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Amtrak and the Freight Roads

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Amtrak and the Freight Roads
Posted by I C Rider on Thursday, June 19, 2014 12:24 AM
I am posing a passenger question to general conversation I am A fan of the Empire Builder #'s 7&8. It has been very late for sometime now and the excuses are piling up. BNSF says that they are at capacity due to oil trains. When I was on it both ways the one that passed us most seem to be merchandise trains. What is CP's excuse? The run from Chicago to MSP was supposed to be a good one but we lost time both ways. Could it be that the freight roads are making deliberately longer trains so that Amtrak has to sit in the siding because the fright trains are too long? After all how long can Amtrak put up passengers who miss their Chicago connections almost daily? I am asking these questions out of curiosity. Are people trying to kill Amtrak and make it look like a suicide?
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Posted by dehusman on Thursday, June 19, 2014 6:47 AM

I C Rider
I am posing a passenger question to general conversation I am A fan of the Empire Builder #'s 7&8. It has been very late for sometime now and the excuses are piling up. BNSF says that they are at capacity due to oil trains. When I was on it both ways the one that passed us most seem to be merchandise trains.

Its total number of trains, not necessarily what you met.  If the railroad used to run 20 trains and you add in an additional 20 trains, that compresses the original 20 trains.  Even if you don't meet an oil train it has doubled the number of trains on the subdivision.

Could it be that the freight roads are making deliberately longer trains so that Amtrak has to sit in the siding because the fright trains are too long?

Train lengths have been growing for the last 3 decades.

What people don't understand is the footprint that a passenger train casts.  If the dispatcher is trying to get the passenger train across a sub with minimal delay, on a single track line, he may be putting trains in sidings from 50 to 100 miles ahead of the passenger train.  If he has x sidings and x trains, he has to start dumping trains.   If he keeps them going he will end up with multiple trains meeting Amtrak at one siding.  If he has more freight trains than sidings then he has to make 2 on one meets. 

Since Amtrak is operating 20-30 mph faster than the freights, the dispatcher has to get trains in BOTH directions out of the way because Amtrak will catch the freights ahead.  With just freight trains, the dispatcher primarily is concerned with opposing trains since there will be fewer overtakes.  That effectively doubles the number of trains the dispatcher has to find a hole for.

If your train lost time, my guess would be that it was following a train in the same direction.  Freight train 50 mph, passenger schedule 79 mph, yep you're going to lose time.

 

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Posted by Phoebe Vet on Thursday, June 19, 2014 7:08 AM
Making deliberately longer trains just to inconvenience Amtrak? I have heard some pretty weird conspiracy theories, but that one takes the cake.

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Posted by PNWRMNM on Thursday, June 19, 2014 11:45 AM

Only Congress can kill ATK and I wish they do it immediately.

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Posted by tree68 on Thursday, June 19, 2014 12:26 PM

dehusman
What people don't understand is the footprint that a passenger train casts.  If the dispatcher is trying to get the passenger train across a sub with minimal delay, on a single track line, ...

This can be seen even on the two-track CSX Chicago Line in NY - Things get really "quiet" around scheduled Amtrak arrivals.

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Posted by henry6 on Thursday, June 19, 2014 12:36 PM
PNWRMNM

Only Congress can kill ATK and I wish they do it immediately.

Mac McCulloch

Questions your proposal raises: 1) what would you propose be done abut moving people? 2) or what do you propose to replace Amtrak or Amtrak's role? 3) what do you think your proposal would accomplish? 4) how realistic and thought out is your proposal. 5) would we really be better off killing off Congress and saving Amtrak?

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Posted by DwightBranch on Thursday, June 19, 2014 1:23 PM

BNSF has been perhaps the most accommodating of any of the freight railroads towards Amtrak, I doubt they are actively trying to "kill Amtrak". Indeed, if any money were forthcoming I'll bet they would be happy to spend it on track work that would benefit Amtrak, as they have on the CZ route through Iowa (CTC islands, etc, paid for by the federal government, so that the CZ can pass all the coal trains on the otherwise ABS direction of traffic system) and are willing to pitch in on the SWC route through Kansas, Colorado and NM (they have offered to pay one-filth of the cost of upgrading the route to passenger train speeds and remove slow orders, with Amtrak and the three states to pay the rest, met with state government officials on Amtrak's behalf several times, hosted trains on the line etc to try to get the states to do their part).

I am not as familiar with the EB route as with the CZ and SWC route, can anyone list some specific improvements that could free up capacity and improve EB time keeping?

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Posted by schlimm on Thursday, June 19, 2014 1:23 PM

The current problems of the EB and Texas Eagle (on another thread on Passenger Forum) illustrate the incompatibility of passenger services (or even one train per day) with American freight practices.  Even with double track, the top speed differential of 79 mph passenger (really too slow for modern service) to 50-60 mph freight is too great.   I do not know what the answer is other than focus on dedicated ROW in short corridors for real passenger services.

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Posted by dehusman on Thursday, June 19, 2014 2:35 PM

The interesting thing is that according to the Amtrak web site, the Acela Express, Amtrak's premier service operating its own trains on its own tracks, dispatched by its own dispatchers over 2-4 main track, grade separated right of way, they are only averaging 75% on time over the last year. 

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Posted by BaltACD on Thursday, June 19, 2014 3:15 PM

The most overlooked aspect of the Amtrak footprint is the amount of space that is required ahead of Amtrak for the train to operate at maximum authorized speed on Clear signals.  Depending on the signal system and the distances between signals - that preceding footprint could be anywhere from 4 to 12 miles.  On a high volume freight railroad, providing that preceding footprint can be very difficult - just because Amtrak is coming, freight trains don't magically disappear.  Parting the waters to facilitate Amtrak's passage can be a exceedingly difficult undertaking from a simple dispatching perspective, couple that with internal company policies and it may be even more difficult.

The implementation of CTC on prior double track territories (at least on my carrier) has forced a change in the prior dispatching philosophy as in the day of Current of Traffic signaling there were directional passing sidings at strategic locations, allowing a freight train being overtaken to 'duck in the clear' and then follow the overtaking train(s) without affecting opposing movements.  With the installation of CTC, in most cases, those sidings have been removed or otherwise rendered unusable for that purpose; to get one train around others moving in the same direction opposing movements will in some way be affected.

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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, June 19, 2014 3:17 PM

dehusman

The interesting thing is that according to the Amtrak web site, the Acela Express, Amtrak's premier service operating its own trains on its own tracks, dispatched by its own dispatchers over 2-4 main track, grade separated right of way, they are only averaging 75% on time over the last year.

I like to look at the numbers at the end of the fiscal year.  They represent an entire seasonal cycle and are more likely to give a true picture over a long enough period.

In FY13 the Acela's end point on-time performance record was 85.3 per cent, which was down from 89.7 per cent in FY12.  The all stations on-time percentages were 88.7 per cent in FY13 and 92.4 per cent in FY12.

The Northeast Regional trains end-point on-time performance records were 84.2 per cent in FY13 and 86.5 per cent in FY12.  The all stations on-time percentages were 87.5 per cent in FY13 and 88.8 per cent in FY12.

For YTD April 2014, the end point on-time performance for the Acela was 75.6 per cent.  However, YTD April 14 only represents seven months, and it is unduly impacted from the effects of late fall, winter, and early spring weather. Winter 2013-14 saw some of the harshest weather to hit the United States in decades, and it had an impact on the performance of all modes of transport. As the year goes on, with better weather, the on-time performance numbers for the NEC, including the Acela, are likely to come close to those put up in FY12 and FY13.

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Posted by schlimm on Thursday, June 19, 2014 3:38 PM

Sam1

dehusman

The interesting thing is that according to the Amtrak web site, the Acela Express, Amtrak's premier service operating its own trains on its own tracks, dispatched by its own dispatchers over 2-4 main track, grade separated right of way, they are only averaging 75% on time over the last year.

I like to look at the numbers at the end of the fiscal year.  They represent an entire seasonal cycle and are more likely to give a true picture over a long enough period.

In FY13 the Acela's end point on-time performance record was 85.3 per cent, which was down from 89.7 per cent in FY12.  The all stations on-time percentages were 88.7 per cent in FY13 and 92.4 per cent in FY12.

The Northeast Regional trains end-point on-time performance records were 84.2 per cent in FY13 and 86.5 per cent in FY12.  The all stations on-time percentages were 87.5 per cent in FY13 and 88.8 per cent in FY12.

For YTD April 2014, the end point on-time performance for the Acela was 75.6 per cent.  However, YTD April 14 only represents seven months, and it is unduly impacted from the effects of late fall, winter, and early spring weather. Winter 2013-13 saw some of the harshest weather to hit the United States in decades, and it had an impact on the performance of all modes of transport. As the year goes on, with better weather, the on-time performance numbers for the NEC, including the Acela, are likely to come close to those put up in FY12 and FY13.

Don't forget that even on the Amtrak-owned track, commuter trains (and some freight) also have to be accommodated.  And part of the Acela route is on MNRR trackage.

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Posted by blue streak 1 on Thursday, June 19, 2014 4:09 PM

Some one enlighten us.   Isn't Acela on time arrival times less than regular passenger trains ?.  Also the distance the train travels affects how late is still on time ?

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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, June 19, 2014 5:19 PM

blue streak 1

Some one enlighten us.   Isn't Acela on time arrival times less than regular passenger trains ?.  Also the distance the train travels affects how late is still on time ?

The Acela is late if it misses its end point schedule by more than 10 minutes. The other trains in the NEC are late only if they miss their end point arrival times by more than 15 minutes. Some of the long distance trains can be 30 minutes off the advertised and still be counted on-time. The Acela is held to a tighter metric.  Go figure.

In FY13 Keystone, Lynchburg, Capitols, New York to Albany (includes trains that operate only between NYC and Albany), Heartland Flyer, Hiawatha, Carl Sandburg / Illinois Zephyr, Lincoln Service, Missouri Service, Pennsylvanian, and City of New Orleans trains had end-point on-time percentages that ranged from just above the Acela's 85.3 per cent to a system high of 95 per cent for the Capitols.

What the results would look like if the Acela were held to the 15 minute metric like the other trains, or the other trains were held to the 10 minute metric like the Acela, is unknown. A train or plane or bus should be considered on-time only if it arrives in the station when the schedule says that it will. Fudging the outcome does not make a lot of sense.

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Posted by Deggesty on Thursday, June 19, 2014 5:52 PM

I have never comprehended reasoning that declares that a train that does not arrive "on the advertised" can be considered to be on time if it arrives within so many minutes late.

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Posted by blue streak 1 on Thursday, June 19, 2014 7:55 PM

Sam1

 A train or plane or bus should be considered on-time only if it arrives in the station when the schedule says that it will. Fudging the outcome does not make a lot of sense.

At one time airplanes were on time if arrives within 15 minutes for Federal reportig metrics.
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Posted by henry6 on Thursday, June 19, 2014 8:06 PM
The dumbing of America has led to the "I don't care" of America, the good enough is not only good enough but also probably more than we need. Perfection, performance, quality? I'll get to it when and if I danged pleased to do so. The ________________ (train, bus, plane, check) got there didn't it, so quit your complaining.

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Posted by tree68 on Thursday, June 19, 2014 9:06 PM

When the railroads had full control of their own passenger operations, they could see to it that their trains arrived "on the advertised."  Heaven help the freight crew that "stuck" a passenger train (especially a "crack" train).

Today, Amtrak is at the mercy of the railroads over which it runs (except in the NEC).  And there's not much shame in "sticking" an Amtrak train.  So all Amtrak can hope for is that they can come close to what they say they will.

The airlines are in the same boat, if you will.  There are so many flights, and so much interweaving of those flights, that a delay at a given airport can affect flights that will never see that airport.  Too, you have the weather - both locally and at flight level, where a stiff headwind can wreak havoc with flight times.

All told, getting there "close" is probably about as good as we can expect from any transportation source.

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Posted by henry6 on Friday, June 20, 2014 7:59 AM
We are lazy and apathetic in this country. Don't say on time can't be done as we used to achieve it all the time with trains arriving or leaving within the 60 seconds of the minute as advertised. But that was the buffer. Look at European operations, especially the Swiss and the Germans who publish schedules at half, and even at one time I believe, quarter minute times. Thus 1816:15 or 1816:30 (3:16:15 or 3:16:30) which are adhered to with no hedging.

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Posted by schlimm on Friday, June 20, 2014 8:35 AM

henry6
Look at European operations, especially the Swiss and the Germans who publish schedules at half, and even at one time I believe, quarter minute times. Thus 1816:15 or 1816:30 (3:16:15 or 3:16:30) which are adhered to with no hedging.

Although I agree that "on time" should mean "On time" not 15-30 minutes late, as far as I know in May of 2014 when I  was there, the DB (German rail) published schedules on the minute.  AFAIK, in the last 46 years, they were never on the 30 second or 15 second in published timetables. Where in the world did you come up with that tall tale?

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Posted by henry6 on Friday, June 20, 2014 9:30 AM
Then only the Swiss do it.

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Posted by schlimm on Friday, June 20, 2014 9:43 AM

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Posted by tree68 on Friday, June 20, 2014 10:31 AM

henry6
Don't say on time can't be done as we used to achieve it all the time with trains arriving or leaving within the 60 seconds of the minute as advertised.

As I noted - that was when the railroads ran their own passenger service and such service was a source of pride to them.  That's no longer the case.

I would challenge you to plan a trip across a major metropolitan area by car, during a weekday, planned to the minute for several intermediate points as well as your destination.  Odds are you wouldn't take the challenge because you know it would be virtually impossible, especially if you were to use the surface streets.  No detours allowed.

Unless you can arrange for a lights and siren escort, you're not likely to even come close.

So it is with Amtrak.  There was a time when passenger trains got "lights and siren" treatment.  That's not the case today.  NYC and PRR both ran passenger-only tracks on their main trunks.

Of course, you can build some padding into your schedule, "just in case," as Amtrak already does.  Still, one traffic accident along the way and your planning is toast.

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Posted by henry6 on Friday, June 20, 2014 11:09 AM
OK, Schlimm. All the Trains Magazine articles I have read about European schedules, etc. have shown departures at the half minute marks. Either I lie or hallucinate.

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Posted by henry6 on Friday, June 20, 2014 11:15 AM
tree68

henry6
Don't say on time can't be done as we used to achieve it all the time with trains arriving or leaving within the 60 seconds of the minute as advertised.

As I noted - that was when the railroads ran their own passenger service and such service was a source of pride to them.  That's no longer the case.

I would challenge you to plan a trip across a major metropolitan area by car, during a weekday, planned to the minute for several intermediate points as well as your destination.  Odds are you wouldn't take the challenge because you know it would be virtually impossible, especially if you were to use the surface streets.  No detours allowed.

Unless you can arrange for a lights and siren escort, you're not likely to even come close.

So it is with Amtrak.  There was a time when passenger trains got "lights and siren" treatment.  That's not the case today.  NYC and PRR both ran passenger-only tracks on their main trunks.

Of course, you can build some padding into your schedule, "just in case," as Amtrak already does.  Still, one traffic accident along the way and your planning is toast.

Often on our Ridewithmehenry trips on MNRR, NJT, LIRR, Amtrak, and SEPTA we zoom past both moving traffic as well as congested back ups miles long. And even on the subways and light rail we often pass traffic which never seems to catch up. So, yeah, transit is often the quickest way across towns. Where is does slow you down, however, could be when you have to interline, making connections and changing trains and routes. One missed connection can be a short 5 minute wait up to several hours...even to the next day if it's too dark to read your watch!

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Posted by CJtrainguy on Friday, June 20, 2014 11:15 AM

I have a good collection of European timetables dating back to the 70s and have spend lots of time on passenger trains in Europe. I have never run across any published departure that included seconds. 

Odd minutes, sure, such as 18:37. That happens all the time. And many a time you can watch the second hand move up towards the minute mark and right on the dot the whistle blows, the doors close and the train departs.

I seem to recall an order maybe 10 years ago in Germany that doors would be closed 30 seconds prior to departure time, so that the train could actually roll on the scheduled time.

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Posted by Murphy Siding on Friday, June 20, 2014 11:16 AM

henry6
We are lazy and apathetic in this country.

  Sigh  And hand basket production is falling behind as well.

Thanks to Chris / CopCarSS for my avatar.

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Posted by schlimm on Friday, June 20, 2014 12:12 PM

henry6
OK, Schlimm. All the Trains Magazine articles I have read about European schedules, etc. have shown departures at the half minute marks. Either I lie or hallucinate.

I do not recall what some Trains articles have said.  You may or may not remember correctly.  What i do know is based on 48 years of extensive riding of passenger trains in Germany, Italy, Austria, Belgium and the UK, most recently this May.  And I have shown you a current TT for the SBB from Bern.   You could easily look at the schedules of all of those countries for yourself online, if you choose not to take my word or CJtrains.   In Germany, printed schedules are becoming much less common, as most folks check and buy tickets online.   Additionally, on the Arrival/Departure boards in large stations such as Berlin and on platform signs, the time in seconds is not given. Dwell time is often only 2 minutes at intermediate stations.  Is it just possible you are the one who erred?

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Posted by billio on Friday, June 20, 2014 12:22 PM

henry6

We are lazy and apathetic in this country.

Ho Hum.  Yawn.  Think I'll grab me another beer...

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Posted by schlimm on Friday, June 20, 2014 12:38 PM

Personal Timetable
(valid from 20.06.2014 to 13.12.2014)
Stralsund Hbf bk Berlin Hbf (tief)
Dep Journey Arr Change Dep Journey Arr Dur. Servicedays
3:23 RE 18323 5:19 Angermunde ¨ 5:33 RE 18343 6:29 3:06 Mo
4:14 RE 18305 7:29 3:15 daily
5:02 RE 18505 8:14 3:12 daily
6:02 RE 13053 7:57 Neustrelitz Hbf 8:01 RE 4355 9:11 3:09 Mo - Sa
6:14 RE 18307 9:29 3:15 daily
7:02 RE 18507 10:11 3:09 daily
7:27 IC 2217 x 8:15 Rostock Hbf 8:34 RE 4357 11:11 3:44 Sa, Su pa
8:02 RE 13205 9:57 Neustrelitz Hbf 10:01 RE 4357 11:11 3:09 Mo - Sa
8:14 RE 18309 11:29 3:15 daily
9:02 RE 18509 12:14 3:12 daily
9:18 IC 2356 x 12:04 2:46 not every day ps
9:27 IC 2089 x 10:19 Rostock Hbf 10:34 RE 4359 13:11 3:44 not every day pd
9:36 IC 2356 x 12:21 2:45 daily pf
10:02 RE 13055 11:57 Neustrelitz Hbf 12:01 RE 4359 13:11 3:09 Mo - Sa
10:14 RE 18311 13:29 3:15 daily
11:02 RE 18511 14:11 3:09 daily
11:40 EC 379 y 14:26 2:46 daily pg
12:02 RE 13209 13:57 Neustrelitz Hbf 14:01 RE 4361 15:13 3:11 Mo - Sa
12:14 RE 18313 15:29 3:15 daily
13:02 RE 18513 16:14 3:12 daily
13:25 IC 2377 x 14:19 Rostock Hbf 14:33 EC 179 y 16:34 3:09 not every day ph
13:25 IC 2287 x 14:19 Rostock Hbf 14:33 X 68904 g 16:58 3:33 not every day pd
13:25 IC 2377 x 14:19 Rostock Hbf 14:33 X 68904 g 16:58 3:33 not every day pj
14:02 RE 13057 15:57 Neustrelitz Hbf 16:01 RE 4363 17:14 3:12 daily
14:14 RE 18315 17:30 3:16 daily
15:02 RE 18515 18:13 3:11 daily
15:27 IC 2289 x 16:19 Rostock Hbf 16:34 RE 4365 19:12 3:45 not every day pd
15:27 IC 2379 x 16:19 Rostock Hbf 16:34 RE 4365 19:12 3:45 not every day pk
16:02 RE 13211 17:57 Neustrelitz Hbf 18:01 RE 4365 19:12 3:10 Mo - Fr, Su
16:14 RE 18317 19:30 3:16 daily
17:02 RE 18517 20:14 3:12 daily
17:27 IC 1989 18:19 Rostock Hbf 18:31 RE 18591 20:49 3:22 Su
18:02 RE 13059 19:57 Neustrelitz Hbf 20:01 RE 4367 21:11 3:09 Mo - Fr, Su
18:23 RE 18319 21:28 3:05 daily
19:02 RE 18519 22:15 3:13 daily
19:15 RE 18593 22:00 2:45 not every day pl
19:26 UBB 29437 K2 19:49 Greifswald 20:01 IC 61258 22:12 2:46 not every day q0
20:02 RE 13213 21:57 Neustrelitz Hbf 22:01 RE 4369 23:14 3:12 Mo - Fr, Su
20:14 RE 18321 23:28 3:14 daily qa
Index
pa = also 3., 31. Oct
All information is issued without liability
Softwareversion/Dataversion: HAFAS-p2w-V1.4/ DATAalls06 - 20.06.14ps = 7. until 20. Jul; not 14. until 18. Jul
pd = 20. Jun until 27. Jul
pf = not 7. until 13. Jul, 19., 20. Jul
pg = not 12., 19., 26., 27. Jul, 23., 24. Aug
ph = 2. Aug until 1. Nov Sa; not 23. Aug
pj = 28. Jul until 13. Dec
pk = 28. Jul until 11. Dec Mo - Th, Su; 2. Aug until 4. Oct Mo - Th, Sa, Su; not 2. Oct; also 3. Oct
pl = 21. Jun until 2. Nov Sa, Su; also 3. Oct
q0 = 5. Jul until 30. Aug Sa
qa = not 30. Jun
legend
x = Bordbistro
y = Bordrestaurant
g = SnackPoint/Snacks on board the train
K2 = 2nd class only

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