV-1, a half a block from the WSOR tracks?

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Posted by henry6 on Saturday, December 15, 2012 4:40 PM

No.  I am of course wrong...sorry.  Chunnel trumps my arrogance.

RIDEWITHMEHENRY is the name for our almost monthly day of riding trains and transit in either the NYCity or Philadelphia areas including all commuter lines, Amtrak, subways, light rail and trolleys, bus and ferries when warranted. No fees, just let us know you want to join the ride and pay your fares. Ask to be on our email list or find us on FB as RIDEWITHMEHENRY (all caps) to get descriptions of each outing.

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Posted by passengerfan on Saturday, December 15, 2012 9:17 PM

Every winter Detroit and some of the other automobile manufacturers have new cars transported to Arizona to the test tracks manitained in that state. The special double deck auto carriers have a special loading elevator on these trailers for lifting the cars to what ever level they are going to be tied down on. I don't know about now but in past years when there was additional space on the transport trucks you could transport a car to Phoenix pretty cheap in the winter time when the next years new cars were being transported there for testing. I don't know if it can still be done but many snowbirds sure liked the idea of flying to Arizona and there car would arrive in a few days. In those pre Amtrak days you could even take the train from Detroit to Phoenix changing trains in Chicago and your car would arrive a day or two after your arrival in Phoenix.

Al - in - Stockton

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Posted by Jim200 on Wednesday, December 19, 2012 1:32 PM
I was trying to figure out operational aspects of running an Auto Train by looking at what happens in Europe. The Netherlands and Czech Republic only go city to city. France and Germany do 2 - 4 cities. France is different from the rest of Europe by having the cars go separate from the people, who make their way to the destination and pick up their car the next day. Finland services 4 and 5 cities, and Austria tops the list with 6 cities. I am not certain that Austria uses just one train, but all cities lie in a line. From east to west Austria's cities are Vienna, Graz,Villach, Lienz, Innsbruck, and Feldkirch next to the Swiss border. Cars are transported between Vienna and all cities except for Graz, and between Graz and Feldkirch, and Villach and Feldkirch. How does Europe do 4, 5, and maybe 6 city car transportation? From what I've seen, Europe uses open sided, two level, end loaded auto carriers which are driven onto by the car owner. //Side loading auto carriers would make multicity car delivery less complicated, and the Chunnel Shuttle is a simple and reliable design. I haven't found technical specifications, but it looks to be about 20 ft wide, whereas we would probably be restricted to 10 ft internally. We could use only the lower level for some intermediate stops. The more complicated Morrill swivelling pad could also be used in some situations. Europe has managed to operate 4, 5, or maybe 6 cities, but perhaps at the expense of time.

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