QUOTE: Originally posted by trainfinder22 Ed Ellis was a pretty bright kid with a lot of great Ideas to bring back freight railroading to the mainstream. One of these was that Amtrak should be in the freight buisness because Amtraks priority ans higher speeds would bring traffic to the rails that would otherwise go by road. Amtrak should also be the freight buisness for envirometal reasons as well because the Freight Railroads want nothing to do with LTL or Pallet shipments. Was not LTL and mail supposed to save amtrak? Mail needs more time because it takes at least 7 years or more for ANY buiseness to break even. MR GUNN is Playing Chicken with the feds again in that he thinks that all Passenger Rail should be subsidised like a National Subway system. Since he has no experance with Freight which have ALWAYS subsidized passenger service since day one running Passenger and freight together is a foreing concept to a TRANSIT MAN.. We NEED National high speed LTL service as a matter of national policy to unclog our roads and have cleaner air.[:)]
QUOTE: Originally posted by trainfinder22 [MR GUNN is Playing Chicken with the feds again in that he thinks that all Passenger Rail should be subsidised like a National Subway system. Since he has no experance with Freight which have ALWAYS subsidized passenger service since day one running Passenger and freight together is a foreing concept to a TRANSIT MAN.. We NEED National high speed LTL service as a matter of national policy to unclog our roads and have cleaner air.[:)]
QUOTE: Originally posted by Limitedclear Colin- Passenger inconvenience was only one issue. Remember, Ed's ideas required a LOT of extra cost. The capital costs of construction and maintenance of the MHCs, roadrailers and additionasl locomotives for both long haul and switching service at local terminals, the operating costs for extra switching crews or contracts with other railroads to perform switching, extra maintenance and operating costs for terminal facilities and personnel; costs of running extra trains to reposition equipment including equipment, locomotives and crews; and I could go on... All of these costs simply can't be borne by a few extra carloads tacked on to a passenger train on a once daily route. The costs immediately make competitive pricing impossible and the inevitable losses begin... Lets also not forget that based upon objections and litigation by Class 1s including UP, Amtrak was limited to how many cars of M&E were allowed per train, so margins had to be much higher than normal freight operations to compensate. M&E is a BAD business model that won't work. Not now, not later. LC
QUOTE: Originally posted by Junctionfan This is the problem with railroads-to much "can't be done" and "why should I spend money on that". Railroads lack innovation big time. My ideas are innovative enough in principle. I get tired of listening to thease nay-sayers, doom-sayers and protectors of the status quo. It is no wonder why some of thease businesses go belly-up. The "autorack" like idea to me is great because the enclosed unit protects against vandalism. My idea was to not have to wait for trucks or cranes to pick them up, just go as soon as the doors open (like a ferry). Obviously if they would use an autorack, you would have to remove the deck and anyways thease are modified autoracks (unilevels?). If the trailers take up 53 feet plus another maybe 15 feet for the truck?, only make them that big. Now why the heck couldn't this work? Forget the business text book quotes; I want to know if people would use this service. If the answer is yes and yes comes from a lot of trucking companies and enough to make the investment worth while, than why can't it be done?
-Don (Random stuff, mostly about trains - what else? http://blerfblog.blogspot.com/)
QUOTE: Originally posted by Junctionfan Thankyou Overmod for the information. I'm glad I'm not the only one who thinks the idea may work. I don't see a problem with the idea of this kind of service, as long as its funded properly.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Junctionfan How about trucks go on with those kind of wheel guides that you see at car washes? 2 metal bars, guiding the wheels but 2 on the inside and none on the outside (like railroad frogs). . I am debating if there should be conveyer belt system for wheel guides as it than would be automatic guiding.
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