Fred M Cain I think I mentioned before that a few years ago I sent some e-mails to a few Chambers Of Commerce in Montana sharing my idea with them. One chamber e-mailed me back and opined that they thought it would be a great boon for Montana grain farmers.
My guess is that whoever thought it would be great for grain farmers might see their enthsiasm wane a bit when you interjected the tidbit of reality that (and by the way) the cost of shipping a 110-car unit grain train from Central Montana to West Coast ports (Portland, Vancouver, Kalama, Longview - that's where wheat goes; almost never to Seattle or Tacoma in unit trains) would be double what BNSF would charge due to increased locomotive and crew costs and circuity.
Of the 23 shuttle grain train facilities currently in service in Montana, 19 are on ex-Great Northern trackage, 3 are on ex-Northern Pacific trackage, and one is on ex-MILW trackage. The MILW shuttle facility is at Moore, but uses ex-Milwaukee trackage only a few miles to the community of the Sipple, where "new" (1980s) track connects the route to the ex-GN Great Falls-Laurel main line at the BNSF station of Sipple. There is a reason for this: That's where the grain is/was. Losing the Milwaukee had little effect.
The suggestion that the exit of the Milwaukee in Montana created a monopoly for moving Montana grain is another myth. Back before 1980, there were no shuttle grain train facilities and local elevators spaced 10 or so miles apart were still handling the grain, and farmers usually hauled their grain to the closest elevator. Where there was "competition" such as in Great Falls, back before deregulation the cost of shipping a carload of grain from there to Kalama was the same on either railroad. Whether the Milwaukee actually could make any money on it is debatable. What we do know is that the cost of handling the car on BN was a fraction of that of the Milwaukee due to its shorter, more level route with operating efficiencies such as more sidings, trackside detectors, double track, and CTC.
Mark Meyer
Fred M Cain I suppose many of you on this group can dismiss me and my interests. But those interests (and opinions) are NOT mine alone. Once again, I can quote/paraphrase another quote at the end of the print version of TRAINS Magazine that went something like "maybe it wasn't needed then but it IS needed now" (emphasis mine). So, if that's really so wrong, then maybe we should try and straighten that guy out. But the possibility cannot be entirely dismissed that maybe, just maybe, he knows what he's talking about after all,
I suppose many of you on this group can dismiss me and my interests. But those interests (and opinions) are NOT mine alone. Once again, I can quote/paraphrase another quote at the end of the print version of TRAINS Magazine that went something like "maybe it wasn't needed then but it IS needed now" (emphasis mine).
So, if that's really so wrong, then maybe we should try and straighten that guy out. But the possibility cannot be entirely dismissed that maybe, just maybe, he knows what he's talking about after all,
VerMontanan For those who are interested and haven't seen it, I invite you to check this out: http://trainweb.org/milwaukeemyths/
For those who are interested and haven't seen it, I invite you to check this out: http://trainweb.org/milwaukeemyths/
I have a bone to pick about your description of the Lewiston - Winnett line and the proposed parallel GN line. While the GN line was not completed, considerable grading work was done between Lewiston and Grass Range, which is still visible in aerial photos. GN also had a vertical lift bridge spanning the Yellowstone river for the extreme eastern end of the line. The 2% grade on the Milw line was limited to a 5 mile stretch. Had the line become part of the proposed second main line through central Montana, the 2% grade could have been bypassed by a 2 mile tunnel (limestone) which would have resulted in a 1% ruling grade for the route.
I do remember talk from 1973-74 time frame of Roundup coal being a new trafic source, but this was also the time that Montana imposed a 30% severance tax on coal going out of state. A more recent development is talk of a copper (?) mine near White Sulphur Springs.
Erik: I am not following your point. A 2% grade for five miles is significant and requires extra power on each train or a helper situation. With regard to the shouldawouldacoulda tunnel, this could be said about any many routes if enough investment was made to ameliorate the situation. I've heard the same type of speculation about a Milwaukee line from Great Falls to Missoula via Cadotte Pass what would only be a 1 percent grade - better than Marias (ignoring the horrible 1.5 percent eastward grade at Arrow Creek and the perpetual instability of the railroad between Highwood and Great Falls). But, the reality is that none of these speculative ventures came to pass. And my treatise focuses only on the reality that all the Milwaukee branches around Lewistown (not Lewiston as you typed; Montanans will tell you that's in Idaho) were flawed, and was not meant to speculate on what could make them less so.
I'm also not getting the relevance of Roundup coal in 1973-74. I imagine you're suggesting this would have been a boon to the Milwaukee Road had the Montana coal severance tax (1975) not been in place. Maybe, but it didn't impede opening of the Sarpy Creek Mine (now Westmoreland Absaloka) in 1974 or the mines near Decker (granted, these would not be readily accessible by a Milwaukee Road, but they did flourish during this time frame). The coal near Roundup did (in spite of the ongoing severance tax) get tapped when a railroad spur was built from the BNSF line near Broadview to the mine south of Roundup. While shipments of coal from Signal Peak have gone east and south, the vast majority of trains originating here contain coal for export at Roberts Bank (Vancouver), BC. Given the destination of the coal and the weight of the trains (nearly 18,000 tons each), operating them via a Milwaukee Road would be very unlikely due to its inferior profile and route structure. Montana's current copper mines don't product a lot of business for railroads, so whatever the reference intended with your mention of the proposed mine north of White Sulphur Springs is unknown; the actual effect and need for transportation, if it comes to pass, would also be unknown.
Many people calling for the rerailing of certain lines on any carrier have no idea of the costs to put a abandoned right of way in shape to be a operating rail line as well as the secure revenue stream of traffic over that line that will be required to keep that line operating and in a state of 'good repair'.
Many of the lines operating today don't generate the revenue stream required to keep them in 'good repair'. Yes - today they are operational, however, in many case they only generate enough revenue for the carriers to defer required maintenance to keep them operational; if the line continues to operate but not it does not generate the necessary revenue stream it will eventually degrade to streaks of rust across the countryside that is barely able to support any level of traffic.
Never too old to have a happy childhood!
JOHN PRIVARA <SNIP> However, it can’t be dismissed from the “socialist” perspective. The Interstate Highways were built with tax-money and were centrally planned by bureaucrats, resulting in the best 20th century transportation system money could buy; which resulted in the destruction of our beloved streamliners and the (near) destruction of a “free-market” railroad system (which is now a shell of its former self). The government COULD rebuild the PCE. The government can build (or destroy) anything it wants. But those seem to be your only two choices related to the PCE: the "evil-socialists" build it -or- it’s not built.
Fred M Cain … but I have never been a fan of the Interstate Highway System. Or, at least not as it was planned and built. I have always felt it did incalculable environmental harm and harm to the Nation’s privately owned, rail freight network. If we absolutely had to build a system like that, I think it could have been done better.
JOHN PRIVARAThe freeways aren’t nearly as massive AND they didn’t blast them through peasant neighborhoods so rich suburbanites could commute quickly to work.
Members of the German royal family are the biggest Nimby's on the planet. All you need to do is accidently drive a tank across the lawn of a German Prince and they will escalate right up to the state or federal level.......no messing around with the locals because they deserve better. So I am not sure your comment is completely true. I am sure some of those autobahns were routed around their estates and castles at the expense of the local farmer.
The biggest failing of the Interstate System is that it was built to a 50 year standard; without any provisions of what was to happen after the 50 years. As we are now 63 years after the system's enabling legislation - there is still no real answer as to what is to happen and who will pay for it.
Tolls are one thing, collection of them is another. Are the tolls to be 'equitable' for the tranportation provided, are the tolls to be real grab into the travelers pocket, are the tolls to be a penalty on the unwary. I have seen all these stragegies implemented - implemented in various ways - manual collection at designated toll plazas (which in most cases create massive traffic jams), transponder collections as well as 'toll by tag' (with the toll amount being sent to the registered owner of the vehicle - without regard to the driver). On top of that mess, there are multiple transponder collection systems that ARE NOT interoperatable. In my home area there is EZ-Pass, in the other areas I travel to there are Sun Pass and K-Tag - these three systems are not interoperatable.
Jacksonville has just implemented toll lanes on I-295 between the Buckman Bridge over the St. Johns River and the I-95 interchange South of town. The toll structure I have seen is for Sun Pass ONLY, those using the lane without being Sun Pass equipped will be assessed a $25 penalty charge - since these lanes are marked to 'avoid local traffic' they will entice 'through' travelers to use the lanes and then sock them with the penalty charge account not being Sun Pass equipped. A real bait and switch situation.
There is some interoperability, I-Pass and EZ-Pass are interoperable, plus several toll roads use EZ-Pass.
The new NC QuickPass is valid in 18 states up and down the east coast.
BTW, anyone remember the Milwaukee Road "Sprint Trains" intermodal experiment? That was a pretty cool concept, I think at their zenith there were three a day each way between Twin Cities and Chicago. Usually one SD-40-2, approx 30-40 flatcars and a caboose. It was right after the mainline 4R loan or whatever it was called rehab. Fun watching those trains fly through Brookfield, WI at 55 to 60 mph. They eventually cut to two trains each way then one, then they disappeared altogether. Railroad refused to release to the press how they were doing financially with that experiment but I suspect not so good based on the loadings.
VerMontanan Erik: I am not following your point. A 2% grade for five miles is significant and requires extra power on each train or a helper situation. With regard to the shouldawouldacoulda tunnel, this could be said about any many routes if enough investment was made to ameliorate the situation. I've heard the same type of speculation about a Milwaukee line from Great Falls to Missoula via Cadotte Pass what would only be a 1 percent grade - better than Marias (ignoring the horrible 1.5 percent eastward grade at Arrow Creek and the perpetual instability of the railroad between Highwood and Great Falls). But, the reality is that none of these speculative ventures came to pass. And my treatise focuses only on the reality that all the Milwaukee branches around Lewistown (not Lewiston as you typed; Montanans will tell you that's in Idaho) were flawed, and was not meant to speculate on what could make them less so.
My comments about the Lewistown (fixed) to Grass Range lines was that in my bombastic opinion, the Milwaukee line was in some respects better engineered than the GN line. Both lines were built with an eye to being part of a second mainline for both roads, with the Milwaukee line to be part of the Cadotte's pass line (with the Arrow Creek portion duly noted as a screw up). In that case, digging a tunnel to bypass the 3.5 mi eastbound, 2 mi westbound section of 2% grade would have made sense. As an agricultural branch line, the tunnel wouldn't have made sense. It would seem likely that the motive power for trains to Winnett and Grass range would have been dispatched for a 1% ruling grade with the expectation that the train would double the hill between Piper and Heath.
It wasn't too surpring that the lines to Winnett and Roy were the first to go as there was plenty of competition from the adjacent highways. The Winifred line may have had a longer life had it built with something heavier than 60# rail - very much doubt that it would have made economic sense to lay heavier rail.
One last comment on the GN line, it would have involved two tunnels, one maybe 500' and the other would have been about a half mile. I don't now how much excavation was done of these tunnels. Work on the Milwaukee's Grass Lake to Winnett line, which was to be shared with the GN, was done in 1917 and further work may have been stopped by the USRA.
The reason it will never be restored is it makes no economic sense. It was a bad decision by the Milwaukee Road to build it in the first place. The competing rails are nowhere near capacity even now. Look at the demographics and geography if you need confirmation.
charlie hebdo The reason it will never be restored is it makes no economic sense. It was a bad decision by the Milwaukee Road to build it in the first place. (SNIP)
The reason it will never be restored is it makes no economic sense. It was a bad decision by the Milwaukee Road to build it in the first place. (SNIP)
Charlie,
Did you read in my last e-mail that there are TWO conflicting viewpoints on this? Unfortunately, all the people who take the opposite viewpoint from you have evidently been run off this forum thread.
And so it will be with me.
Farewell and good luck to ya!
Regards
Fred M. Cain
Fred. I have no idea of what either of them said on the PSE question. I was just offering my outsider's opinion not based on some idealized dream. Not sure why you cannot handle opinions of others.
Fred. I have no idea of what either of them said on the PSE question. I was just offering my outsider's opinion not based on some idealized dream. Not sure why you cannot handle opinions of others. No one whom I am aware of was "run off the thread" by anyone.
O.K., I wasn't gonna respone anymore but I will one more time. Was what you stated about the PSE making "no economic sense" fact? Now you're telling me it's just an outsider's "opinion".
I actually respect your opinion. But, like I keep saying there are two sides. That's why I want to quit because continuing to argue this is basically pointless.
I am going to try and do what I can to explore the relaying of this line. I cannot do much but I will do what I can. First I will try to get to the facts. "Overmod", whoever he is, has actually helped me with that.
Perhaps I was just a bit too curt in my last response. I don't hold anything against anyone on this list.
Regards,Fred M. Cain
Fred, I have no ox to flay in this issue. If you want to advocate for the rebuilding of the PSE, that is your choice. Different people undertake the causes they choose. Some are cowed by opposition, and some become crusaders. My opinion has no facts to support or destroy your quest. Many worthwhile causes have been destroyed by naysayers and many hours have been exhausted fighting for losing causes.
I mourn over many of the rail routes I used to work on back in the fifties. The PRR had the double track cab signaled 152 pound rail line between St. Louis and Pittsburgh which no longer exists East of Indianapolis. The Cincinnati and Xenia is a bike trail. The freight traffic is not there to support these lines. I accept these facts.
BNSF is the dominant RR in the area of the PSE and has expended big dollars to add track where they felt there was an economic case for it. Case in point, the new bridge near Spokane. If the traffic required it, I think they might consider restoring the PSE and they have not
I have doubt that any economic case can be made for the rebuild of the PSE, but if you wish to persue it, and, that is your choice, good luck and enjoy.
CMStPnP BTW, anyone remember the Milwaukee Road "Sprint Trains" intermodal experiment? That was a pretty cool concept, I think at their zenith there were three a day each way between Twin Cities and Chicago. Usually one SD-40-2, approx 30-40 flatcars and a caboose. It was right after the mainline 4R loan or whatever it was called rehab. Fun watching those trains fly through Brookfield, WI at 55 to 60 mph. They eventually cut to two trains each way then one, then they disappeared altogether. Railroad refused to release to the press how they were doing financially with that experiment but I suspect not so good based on the loadings.
CMStPnPBTW, anyone remember the Milwaukee Road "Sprint Trains" intermodal experiment? That was a pretty cool concept, I think at their zenith there were three a day each way between Twin Cities and Chicago. Usually one SD-40-2, approx 30-40 flatcars and a caboose. It was right after the mainline 4R loan or whatever it was called rehab. Fun watching those trains fly through Brookfield, WI at 55 to 60 mph. They eventually cut to two trains each way then one, then they disappeared altogether. Railroad refused to release to the press how they were doing financially with that experiment but I suspect not so good based on the loadings.
Yep, sure do. They were going at the same time we had the "Slingshots" between Chicago and East St. Louis.
They were a government (FRA) initiated "experiment". And, IIRC, they operated before deregulation. They were significantly handicapped by government restrictions. The railroad couldn't lower rates, for example. The business was mostly moved on ramp to ramp TOFC plan 2.5 rates. A ramp to ramp rate is automatically wrong in two ways: 1) it underprices some business leaving money on the table and, 2) it overprices other business causing it to move by highway. To maximize profit the traffic must move on a door to door rate and that was very hard to do under regulation. This is particularly important on shorter haul routes such as Chicago-Twin Cities. The government set up an experiment and then restricted it so as it had to fail.
The railroad was able to establish some door to door through rates with common carrier truck lines. That helped, but not enough.
As an aside, I had a friend who was a Milwaukee trainmaster in the Twin Cities. She (yes, she) told me that she had to get the trains out on time. So she'd cause freight to be left behind when loading the trailers on the flatcars would delay the departure. That's a good way to loose customers. It's the movement of the freight that's important - not the train.
Fred M Cain I think the Puget Sound Extension (PSE) was better engineered than the Great Northern line. In fact, I think it was probably better engineered that most of the other transcons (The Sunset Route being a notable exception ‘cause in ran through mostly flat country.) The reason I can say that is that it was among the last of the transcons to be built so they had heavier equipment at their disposal that the UP and CP didn’t have in 1869. The PSE also was built about 20 years later that the GN line.
What about an alternate type of restoration? Use the PSE where its profile is superior to parallel tracks? Connect those sections to existing tracks at other points? Now recognize that the tracks will be too far apart at some places..
blue streak 1What about an alternate type of restoration? Use the PSE where its profile is superior to parallel tracks? Connect those sections to existing tracks at other points? Now recognize that the tracks will be too far apart at some places..
As always 'The Devil' ($$$$$$$$$$$$$$$) is in the details.
blue streak 1Use the PSE where its profile is superior to parallel tracks? Connect those sections to existing tracks at other points? Now recognize that the tracks will be too far apart at some places..
Section, not "sections." The only portion where the PCE is superior to an alternate route is Snoqualmie Pass vs. Stampede Pass. A connection at Easton between the two was available when the Milwaukee was in place; the west end connection would be at Black River, but there has been much buildup along the route including WA highway 169. Then there is the issue of street-running in downtown Renton, which was in place when the Milwaukee was still operating there on GN's Pacific Coast Railroad, and that elsewhere some of the MILW right-of-way is a popular trail. A connection to the ex-NP Stampede Pass line in the vicinity of Ravensdale would be a more logical connection, but this would be an all-new alignment. But it should be noted that the superior crossing of the Cascades is not MILW's Snoqualmie Pass, but rather the current BNSF (ex-SP&S) route along the Columbia River (as well as the UP route on the other side of the river) where BNSF routes its heavy westward unit trains and uses the Stampede Pass route only for eastward empties. Directional running and additional capacity along the Columbia River route (Fallbridge subdivision) has drastically improved the flow of rail traffic in the Northwest.
I've seen comments to the effect of the Milwaukee would have been better off parallelling the NP up the Yakima Valley (or a joint line). A more far out merging of the NP and the Milwaukee would have been extending the NP's Shields River branch from Wilsall to Ringling, looks that with some earthwork it would have been possible to get a 1% ruling grade both ways between Mission and Lombard.
I've also heard talk of BN interest in using the Milwaukee line between Miles City and Forsyth, but was never more than talk. Speaking of that line, my dad thought that Hathaway was named because it was half the way between Miles City and Forsyth.
VerMontanan So, the “engineering superiority” is just another Milwaukee Myth.
So, the “engineering superiority” is just another Milwaukee Myth.
charlie hebdo VerMontanan So, the “engineering superiority” is just another Milwaukee Myth. Thank you. It's helpful to read a post based on facts, not wishes.
C'mon Charlie. Living in a fact-based world. There's no fun in that, is there?
AnthonyV C'mon Charlie. Living in a fact-based world. There's no fun in that, is there?
I think everyone here has nostalgia for the way things used to be. I wish that the steel mills of Ohio and Pennsylvania were still strong and US Steel still had their large fleet of oreboats and captive railroads. But I also know its time has passed and we live in a new world. The problem with some is that they actually think that they could turn back the hands of time.
Our community is FREE to join. To participate you must either login or register for an account.