I would rather some answers be thought about before we commit the billions of tax dollars (you know the gov't will be the ones footing the bill one way or another) in a failing enterprise.
A to B is the easy part. Yarding, switching, delivering, inspecting, etc is the part that will be a bit more difficult.
It's been fun. But it isn't much fun anymore. Signing off for now.
The opinions expressed here represent my own and not those of my employer, any other railroad, company, or person.t fun any
Obviously the way to get freight lost to trucks back on the rails is to act like a truck. Only without the flexability, convenience, and maybe once all is said and done, the cost of a truck.
One other thing not mentioned. In the last 30 years or so many facilities, either production or distribution, have been built away from a railroad. Some locations with rail service have developed industrial parks away from the railroad, but with great highway access.
This is a system that will either completely change the way that railroads are structured and operated (unlikely) or be such a small part of the transport picture that it's almost irrelevant (more likely).
Jeff
jeffhergertObviously the way to get freight lost to trucks back on the rails is to act like a truck. Only without the flexability, convenience, and maybe once all is said and done, the cost of a truck. One other thing not mentioned. In the last 30 years or so many facilities, either production or distribution, have been built away from a railroad. Some locations with rail service have developed industrial parks away from the railroad, but with great highway access. This is a system that will either completely change the way that railroads are structured and operated (unlikely) or be such a small part of the transport picture that it's almost irrelevant (more likely). Jeff
21st Century railroads are not interested in car load customers. Train load customers are all they really are looking for. Car load customers create the requirement for too much terminal support and thus too much cost.
21st Century railroading is all about cost avoidance more that it is in revenue enhancement. They want a much higer percentage of all revenue generated brought straight to the bottom line without incurring costs along the way.
Never too old to have a happy childhood!
That's why I think that the role, if any, for autonomous railcars is in the terminal (think self assembling and self disassembling trains). Individual railcars traveling down a line break two advantages of a train: first is more efficient use of track space/time; second the frontal area of a single car is about the same as a train. The trains would most likely be locomotive hauled.
Side note about braking: From what I've read, the highest reliable factor of adhesion for braking is 10%. At 30mph, this translates into a 300' stopping distance from when the brakes take hold (I'm in no way saying that a 100 car freight train is going to stop in 300' from 30mph). At 15mph and 25% factor of adhesion, stopping distance would be 30' assuming the brakng effort was applied instantly. I would expect an autonomous rail car to use very quick acting regenerative braking, but that assumes the sensors are up to snuff (right now, they're not).
Railroading as mass transportation, is not a new concept, Martin Stevers 1933 book, Steel Trails, makes frequent mention that railroading works best with large scale transportation, i.e. wholesale, not retail. OTOH, the problem with not pursuing revenue enhancement is that it may enventually lead to revenue declines.
Frankly, even if greyhounds' approach were to be implemented only on the scale of CP Expressway, it would be worth trying -- if he could secure the financing to build the specialized equipment and put it in place, and if he can secure enough ongoing, regular business willing to pay for its extra cost (or its cost over autonomous electric trucking, which is the 'default alternative'). Note that a suitable 'power car' could be made low-deck, to match rakes of flatcars on either side (like the arrangement in some of the British Autocoach trains) with hardpoints to mount an appropriate guidance sensor suite on the ends of the set. As he said, none of the technology that would have to be used, aside from the guidance, has to be reinvented under conditions of uncertainty.
In my opinion, what Parallel Systems proposed, and what they now seem to be doing, have more operational and logistic holes than moldy and rat-gnawed Swiss cheese. It doesn't take the scientific method to establish that the fundamental engineering can't make the fundamental economics work. Keep in mind this is with level 4 autonomy for road vehicles stipulated as practicable by the time any commercial adoption of a Parallel Systems-style operation is actually marketed.
Exactly how did the RoadRailer people propose their equipment would be used with other intermodal consists, other than appended onto the back end as with other conventional equipment? (Something I confess I was hoping to see with that Canadian module thing was the use of a 'hostling' module at the head of the RoadRailer segment, where the transition truck would be, that could be used to allow cutting-off and moving of the RoadRailers if the end of a train of intermodal flats needed to be exposed quickly to back it to a ramp...)
Where are the battery-electric locomotives going to be charged?
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