Thanks to Chris / CopCarSS for my avatar.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MichaelSol Not sale, 50 year lease. Denny had Milwaukee Road veterans William Brodsky and Fred Simpson who told him, " we can make this work." It was the SORE/NewMil model, scaled down. Very profitable. Just finished a consulting project with the largest shipper on the MRL. Transportation budget of $30 million annually. Used to go 50/50 Milwaukee/BN. It's general manager told me: "We now ship 50/50 truck/rail. If we could get the trucks we would ship everything truck, but I will say this, Montana Rail Link works hard for us. If we had to work with BNSF, we'd buy our own trucks and ship everything by truck. Rail Link still keeps us shipping by rail. Very good to work with."
QUOTE: Originally posted by andrewjonathon QUOTE: Originally posted by MichaelSol Not sale, 50 year lease. Denny had Milwaukee Road veterans William Brodsky and Fred Simpson who told him, " we can make this work." It was the SORE/NewMil model, scaled down. Very profitable. Just finished a consulting project with the largest shipper on the MRL. Transportation budget of $30 million annually. Used to go 50/50 Milwaukee/BN. It's general manager told me: "We now ship 50/50 truck/rail. If we could get the trucks we would ship everything truck, but I will say this, Montana Rail Link works hard for us. If we had to work with BNSF, we'd buy our own trucks and ship everything by truck. Rail Link still keeps us shipping by rail. Very good to work with." If Montana Rail Link is such a great company to work with (and I am sure they are) why is the shipper so motivated to switch as much business to trucks as they can?
QUOTE: Originally posted by MichaelSol Not sale, 50 year lease.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MP173 Those NP bonds proved to be pretty pesky securities, as outlined by Kaufman.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MP173 Thanks for the correction on the "lease" vs buy. The book indicated it was sold, but the more I think about it...that would not have been very feasible. ... Has anyone else read his book? At $15, it is a bargain.
rrandb wrote:While I found Leaders Count to be an "interesting" read its accuracy was sorely lacking.
There is a good story to be told, but "Leaders Count" was more on the order of a bunch of execs being able to offer a public relations account of their version of history, with no qualification, no critical eye, no historical accountability.
MP173 wrote:What is the level of traffic on this line? Are most of the trains BNSF flow thru trains? I see they purchased new power for the helpers. Much coal?
JSGreen wrote: MP173 wrote:What is the level of traffic on this line? Are most of the trains BNSF flow thru trains? I see they purchased new power for the helpers. Much coal? I dont know all the details, but I can tell you what I see go by the house everyday....There are 6-10 unit coal trains a week westbound through Missoula, and empties east. Sometimes I see as many as two a day...recently I have seen some stack trains going in either direction, there appears to be a correlation with weather patterns on the more northerly route past Glacier and stack trains through town. Recently, one or two unit grain a day pass in each direction. (ok, I am assuming they are grain, based on the fact they are covered hoppers)The majority of the traffice appears to be run-through, but MRL appears to operate at least one train East from missoula daily, other than the local which switches the mill at Bonner. I recently returnd to town from Portland, and noticed a mixed consist along the BNSF Columbia river rooute being led east bound by an MRL unit...too far across the river to see what model...so I have no idea how many of the trains that pass by are MRL and how many are run-throughs...I would guess 80% or better are run throughs. Of course, I have no idea of the manifest on the 3-4 trains that go by each night...
Yep, that is what I pretty much saw when I was living in Bozeman. It's seemed like there was a good amount of traffic, but I've been listening to Live scanner from a gentleman in Bozeman on Railroadradio.com and it doesn't seem like there is any traffic. I figured I would see at least a train an hour go over the pass at Bozeman. All except the M-L and the L-M were "Bridge" traffic that MRL ran for BNSF. I loved the variety of power that would run up there. Here in SoCal it seems like all I see are Dash 9 pumpkins.
--Zak Gardner
My Layout Blog: http://mrl369dude.blogspot.com
http://zgardner18.rrpicturearchives.net
VIEW SLIDE SHOW: CLICK ON PHOTO BELOW
Our community is FREE to join. To participate you must either login or register for an account.