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HSR around the world

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Posted by Gramp on Sunday, May 10, 2015 11:34 AM

As I understand it, in China it costs in the neighborhood of the equivalent of $30,000 to license a car.  In our state it costs $75.

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Posted by blue streak 1 on Tuesday, May 12, 2015 8:40 PM
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Posted by blue streak 1 on Tuesday, May 26, 2015 8:51 PM
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Posted by schlimm on Monday, June 1, 2015 4:35 PM

In China, thousands demonstrate in the streets and face SWAT teams and repression to demand an HSR link to their city while elsewhere people sign petitions to bring HSR to their cities.   Here we discuss table linens in dining cars and order baggage cars.

http://www.ibtimes.com/china-protests-high-speed-rail-line-abandoned-city-triggers-violent-clashes-1926516

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Posted by BaltACD on Monday, June 1, 2015 9:40 PM

schlimm

In China, thousands demonstrate in the streets and face SWAT teams and repression to demand an HSR link to their city while elsewhere people sign petitions to bring HSR to their cities.   Here we discuss table linens in dining cars and order baggage cars.

http://www.ibtimes.com/china-protests-high-speed-rail-line-abandoned-city-triggers-violent-clashes-1926516

 

No - in the US, in general, HSR is viewed as a pipe dream that no one would use even if it were built.  (the 20/400 foresight of the masses)

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Posted by schlimm on Tuesday, June 2, 2015 4:15 PM

BaltACD

 

 
schlimm

In China, thousands demonstrate in the streets and face SWAT teams and repression to demand an HSR link to their city while elsewhere people sign petitions to bring HSR to their cities.   Here we discuss table linens in dining cars and order baggage cars.

http://www.ibtimes.com/china-protests-high-speed-rail-line-abandoned-city-triggers-violent-clashes-1926516

 

 

 

No - in the US, in general, HSR is viewed as a pipe dream that no one would use even if it were built.  (the 20/400 foresight of the masses)

 

The interest may be greater than you would judge from these pages.  Even in the Passenger Forum, "The place to discuss Amtrak, the future of passenger rail, and high-speed proposals," many threads wax nostalgic about the past and contributors are largely anti-HSR.   I wonder if age has a bearing along with interests?  For example, what is the median age of members?  Even among younger members, their connection to passenger rail may be only as hobbyists or fans of the Golden Era.

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Posted by daveklepper on Wednesday, June 3, 2015 5:16 AM

What limited experience I had with high-speed rail in Europe indicated that food and beverage service, while very very expensive, was also very very good.

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Posted by schlimm on Wednesday, June 3, 2015 9:55 AM

daveklepper

What limited experience I had with high-speed rail in Europe indicated that food and beverage service, while very very expensive, was also very very good.

 

The price is hardly as you describe.

Part of current menu on Deutsche Bahn dining cars (Bord Restaurant) on ICE trains:

Sausages with potato salad (vinegar & oil) 7.80 EUR 

Baked potato with sour cream and slices of smoked salmon 7.90 EUR

Penne with tomato sauce  7.90 EUR

Penne with ham and cream sauce  8.90 EUR

Chili con carne with Argentinian beef 8.20 EUR

Potato and leek stew with smoked sausage slices 9.90 EUR 

Chicken fricassee with mushrooms and buttered rice 9.90 EUR

Meatballs in caper sauce with buttered rice 10.90 EUR 

Beers (0.5L) 3.90-4.20 EUR

Wines (0.25 L) 6.50-8.50 EUR

The food is quite good and similar in price to a moderately priced restaurant 

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Posted by BaltACD on Wednesday, June 3, 2015 10:43 AM

schlimm
daveklepper

What limited experience I had with high-speed rail in Europe indicated that food and beverage service, while very very expensive, was also very very good.

The price is hardly as you describe.

Part of current menu on Deutsche Bahn dining cars (Bord Restaurant) on ICE trains:

Sausages with potato salad (vinegar & oil) 7.80 EUR 

Baked potato with sour cream and slices of smoked salmon 7.90 EUR

Penne with tomato sauce  7.90 EUR

Penne with ham and cream sauce  8.90 EUR

Chili con carne with Argentinian beef 8.20 EUR

Potato and leek stew with smoked sausage slices 9.90 EUR 

Chicken fricassee with mushrooms and buttered rice 9.90 EUR

Meatballs in caper sauce with buttered rice 10.90 EUR 

Beers (0.5L) 3.90-4.20 EUR

Wines (0.25 L) 6.50-8.50 EUR

The food is quite good and similar in price to a moderately priced restaurant

Currently 1 Euro = $1.13 - in the recent past it has been $1.50 or so

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Posted by schlimm on Wednesday, June 3, 2015 12:12 PM

BaltACD

 

 
schlimm
daveklepper

What limited experience I had with high-speed rail in Europe indicated that food and beverage service, while very very expensive, was also very very good.

The price is hardly as you describe.

Part of current menu on Deutsche Bahn dining cars (Bord Restaurant) on ICE trains:

Sausages with potato salad (vinegar & oil) 7.80 EUR 

Baked potato with sour cream and slices of smoked salmon 7.90 EUR

Penne with tomato sauce  7.90 EUR

Penne with ham and cream sauce  8.90 EUR

Chili con carne with Argentinian beef 8.20 EUR

Potato and leek stew with smoked sausage slices 9.90 EUR 

Chicken fricassee with mushrooms and buttered rice 9.90 EUR

Meatballs in caper sauce with buttered rice 10.90 EUR 

Beers (0.5L) 3.90-4.20 EUR

Wines (0.25 L) 6.50-8.50 EUR

The food is quite good and similar in price to a moderately priced restaurant

 

Currently 1 Euro = $1.13 - in the recent past it has been $1.50 or so

 

If you can get a very tasty meal and a beer for $16.00 (service charge and tax included), most people would not consider that "very very expensive."

If you go the lounge car (Bord Bistro) you can get some excellent bratwurst in curry sauce with bread and a beer for about $7.00.  And your train is moving at a speed up to 170 mph.

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Posted by daveklepper on Sunday, June 7, 2015 9:56 AM

Schlimm, I appreciate your comments on German dining cars.  In reply, I was referring to my experience on truly high-speed trains, and I never had the opportunity to ride such a train in Germany.  I did ride lots of regular intercity German trains and ate in dining cars and found the experience on par with the near-best on pre-Amtrak dining cars, not quite Super Chief or Panama Limited or, later, Rio Grande Zephyr, but comperable to a good car on the ACL or Seabord or on an MP Eagle or New Haven Yankee Clipper, or a PRR corridor train, all very good if not excellent excellent. All decently priced and very courteously served.   My experience with very expensive but good meals was in another European country, and most travelers would know which one and agree. And that also was only on the high-speed trains.   Regular trains had reasonable meals, not quite as good as German trains, but good enough, and reasonably priced. And diners of this country often worked through on trains across boarders into other countries.

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Posted by schlimm on Sunday, June 7, 2015 10:05 AM

uote user="daveklepper"]Schlimm, I appreciate your comments on German dining cars.  In reply, I was referring to my experience on truly high-speed trains, and I never had the opportunity to ride such a train in Germany. [/quote]

ICE trains on DB in Germany are their version of HSR (high-speed, French TGV).  I assume your experience was on the French?

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Posted by daveklepper on Monday, June 8, 2015 2:22 AM

Shhhh......    I am told by my rabbi-teachers never to speak ill of anyone unless it is to avert further harm.   Could matters have been improved in the 19 years since I last rode one?

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Posted by schlimm on Monday, June 8, 2015 2:27 PM

A series of articles on HSR from Fortune.

http://fortune.com/2015/06/04/americas-bet-on-bullet-trains/

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Posted by blue streak 1 on Friday, June 12, 2015 8:23 PM

Not exactly but India has converted a major line from 1.5 Kv DC  to 25 Kv AC.  Will allow HSR trains to continue with no change of trains.  One reason given was the necessity to build more DC substations that did not have real estate. Another reason much more energy efficient.,

http://www.railwaygazette.com/news/passenger/single-view/view/mumbai-network-switches-from-dc-to-ac.html

 

 

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Posted by CNSF on Tuesday, June 23, 2015 8:02 AM
Forgive me, but why were we talking about highways in China a few posts back? Did I miss the part about the US interstate highway system covering its costs through user-fee revenue, or China's air being so clean that they could have the same per capita use of autos as the US with no repercussions?
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Posted by schlimm on Tuesday, June 23, 2015 8:35 AM

CNSF
Forgive me, but why were we talking about highways in China a few posts back? Did I miss the part about the US interstate highway system covering its costs through user-fee revenue, or China's air being so clean that they could have the same per capita use of autos as the US with no repercussions?
 

I think highways/Interstates were mentioned by bluestreak and also sam1 (who seems to have departed the forum) for reasons unspecified.   For a forum that is dedicated to "the future of passenger rail, and high speed proposals" there are surprisingly few folks on here who have ever ridden HSR trains (abroad, since there really aren't any in the US) as well as few who support HSR in the US.

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Posted by CMStPnP on Tuesday, June 23, 2015 12:14 PM

My next European trip is next June.      Mostly free with my frequent traveler points  Will be riding the TGV, Thalys, ICE and potentially the Eurostar.    Can't wait.

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Posted by schlimm on Tuesday, June 23, 2015 2:04 PM

CMStPnP

My next European trip is next June.      Mostly free with my frequent traveler points  Will be riding the TGV, Thalys, ICE and potentially the Eurostar.    Can't wait.

 

 
Good.  In addition to riding HSR, make a note or even better, experience the ease of train connections and interfacing with local transport and air travel.

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Posted by CNSF on Tuesday, June 23, 2015 2:20 PM
To that point, although this isn't HSR-specific, on my most recent trip to Europe, Lufthansa went on strike while we were in the air, grounding our connecting flight from Frankfort to Birmingham, England. It took the customer service agent only a few minutes to book us on a BA flight to London City and provide detailed instructions (including a map) on how to get from there to London Euston (via tube, with connections) plus train schedules and fares from Euston to Birmingham. We had to buy our own tube and train tickets, but Lufthansa reimbursed us.

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