DesertXpress quote $3 to $5 billion for their scheme - to build 190 miles of double track 125mph railway! Sounds far too cheap to me!
The other problem is starting the service at Victorville rather than L.A. Will enough people park their cars at Victorville and take the train to make the venture profitable?
Surely any venture should be targeting the L.A to Las Vegas airlines? The new Madrid - Barcelona high speed line in Spain is a good example of this.
Chafford1 wrote: DesertXpress quote $3 to $5 billion for their scheme - to build 190 miles of double track 125mph railway! Sounds far too cheap to me!
That might pay for the initial survey, the IAS, permitting and part of the land acquisition.
Once a driver climbs Cajon, the temptation to just keep going will be all but irresistable! As for reverse traffic (Las Vegas residents wanting to go to LA,) if there isn't a rent-a-car service at Victorville, that simply won't happen - and is very unlikely to happen even if there is a rental counter right in the station.
What seems to be getting overlooked is that Madrid-Barcelona (and London-Paris, and Tokyo-Osaka on the original Shinkansen) will be attracting BUSINESS travelers, not pleasure seekers. Sin City is NOT a center of commerce.
Also, if anyone expects the Las Vegas casinos to pay any part of the cost of LA-LV rail they're hallucinating. The big operators would rather spend that money opening 'branch offices' in Macau.
Chuck (Clark County, NV, resident)
We need the Desert Wind back.
All those people ranting about oil company profits seem to forget that the major reason they have increased is the oil companies are simply selling more oil. If a company can sell more of its products, of course its going to make more money. And since they are among the largest corporations in the world, of course they are going to have large profits when running at or very near full capacity. The real culprits behind the huge run up in oil prices not due to just supply and demand are the (1) OPEC members who seem to be believe that $90 a barrel oil is now their God given right and (2) the environmentalists, and their political allies, almost all of the Democrats and a few NE Republicans, and almost all of the press--all of whom keep pushing for alternative fuels but refuse to do one thing to increase the US domestic supply of oil and natural gas that's needed for the next 20-30 years! Nothing wrong with alternative fuels, although ethanol from corn and other grains in US is turning out to be a disaster for consumers, but you also need to increase the US supply of oil and natural gas if you want to have any clout with OPEC and stop the spiraling prices.
As I've stated before, I retired from a major university and I can't tell you of the number of academics who have told me that the best thing for the country is $5-6 gallon of gas "so the environment will be cleaner". The idea that what they want could throw this country into chaos unseen since the 1930's never crosses their mind. The fact that the "common man" is already hurting, as are most businesses, and would really get clobbered under their scenario also never crosses their mind.
That's my rant for today.
tomikawaTT wrote: Chafford1 wrote: DesertXpress quote $3 to $5 billion for their scheme - to build 190 miles of double track 125mph railway! Sounds far too cheap to me!That might pay for the initial survey, the IAS, permitting and part of the land acquisition.The other problem is starting the service at Victorville rather than L.A. Will enough people park their cars at Victorville and take the train to make the venture profitable? Once a driver climbs Cajon, the temptation to just keep going will be all but irresistable! As for reverse traffic (Las Vegas residents wanting to go to LA,) if there isn't a rent-a-car service at Victorville, that simply won't happen - and is very unlikely to happen even if there is a rental counter right in the station.Surely any venture should be targeting the L.A to Las Vegas airlines? The new Madrid - Barcelona high speed line in Spain is a good example of this.What seems to be getting overlooked is that Madrid-Barcelona (and London-Paris, and Tokyo-Osaka on the original Shinkansen) will be attracting BUSINESS travelers, not pleasure seekers. Sin City is NOT a center of commerce.Also, if anyone expects the Las Vegas casinos to pay any part of the cost of LA-LV rail they're hallucinating. The big operators would rather spend that money opening 'branch offices' in Macau.Chuck (Clark County, NV, resident)
Chuck, you make an excellent point about those routes in other countries whose HST's thrive and profit by catering to the business set (and I could say that as well of Acela in this country). And a major reason the business set will pay screechingly high fares to ride first class on Acela (along with the who-cares aspects of some expense accounts), is that a lot of business travel can't be planned, and they have to have the quickest transport to another NEC city Right Away and d**n the expense. Call it impulse purchase, impromptu, unplanned or spur-of-the-moment, that's what makes the profits, if the Amtrak accountants allow there's any to be made at all.
I'm going to suggest that in the medium-to-far future there might be a sustainable or profitable market for an L.A. - N.V. highspeed train. If such is to occur, I for one would expect the people who pay amazingly high fares, besides wanting a more comfortable seat, expect a higher (for lack of a better term), "exclusive" class of service. Maybe there could be three classes: Coach, First Class and Luxury (or "High Roller"). The High Rollers car could be like the Metroliner-and-earlier-vintage parlor cars, swivel chairs two across (everyone gets an aisle seat AND a window seat. The real draw would be, along with a lot more personal space, plush, and personal attention (waiter service and meal included); for lack of a better term), a dose of Vegas-style "vice" would bring the hard core in. Maybe there are enough people willing to brush up on their Blackjack before hitting the tables at the casinos that they wouldn't mind the Luxury Car ("house") holding on a soft fifteen. Cigarettes, mixed drinks and such would be suitably exorbitant, just as they are getting to be in Vegas itself. Blackjack and Hold'em don't need an awful lot of room. I'd avoid craps and roulette for sure!
Two huge hurdles present themselves: the first, as was so well brought up in earlier posts: capitalization. And number two: all but the last roughly sixty miles would be in California, where specific laws against smoking and gambling exist, and even rolling cocktail lounges might have a lot of hoops to jump through before the state licenses them. (Anyone out there ridden the Amtrak trains that do offer wine or mixed drinks??) Point being, even people who act like the stereotypical drunken sailor will balk if the indulgences exist only through the last third of the trip -- about 35 mins. at HST speed.
After those close-to-impossible barriers, real-life objections present themselves. California is not about to pay to build part of most of an private-capital high-speed line to carry their citizens out of state. And my guess would be, as expensive as acquisition costs would be, three- and four-laning the Interstate, even the roughly one-third of the line that runs within the state of Nevada, (or building a parallel toll road) would be as naught compared to HST planning, surveying, laying track, buying state-of-the-art trainsets, electrification etc etc etc.
For this to work our imaginary capitalist would have to get at least some of the "official" Vegas of big casinos, hotels and related services to get on board, pardon the pun. Up until now that highly specialized city has dealt with the problem of transportation in some classically American ways: run longer city busses more frequently, buy up old housing or parking lots to buy high-rise parking decks, encourage the rental of cars. Oh, and next time you really should book that car ahead. Sadly, IMHO, the powers that be have re-laned Las Vegas Boulevard (The Strip) so that it is almost impossible to take a cab for a very short distance: multiple right-turn-only lanes at most intersections force cabbies into the right turn, from which another turn ensues to take the Interstate or a side road, sometimes describing a shoe-box pattern, just to reach the palace "just a couple of buildings down." But those of us who are slow to acclimate to 105-degree (F) temps (never mind the low humidity) might find those little third-and half-mile taxi rides the only feasible options (watch carefully: those buses stop at places more useful to the employees than the tourists). Between 1999 and 2005, by my traveling companion and my lights, the cost of cab fares per mile did not go up all that much, but what used to be a three-dollar fare is now a seven-dollar fare due to all the circling (shoeboxing?) around. So the short trip with tip cost four bucks less than ten years ago; as of 2005 it was seven or eight (and so easy to let the cabdriver keep a ten) -- in effect more than doubling the price of convenient transportation over short distances -- not to mention overcrowding already-crowded local roads and wasting hydrocarbons in a way that would make even the Exxon tiger blush.
Short of adding diamond lanes for Vegas-bound buses which is probably politically untenable and about as expensive as adding extra lanes on the superhighway, at some point, assuming Vegas grows steadily, I would guess that some sort of rail would come to the fore (the faster the growth, the more acute the need, of cours
The hell with everyone else, just build the *** thing and be done with it. I live right between the I-210 and the I-15 and seeing this parking lot every weekend is crazy. If UP, Sante Fe and BNSF has a problem with running high-speed trains pass colton yard, San Bernandino yard and thru the el cajon pass then tell them to come see me!
Expand it to LA! not many people would like to drive to Victorville and besides, the wind blows to much dirt on nice clean carsFinally, Southwest is afaird of the competetion but hey, at least you can look sexy or wear nice short clothes on a train and not get kicked off for being beatiful
ndbprr wrote:Your arguements (sic) are so full of holes it would take a book or more to address them
I stand by my statements completely particularly that the government does create wealth it takes it from every producing American
The government is not continuously cutting taxes and when they do the revenues increase - every time without exception
If cutting taxes is so bad how come the current stimulus package will work since they are giving us back our money to spend?
alphas wrote:All those people ranting about oil company profits seem to forget that the major reason they have increased is the oil companies are simply selling more oil. If a company can sell more of its products, of course its going to make more money. And since they are among the largest corporations in the world, of course they are going to have large profits when running at or very near full capacity.
The real culprits behind the huge run up in oil prices not due to just supply and demand are the (1) OPEC members who seem to be believe that $90 a barrel oil is now their God given right and (2) the environmentalists, and their political allies, almost all of the Democrats and a few NE Republicans, and almost all of the press--all of whom keep pushing for alternative fuels but refuse to do one thing to increase the US domestic supply of oil and natural gas that's needed for the next 20-30 years! Nothing wrong with alternative fuels, although ethanol from corn and other grains in US is turning out to be a disaster for consumers, but you also need to increase the US supply of oil and natural gas if you want to have any clout with OPEC and stop the spiraling prices
As I've stated before, I retired from a major university and I can't tell you of the number of academics who have told me that the best thing for the country is $5-6 gallon of gas "so the environment will be cleaner". The idea that what they want could throw this country into chaos unseen since the 1930's never crosses their mind. The fact that the "common man" is already hurting, as are most businesses, and would really get clobbered under their scenario also never crosses their mind
Amtrak77 wrote:The hell with everyone else, just build the *** thing and be done with it. I live right between the I-210 and the I-15 and seeing this parking lot every weekend is crazy. If UP, Sante Fe and BNSF has a problem with running high-speed trains pass colton yard, San Bernandino yard and thru the el cajon pass then tell them to come see me!Expand it to LA! not many people would like to drive to Victorville and besides, the wind blows to much dirt on nice clean carsFinally, Southwest is afaird of the competetion but hey, at least you can look sexy or wear nice short clothes on a train and not get kicked off for being beatiful
I,m with you, build it. Stop in victorville and pick me up. how many lanes wide is that 15 going over the hill? And on the weekend it's bumper to bumper. lets all pitch in and rent a billboard on the 15 that says, next time take the train! And put amtraks phone number on the bottom!!
I dunno. The same "big operators" are springing for all the costs of new NY - AC service...
-Don (Random stuff, mostly about trains - what else? http://blerfblog.blogspot.com/)
Do they need a reason?
With our taxpayer money they pay attorneys to protest any issue. And the attorneys are always ready to take the money.
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