QUOTE: Originally posted by MichaelSol QUOTE: Originally posted by greyhounds [brThey also increased their cash flow by not maintianing the railroad. If you don't replace the ties you can keep going for years, you get slower and slower. But you can creep over the railroad for years. Eventually, you face a tremendous rebuilding cost, throw up your hands and retreat. This is what happened. I keep asking for your actual numbers, but all I get is baloney. The BN conditions produced approximately $500 million in additional cash flow 1970-1977. Expenses didn't increase by nearly that much. We know that because we have specific data. As one retired Milwaukee VPO put it, "the Milwaukee had a choice between the very good revenue from long haul traffic, or the short haul traffic that railroads were trying to get rid of because there was no profit in it Their choice made no sense. Milwaukee was the only railroad in the country that thought it could make money off the short haul." Why do you argue that long haul was unprofitable, and short haul the way to go? What school did you get your MBA from? You have already confused "cash flow" with "net cash flow," and this is specifically documented on this thread, and then you pretended you knew there was no difference when in fact there is a huge difference You would have flunked out of the MBA courses I took. I keep looking for numbers here, and you keep pretending numbers are not important, only your "conclusions." I guess this comes down to this, since you refuse to offer any support for any of your contentions. How do you "know" so much about the Milwaukee Road, more than its employees, more than it's officers, more than the numbers, more than anybody? Please, this time be specific. Best regards, Michael Sol
QUOTE: Originally posted by greyhounds [brThey also increased their cash flow by not maintianing the railroad. If you don't replace the ties you can keep going for years, you get slower and slower. But you can creep over the railroad for years. Eventually, you face a tremendous rebuilding cost, throw up your hands and retreat. This is what happened.
QUOTE: Originally posted by greyhounds [There is no real difference between "cash flow" and "free cash flow". I think it's another thing you've made up to support your false ideology. "Cash Flow" is what gets deposited in the bank after you pay your bills. If you're living off your assets, not replacing them, you have cash flow but you're not making money. You don't/won't understand that.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MP173 [But, I do know enough to realize that you cannot allow emotion get in the way of facts and the simple fact is the Milw folks might have had a decent franchise if they had managed it correctly. They chose not to. They did not use the cash flow properly (regardless of which definition one uses) to invest in their business. They ignored cold hard data which suggested the path that should have been taken.
QUOTE: Originally posted by greyhounds [MBA from Loyola of Chicago. MS in transportation from Northwestern in Evanston, IL. BA in political science from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Murphy Siding MichaelSol: Since you're never at a loss for words,could you explain why the Milwaukee Road Went Broke? If I read all your posts, it would seem impossible,but it did happen. What are your thoughts about why?
Thanks to Chris / CopCarSS for my avatar.
QUOTE: Originally posted by greyhounds They were the third railroad to the "north coast" with the BN on their north and the UP to their south. There was nothing they could do - and they died.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MichaelSol What underscores VerMontanans lengthy perambulations is that GN was frantically spending millions and millions of dollars attempting to re-engineer its line, and at that point in time at which the railroads were comparable, 1960-1970, still could not match Milwaukee Road's fast freight transit times to the Pacific Northwest.
Mark Meyer
QUOTE: Originally posted by VerMontanan If Mr. Sol is right, the legacy of the deteriorating financial condition of the Great Northern and its lack of prescience in discontinuing passenger trains along its transcontinental route seems to be in conflict with historical reality as relected today with regard to the GN route:
QUOTE: Originally posted by PNWRMNM I think you are stretching it a bit to claim that the MILW "dominated" in Seattle and Tacoma.
QUOTE: Originally posted by PNWRMNM Michael,I was counting trains each way, you counted total trains, a 2:1 difference.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MichaelSol QUOTE: Originally posted by PNWRMNM I think you are stretching it a bit to claim that the MILW "dominated" in Seattle and Tacoma. Mac, anytime one competitor can get 76% of Port traffic, in the face of two other competitors, plus capture the Auto market, plus 50% of all intermodal, well .... Now, things had begun to slow down by 1977, compared to the peak year of 1974, but here is the official record for Milwaukee in 1977: Per day: St. Maries to Othello, 9 trains average/day Othello to Black River, 9 trains. Seattle/Tacoma, 11 trains Tacoma to Portland, 9 trains I cannot speak to it personally as I was not there, and couldn't stay awake for 24 hours a day to observe even if I was. However, this was information presented to the ICC by the Milwaukee in "Appendix I, Train Operations," Petition to Abandon, August 8, 1979. During 1976 and 1977, Trains 200, 201, 202 and 205 were operated seven days a week, and Trains 206 and 207 were operated five days a week. Trains 200 and 201, and their predecessors, #261 and #262, frequently ran in two sections, a C, Chicago, and a TC, Twin Cities, section. Best regards, Michael Sol
QUOTE: Originally posted by greyhounds QUOTE: Originally posted by MichaelSol QUOTE: Originally posted by PNWRMNM I think you are stretching it a bit to claim that the MILW "dominated" in Seattle and Tacoma. Mac, anytime one competitor can get 76% of Port traffic, in the face of two other competitors, plus capture the Auto market, plus 50% of all intermodal, well .... Now, things had begun to slow down by 1977, compared to the peak year of 1974, but here is the official record for Milwaukee in 1977: Per day: St. Maries to Othello, 9 trains average/day Othello to Black River, 9 trains. Seattle/Tacoma, 11 trains Tacoma to Portland, 9 trains I cannot speak to it personally as I was not there, and couldn't stay awake for 24 hours a day to observe even if I was. However, this was information presented to the ICC by the Milwaukee in "Appendix I, Train Operations," Petition to Abandon, August 8, 1979. During 1976 and 1977, Trains 200, 201, 202 and 205 were operated seven days a week, and Trains 206 and 207 were operated five days a week. Trains 200 and 201, and their predecessors, #261 and #262, frequently ran in two sections, a C, Chicago, and a TC, Twin Cities, section. Best regards, Michael Sol Market share is important - but you can't buy it and survive. I had a good friend named Dorthy Cranshaw from Northwestern U. grad school. She was hired by Cruckshank (SP?). He "acquired" her for the MILW by promissing operating experience - something that was unusual and critical for a woman in those days. (She was sharp, left the MILW for CSX, as has disappeared for all I know.) She just railed about how the MILW got that auto traffic. She claimed they bought it with low rates. You can't do that. You've got to cover cost, not just produce a positive cash flow. The MILW couldn't do that and they died.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MP173 It is very difficult to assess the profitability of the MILW line vs BN's line. Michael, we have your figures for the MILW's line. I assume those were internal accountings and at this time in history, are all we have to go on. But, do such accountings exist for BN? Have I missed that in this long continuing epic of a thread?
QUOTE: Originally posted by MP173 I would bet, that BN had similar profits on it's long haul traffic.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MP173 I would think most long haul traffic back then was very profitable due to the very nature of the rates, pricing and costs structures.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MP173 [brSo all you can do is compare MILW's LW financial's to GN's SYSTEM financials which would include: 1. Passenger trains 2. All branch lines 3. Short haul traffic No adequate means is available to compare Chicago - PNW financials of MILW and BN (or GN)...which makes my assessment that BN's long haul traffic was probably pretty profitable. Just how much traffic moved from L'ville to PNW? I would assume some auto traffic from the Ford plant, and probably interchange off of L&N and Southern, at least until service imploded.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MP173 Well, I am really not obsessed with BN's profit on PNW traffic other than you stated that MILW was cleaning their clock or something to that effect...so I just thought their financial data for their long haul traffic would be interesting to compare. But, I think you answered it when you stated all roads were looking for the long haul. No doubt, BN was doing just fine on that segment and just buying time system wide until the coal started running.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MP173 So, no data exists....just the comments of a dispatcher.
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