QUOTE: Originally posted by CSSHEGEWISCH Point to remember (again): The former GN main line has trains operating over it, the Pacific Coast Extension is little more than a glorified bike trail.
QUOTE: Originally posted by greyhounds What's BN got to do with it? If a shipper wanted the service route between the Pacific Northwest and Chicago they used the Union Pacific. I worked for a forwarder (ltl/lcl and intermodal) in Chicago. Our "North Coast" freight went CNW-UP. Back then, the UP was fast and reliable. The MILW was caught between the UP and the BN. No wonder they died.
QUOTE: I do not know if Milwaukee officials over the years had planned or hoped for any realignments of their original route.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MichaelSol QUOTE: Originally posted by greyhounds ...I worked for a forwarder (ltl/lcl and intermodal) in Chicago. Our "North Coast" freight went CNW-UP. Back then, the UP was fast and reliable... This is a good example of ignoring facts....
QUOTE: Originally posted by greyhounds ...I worked for a forwarder (ltl/lcl and intermodal) in Chicago. Our "North Coast" freight went CNW-UP. Back then, the UP was fast and reliable...
QUOTE: Originally posted by bobwilcox QUOTE: Originally posted by MichaelSol QUOTE: Originally posted by greyhounds ...I worked for a forwarder (ltl/lcl and intermodal) in Chicago. Our "North Coast" freight went CNW-UP. Back then, the UP was fast and reliable... This is a good example of ignoring facts.... The customer is always right, even if you think he is wrong. We can spin all the theories we care to but greyhounds laid out the cash and the MILW did not get that cash.
QUOTE: Demand has far exceeded the Milwaukee's ability to provide an adequate freight car supply." Cruikshank, Paul F., "Verified Statement," August 30, 1979 Docket No. AB-7 (Sub-No. 86F), Exhibit 5, ICC hearings, 1979. This was a company that was in receivership because it had too much business.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MichaelSol QUOTE: I do not know if Milwaukee officials over the years had planned or hoped for any realignments of their original route. The Snoqualmie Tunnel is a line re-alignment from the original Laconia route. There were a number. Like most of the railroads, there were ongoing projects, grade lowering in Central Montana in 1956, work here and there. The biggest wish list project was a tunnel between Bryson and Adair, replacing Tunnel #19, St. Paul Tunnel (#20), Tunnels #21, #22, #23, #24, #25 #26, #27, #28, #29, #30, #31, #32, #33, and #34, four high steel bridges, about 1,000 degrees of curvature, ten miles of line, and lowering the grade to about .6% at 3500 feet. It would have been an extremely useful and productive improvement. Best regards, Michael Sol
QUOTE: If a shipper wanted the service route between the Pacific Northwest and Chicago they used the Union Pacific.
QUOTE: Originally posted by futuremodal but wouldn't then the Milwaukee have suffered the same constraints as GN per the Cascade and Flathead tunnels' trains per day limitations?
Thanks to Chris / CopCarSS for my avatar.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MichaelSol QUOTE: Originally posted by futuremodal but wouldn't then the Milwaukee have suffered the same constraints as GN per the Cascade and Flathead tunnels' trains per day limitations? Milwaukee had electrics. Best regards, Michael Sol
QUOTE: Originally posted by arbfbe Futuremodal, As is was explained to me by long term employees in the operating department, the east portal of the tunnel would be just out of the horseshoe curve at Bryson and the west portal would be between the tunnels at Adair. Supposedly it would be a gradeless tunnel but you would have to check elevations between the two points to confirm that. The length of the new tunnel was reputed to be equal to the total length for all the tunnels and bridges it would replace. Additionally, about 70% of all rotary trips had historically been on the line that would have been abandoned. As the story goes the tunnel had been an integral part of the original construction but no one had yet built a tunnel of that length and the MILW Board of Directors was hesitant to go into such a project only to find unstable soils and formations inside that would immensely increase the total cost of construction. The tunnel would have additionally eliminated helper service for most trains. Oh but for today's drilling technology and the ability to drill core samples for the entire length of the proposed tunnel. The tunnel part of the story has been confirmed but some of the details I have mentioned may be part folklore handed down amongst employees over 60 or more years by the time I heard them. There must be surveys of the proposed bore that someone may access.
QUOTE: Originally posted by futuremodal QUOTE: Originally posted by arbfbe Futuremodal, As is was explained to me by long term employees in the operating department, the east portal of the tunnel would be just out of the horseshoe curve at Bryson and the west portal would be between the tunnels at Adair. Supposedly it would be a gradeless tunnel but you would have to check elevations between the two points to confirm that. The length of the new tunnel was reputed to be equal to the total length for all the tunnels and bridges it would replace. Additionally, about 70% of all rotary trips had historically been on the line that would have been abandoned. As the story goes the tunnel had been an integral part of the original construction but no one had yet built a tunnel of that length and the MILW Board of Directors was hesitant to go into such a project only to find unstable soils and formations inside that would immensely increase the total cost of construction. The tunnel would have additionally eliminated helper service for most trains. Oh but for today's drilling technology and the ability to drill core samples for the entire length of the proposed tunnel. The tunnel part of the story has been confirmed but some of the details I have mentioned may be part folklore handed down amongst employees over 60 or more years by the time I heard them. There must be surveys of the proposed bore that someone may access. Michael Sol describes the elimination of Tunnel's 19-34 with this project, which clearly shows a substantial grade realignment as well as the new tunnel. It may be that this was a long term project borne of the original plans, and then the grade realignment was added to later plans.
QUOTE: Originally posted by greyhounds Sol has misrepresented what I say. I pointed out that the service route between Chicago and the Pacific Northwest was CNW-UP. He then accused me of ignoring the "Free Cash Flow". I never mentioned "Cash Flow" until this post. Intereresting. You say you never mentioned "Free Cash Flow" until this post, but that I accused you of ignoring it previously. Isn't "not mentioning it" kind of, sort of, exactly the same thing as "ignoring" it? So, if you didn't mention it, isn't that exactly what I said, you "ignored it?" Good grief, what a hoot. And of course statistics showing Milwaukee with greater market share obviously supports the idea that UP/CNW was "the" market route. But, don't customers create "market share"? In Oregon, customers may have used UP, or BN, or SP. Don't know, since the correspondent provides no evidence of anything. In Washington State, customers favored the Milwaukee over the UP/CNW and that was verified by an ICC traffic analysis. Big customers favored Milwaukee over everyone, and Milwaukee made very good money. Hopefully making more sense than the correspondent, the "Free Cash Flow" was what paid for things. A 35% or more gross profit margin does not suggest break-even pricing; far from it, it shows Milwaukee's control of the premium traffic market. The corresponding corollary is that something, somewhere else, was sucking up "Free Cash Flow" since the Company as a whole was about $55 million in the hole in 1977. Ya think? Best regards, Michael Sol Reply MichaelSol Member sinceOctober 2004 3,190 posts Posted by MichaelSol on Thursday, August 25, 2005 1:48 AM QUOTE: Greyhounds wrote:Way back then, there was Federal ecnomic rate regulation. Now if by Federal Law you keep the rates low enough, shippers will, in fact, flock to your service. Of course, since the rates are artificially low, you loose your shirts providing the service That's what was going on with the Milwaukee and the ICG and the Rock Island and some others. Please provide specific proof for your statement that "this is what was going on with the Milwaukee," and specifically for your contention that Milwaukee Road's rates out West were artificially low. Best regards, Michael Sol Reply MichaelSol Member sinceOctober 2004 3,190 posts Posted by MichaelSol on Thursday, August 25, 2005 1:52 AM QUOTE: Originally posted by Murphy Siding p.s. I'm not sure if *everyone* realizes this, but the Milwaukee Road is gone now! *Some* think it's just hiding incognito-like Elvis![}:)] It's a "Milwaukee" thread, Murphy. Hard to talk about the past without talking about the past. Best regards, Michael Sol Reply arbfbe Member sinceFebruary 2002 910 posts Posted by arbfbe on Thursday, August 25, 2005 11:07 AM p.s. I'm not sure if *everyone* realizes this, but the Milwaukee Road is gone now! *Some* think it's just hiding incognito-like Elvis![}:)]
Sol has misrepresented what I say. I pointed out that the service route between Chicago and the Pacific Northwest was CNW-UP. He then accused me of ignoring the "Free Cash Flow". I never mentioned "Cash Flow" until this post.
QUOTE: Greyhounds wrote:Way back then, there was Federal ecnomic rate regulation. Now if by Federal Law you keep the rates low enough, shippers will, in fact, flock to your service. Of course, since the rates are artificially low, you loose your shirts providing the service That's what was going on with the Milwaukee and the ICG and the Rock Island and some others.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Murphy Siding p.s. I'm not sure if *everyone* realizes this, but the Milwaukee Road is gone now! *Some* think it's just hiding incognito-like Elvis![}:)]
QUOTE: Originally posted by MichaelSol QUOTE: Originally posted by Murphy Siding p.s. I'm not sure if *everyone* realizes this, but the Milwaukee Road is gone now! *Some* think it's just hiding incognito-like Elvis![}:)] It's a "Milwaukee" thread, Murphy. Hard to talk about the past without talking about the past. Best regards, Michael Sol
QUOTE: Originally posted by greyhounds QUOTE: Demand has far exceeded the Milwaukee's ability to provide an adequate freight car supply." Cruikshank, Paul F., "Verified Statement," August 30, 1979 Docket No. AB-7 (Sub-No. 86F), Exhibit 5, ICC hearings, 1979. This was a company that was in receivership because it had too much business. You know, I think Sol actually believes this. The poor man. The Milwaukee couldn't provide equipment for the same reason the ICG couldn't provide equipment. It wouldn't pay for itself. We had "Oodles" of bad order equipment sitting around. And we had shippers that wanted to use that equipment at the artificially low charges. But we couldn't afford to fix it because we'd never get our money back.
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