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Posted by oltmannd on Friday, January 13, 2012 11:02 AM

From Progressive Railroading Jan 12, 2012

"• Amtrak will advance design, engineering and other pre-construction activities for a $450 million project that will boost train speeds from 135 mph to 160 mph along a 24-mile section of the NEC between Trenton and New Brunswick, N.J. Major construction is scheduled to begin in 2013 and be complete in 2017."

Cool!  But, 5 years to upgrade 24 miles of RR?  Can't we get this elephant to dance a bit faster?

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Posted by D.Carleton on Friday, January 13, 2012 11:07 AM

Please understand that, despite all the fanfare, this is nothing more than a clean-up of long deferred maintenance with some extra bells-and-whistles.

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Posted by oltmannd on Friday, January 13, 2012 11:31 AM

D.Carleton

Please understand that, despite all the fanfare, this is nothing more than a clean-up of long deferred maintenance with some extra bells-and-whistles.

This has to be new, constant tension catenary, and perhaps a voltage/freq change.  A good start.  The rest of the NEC's southern end needs this.  This is all "off the shelf" stuff.  Why a 5 year period to do a mere 24 miles?

The longer the gap between the money going out and the return flowing in, the worse the ROI - by a lot! Big projects like new intermodal terminals in frt RRs typically take only a few years from first thought to completion.  

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Posted by henry6 on Friday, January 13, 2012 12:03 PM

oltmannd

From Progressive Railroading Jan 12, 2012

"• Amtrak will advance design, engineering and other pre-construction activities for a $450 million project that will boost train speeds from 135 mph to 160 mph along a 24-mile section of the NEC between Trenton and New Brunswick, N.J. Major construction is scheduled to begin in 2013 and be complete in 2017."

Cool!  But, 5 years to upgrade 24 miles of RR?  Can't we get this elephant to dance a bit faster?

Maybe we really do need fewer elephants to accomplish this.  In fact, no maybe about it, get rid of the elephants and call in the donkeys!

 

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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, January 13, 2012 1:20 PM

When there is only one elephant on or near the dance floor, what options do you have.  I recommend you booze it up on the premise that the only elephant in the bar, irrespective of appearance, will begin to look good as closing time approaches.

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Posted by oltmannd on Friday, January 13, 2012 1:34 PM

henry6

 

 oltmannd:

 

From Progressive Railroading Jan 12, 2012

"• Amtrak will advance design, engineering and other pre-construction activities for a $450 million project that will boost train speeds from 135 mph to 160 mph along a 24-mile section of the NEC between Trenton and New Brunswick, N.J. Major construction is scheduled to begin in 2013 and be complete in 2017."

Cool!  But, 5 years to upgrade 24 miles of RR?  Can't we get this elephant to dance a bit faster?

 

 

Maybe we really do need fewer elephants to accomplish this.  In fact, no maybe about it, get rid of the elephants and call in the donkeys!

 

Donkey's don't move in a straight line any faster than elephants.

Why not just bid the whole deal out?  Have bidders give timeline and costs.  Smallest net present cost for the project wins.  Bonus paid if it can beat promised deadline.  Keep as much of Amtrak's internal bureaucratic out of it as possible!  Send'em out for dancing lessons!

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Posted by dakotafred on Friday, January 13, 2012 6:37 PM

$450 million and five years for an additional 25 mph on 24 miles of railroad?

This reminds me of how the Boardman administration addressed the shortage of revenue space on long-distance trains in July 2010, with a five-year, $298-million contract for 130 cars that include 55 baggage cars and 25 baggage-dorms.

Maybe it is time to throw in the sponge on Amtrak ... or at least on Joseph Boardman and his board.  

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Posted by blue streak 1 on Friday, January 13, 2012 9:57 PM

dakotafred

$450 million and five years for an additional 25 mph on 24 miles of railroad?

This reminds me of how the Boardman administration addressed the shortage of revenue space on long-distance trains in July 2010, with a five-year, $298-million contract for 130 cars that include 55 baggage cars and 25 baggage-dorms.

Your statements are based on assumptions that are not actually the way rail operations are conducted on the 24 miles. 

1. If it was 135 to 160 MPH then only 1:36 would be saved for each Acela.

2. Unfortunately for Amtrak they are not going 135 for the whole 24 miles. 

2a. Acelas generally only run the route at 125 MPH max as well as the regionals especially during extreme weather temps.

2b. There is a 60 MPH slow order at the Elizabeth "S" curve. The 60 may be for only regional trains and Acelas may be higher.

2c. The curves at Lincoln,Croyden, Torresdale, Frankford all have  various speed restrictions from 90 - 115 MPH.

2d. The best scheduled timing for the 24 miles from Metropark to Trenton of a regional is 21 minutes or 68 MH.

3. Next is construction duration. The time is due to complexity of rebuilding a RR while it is providing service.

3a. First the acquisition of ROW to effect curve realignments will have to be addressed especially at the Elizabeth "S" curve. 

3b. The construction of new alignments will require new high voltage transmission line locations.

3c. The new alignments will require the inside of curve tracks to be relocated one at a tiime but in coordination with installation of the constant tension CAT.

3d. New constant tension CAT is required for speeds over 150 MPH.

3e. To install constant tensio requires intermediate CAT supports ( horizontals ) between eachof the present supports. Do you want to span a steel beam across 4 - 6 tracks of live CAT? So probably will have to be done at night ?

3f. After all Track work and new intermediate CAT supports installed then constant tension can be installed.

4. Although this work is for present Acelas whose max speed is 160 the rebuilding on this section will be good for 220 MPH when next gen Acelas are built.

5.  The 130 cars are ordered to replace cars that have a max speed limit of 110 MPH which now can slow down any Acelas or regional trains. Any delay of these 110 MPH trains ( usually LD trains ) cascades and slows following trains.

6. the shortage of revenue cars may be somewhat addressed by the new bi-levels for the midwest that will free up single level cars to be used on eastern trains.

7. NJ Transit is being required to upgrade all equipment used on the NEC to operate at 125 MPH so they will not delay following Amtrak trains.

8. Same for SEPTA and MARC.

9. The number of passenger minutes saved  ( 10 + minutes for each Amtrak and NJ Transit train )will be a great number since both Amtrak and NJ Transit will be able to run xpress train to / thru Trenton at 125 or better. There may be a net energy savings as trains on this 24 mile streach will no longer have to slow at the above named curves.

10. These items and more are covered on Amtrak's web site under Reports and Documents then selecting " Interim Assestment of Achieving Improved Trip Times "

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Posted by oltmannd on Friday, January 13, 2012 10:55 PM

blue streak 1

 

 dakotafred:

 

$450 million and five years for an additional 25 mph on 24 miles of railroad?

This reminds me of how the Boardman administration addressed the shortage of revenue space on long-distance trains in July 2010, with a five-year, $298-million contract for 130 cars that include 55 baggage cars and 25 baggage-dorms.

 

 

Your statements are based on assumptions that are not actually the way rail operations are conducted on the 24 miles. 

1. If it was 135 to 160 MPH then only 1:36 would be saved for each Acela.

2. Unfortunately for Amtrak they are not going 135 for the whole 24 miles. 

2a. Acelas generally only run the route at 125 MPH max as well as the regionals especially during extreme weather temps.

2b. There is a 60 MPH slow order at the Elizabeth "S" curve. The 60 may be for only regional trains and Acelas may be higher.

2c. The curves at Lincoln,Croyden, Torresdale, Frankford all have  various speed restrictions from 90 - 115 MPH.

2d. The best scheduled timing for the 24 miles from Metropark to Trenton of a regional is 21 minutes or 68 MH.

3. Next is construction duration. The time is due to complexity of rebuilding a RR while it is providing service.

3a. First the acquisition of ROW to effect curve realignments will have to be addressed especially at the Elizabeth "S" curve. 

3b. The construction of new alignments will require new high voltage transmission line locations.

3c. The new alignments will require the inside of curve tracks to be relocated one at a tiime but in coordination with installation of the constant tension CAT.

3d. New constant tension CAT is required for speeds over 150 MPH.

3e. To install constant tensio requires intermediate CAT supports ( horizontals ) between eachof the present supports. Do you want to span a steel beam across 4 - 6 tracks of live CAT? So probably will have to be done at night ?

3f. After all Track work and new intermediate CAT supports installed then constant tension can be installed.

4. Although this work is for present Acelas whose max speed is 160 the rebuilding on this section will be good for 220 MPH when next gen Acelas are built.

5.  The 130 cars are ordered to replace cars that have a max speed limit of 110 MPH which now can slow down any Acelas or regional trains. Any delay of these 110 MPH trains ( usually LD trains ) cascades and slows following trains.

6. the shortage of revenue cars may be somewhat addressed by the new bi-levels for the midwest that will free up single level cars to be used on eastern trains.

7. NJ Transit is being required to upgrade all equipment used on the NEC to operate at 125 MPH so they will not delay following Amtrak trains.

8. Same for SEPTA and MARC.

9. The number of passenger minutes saved  ( 10 + minutes for each Amtrak and NJ Transit train )will be a great number since both Amtrak and NJ Transit will be able to run xpress train to / thru Trenton at 125 or better. There may be a net energy savings as trains on this 24 mile streach will no longer have to slow at the above named curves.

10. These items and more are covered on Amtrak's web site under Reports and Documents then selecting " Interim Assestment of Achieving Improved Trip Times "

I don't have a problem with doing the work.  I have a problem with the timeline.  Exactly how long did it take to do the Heartland Corridor Project? Or the PRR mainline clearance project?  Both less than two years from start to finish - and they both included lots of obstacles and unexpected problems dealing with raising the roof on tunnels.  How long for Abo Canyon on BNSF?

If this were Conrail or NS or BNSF, this wouldn't be a 5 year deal...

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Posted by D.Carleton on Friday, January 13, 2012 11:51 PM

oltmannd
This has to be new, constant tension catenary, and perhaps a voltage/freq change.  A good start.  The rest of the NEC's southern end needs this.  This is all "off the shelf" stuff.  

Although not an official topic at the Railway Age conference one of the presenters is directly involved in this and gave a brief overview. This section has been on the wishlist for quite some time. Since Florida rejected the HSR monies this became the runner up prize. The work will involve constant tension catenary, signaling for the higher speeds and there is at least one interlocking which still has 45 MPH switches which will be replaced. This is a stretch of railroad that varies between four and six tracks wide and thus will chew up quite a bit of money.

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Posted by blue streak 1 on Saturday, January 14, 2012 10:28 AM

oltmannd

I don't have a problem with doing the work.  I have a problem with the timeline.  Exactly how long did it take to do the Heartland Corridor Project? Or the PRR mainline clearance project?  Both less than two years from start to finish - and they both included lots of obstacles and unexpected problems dealing with raising the roof on tunnels.  How long for Abo Canyon on BNSF?

If this were Conrail or NS or BNSF, this wouldn't be a 5 year deal...

Don:  I agree that the time line is very long. 

1. Certainly the upgrade to 100 MPH iinterlockings could be completed by this time next year.

2. the installation of intermediate cross arms for the constant tension CAT can also start.

3. Sections of Constant tension CAT can then be installed when the iintermediate supports are installed.

4. Signal upgrades should also be substantially completed.

Then the problems begin.

5. NS was able to complete their work on owned ROW.

6. Unfortunately Amtrak will have to go outside existing ROW for the curve realignments.

7. THE nimbys , BANANAS,  and everyone else will fight the various required EISs. Ssome persons will try to inflate the value of the property needed to realign the ROW. Even construction access easements may be difficult. There may not be the access cooperation that MNRR got for rebuilding the Port Jervis line ?  Anyone know what the various rules in NJ for adverse property acquisition both temporary and permanent ?

8. So Amtrak could find 22 miles completed in 2 years while the various curves prevent HSR operation.

9. When all the work is completed then the FRA will step in and require endless testing of the track.  The FRA will claim that  this is the first track to operate at these speeds in the USA and they need to write rules for these speeds even though it will only be 150 MPH to 160 MPH operation.  Maybe Amtrak can operate at 150 until FRA is satisfied ?

10. So IMHO it will be government interferrence that will streach out this work ? Can any US president speed it up ? I doubt it.

Does anyone know if NS or CSX had to file any EIS for their double stack work?  I know that that took BNSF many years for ABO.

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Posted by oltmannd on Saturday, January 14, 2012 11:12 AM

blue streak 1

Does anyone know if NS or CSX had to file any EIS for their double stack work?  I know that that took BNSF many years for ABO.

Certainly for some of the work.  Daylighting some of the tunnels, at the least.

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Posted by blue streak 1 on Saturday, January 14, 2012 2:59 PM

Oltmannd:  Do you or anyone know if Amtrak has already completed or at least started EIS ??  iF SO WHAT IS THE PROGRESS?  excuse capitals keyboard is acting up.

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Posted by D.Carleton on Saturday, January 14, 2012 10:20 PM

blue streak 1

6. Unfortunately Amtrak will have to go outside existing ROW for the curve realignments.

I have not seen in print nor heard from anyone involved anything pertaining to the acquisition of property for curve realiglmnets. I shall re-review my notes but for a paltry $450 million all we can rightly expect is some new hardware.

To put all of this into perspective, Metro-North/ConnDOT have been doing something similar on the former New Haven catenary slowly replacing the original hardware with constant tension. "Thus far, 132 track miles of catenary wire have been replaced..." at a cost of $218.5 million. "When the entire project is finished, 217 track miles of wire throughout the New Haven Line will have been upgraded."  Amtrak should have no problem blowing through $450 million in under 24 miles.

http://www.mta.info/news/stories/?story=154

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Posted by oltmannd on Sunday, January 15, 2012 7:04 AM

blue streak 1

Oltmannd:  Do you or anyone know if Amtrak has already completed or at least started EIS ??  iF SO WHAT IS THE PROGRESS?  excuse capitals keyboard is acting up.

The preliminary EIS is called a FONSI. (Finding of no significant impact).  I don't know, but we should be able to look it up on the EPA web site...

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Posted by oltmannd on Sunday, January 15, 2012 7:20 AM

blue streak 1

 

 dakotafred:

 

$450 million and five years for an additional 25 mph on 24 miles of railroad?

This reminds me of how the Boardman administration addressed the shortage of revenue space on long-distance trains in July 2010, with a five-year, $298-million contract for 130 cars that include 55 baggage cars and 25 baggage-dorms.

 

 

Your statements are based on assumptions that are not actually the way rail operations are conducted on the 24 miles. 

1. If it was 135 to 160 MPH then only 1:36 would be saved for each Acela.

2. Unfortunately for Amtrak they are not going 135 for the whole 24 miles. 

2a. Acelas generally only run the route at 125 MPH max as well as the regionals especially during extreme weather temps.

2b. There is a 60 MPH slow order at the Elizabeth "S" curve. The 60 may be for only regional trains and Acelas may be higher.

2c. The curves at Lincoln,Croyden, Torresdale, Frankford all have  various speed restrictions from 90 - 115 MPH.

2d. The best scheduled timing for the 24 miles from Metropark to Trenton of a regional is 21 minutes or 68 MH.

3. Next is construction duration. The time is due to complexity of rebuilding a RR while it is providing service.

3a. First the acquisition of ROW to effect curve realignments will have to be addressed especially at the Elizabeth "S" curve. 

3b. The construction of new alignments will require new high voltage transmission line locations.

3c. The new alignments will require the inside of curve tracks to be relocated one at a tiime but in coordination with installation of the constant tension CAT.

3d. New constant tension CAT is required for speeds over 150 MPH.

3e. To install constant tensio requires intermediate CAT supports ( horizontals ) between eachof the present supports. Do you want to span a steel beam across 4 - 6 tracks of live CAT? So probably will have to be done at night ?

3f. After all Track work and new intermediate CAT supports installed then constant tension can be installed.

4. Although this work is for present Acelas whose max speed is 160 the rebuilding on this section will be good for 220 MPH when next gen Acelas are built.

5.  The 130 cars are ordered to replace cars that have a max speed limit of 110 MPH which now can slow down any Acelas or regional trains. Any delay of these 110 MPH trains ( usually LD trains ) cascades and slows following trains.

6. the shortage of revenue cars may be somewhat addressed by the new bi-levels for the midwest that will free up single level cars to be used on eastern trains.

7. NJ Transit is being required to upgrade all equipment used on the NEC to operate at 125 MPH so they will not delay following Amtrak trains.

8. Same for SEPTA and MARC.

9. The number of passenger minutes saved  ( 10 + minutes for each Amtrak and NJ Transit train )will be a great number since both Amtrak and NJ Transit will be able to run xpress train to / thru Trenton at 125 or better. There may be a net energy savings as trains on this 24 mile streach will no longer have to slow at the above named curves.

10. These items and more are covered on Amtrak's web site under Reports and Documents then selecting " Interim Assestment of Achieving Improved Trip Times "

The $450M is for New Brunswick to Trenton.  There are two very shallow curves just south of New Brunswick.  I don't think an curve realignment is included.

Would think a FONSI would suffice for cat replacement - even with some new cat poles.  If a new sub station site is included, that would need a full blown EIS, probably.

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Posted by daveklepper on Sunday, January 15, 2012 9:36 AM

Buying baggage-dorms does release revenue space in sleepers now occupied by attendants.

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Posted by blue streak 1 on Sunday, January 15, 2012 10:01 AM

oltmannd

The $450M is for New Brunswick to Trenton.  There are two very shallow curves just south of New Brunswick.  I don't think an curve realignment is included.

Would think a FONSI would suffice for cat replacement - even with some new cat poles.  If a new sub station site is included, that would need a full blown EIS, probably.

Oltmannd: You may be correct of only 2 curves ?. I took the all curves listed in Amtrak's statement from NYP to PHL. Someone who knows all the locations may be able to locate them.

2b. There is a 60 MPH slow order at the Elizabeth "S" curve. The 60 may be for only regional trains and Acelas may be higher.

2c. The curves at Lincoln,Croyden, Torresdale, Frankford all have  various speed restrictions from 90 - 115 MPH.

 

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Posted by D.Carleton on Sunday, January 15, 2012 11:50 AM

blue streak 1

 2c. The curves at Lincoln,Croyden, Torresdale, Frankford all have  various speed restrictions from 90 - 115 MPH. 

Lincoln is north of New Brunswick; Croyden, Torresdale and Frankford are south of Morrisville. There is a reason that these particular 24 miles were chosen for upgrade.

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Posted by oltmannd on Sunday, January 15, 2012 6:57 PM

daveklepper

Buying baggage-dorms does release revenue space in sleepers now occupied by attendants.

Buying a whole sleeper creates even more revenue space.

You can make perfectly good 125 mph baggage cars out of Amfleet cars.

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Posted by oltmannd on Sunday, January 15, 2012 6:58 PM

daveklepper

Buying baggage-dorms does release revenue space in sleepers now occupied by attendants.

Why don't the attendants just rotate off like the operating crew and release all that space w/o having to buy a thing?

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Posted by dakotafred on Sunday, January 15, 2012 8:20 PM

oltmannd

 daveklepper:

Buying baggage-dorms does release revenue space in sleepers now occupied by attendants.

 

Why don't the attendants just rotate off like the operating crew and release all that space w/o having to buy a thing?

A very good question, Don, that I remember you asking back in July 2010. I wonder if the answer isn't simply that this is a case of industrial hangover ... the way things were always done. Pullman attendants always made the whole trip, therefore needed sleeping space. It's true that if we changed them as often as engine crews we wouldn't need sleeping space for them ... but we'd need many more crews!

The whole thing needs to be rethought, if we're going to keep long-distance. But I sure wouldn't start the rethinking process with a whole bunch of expensive non-revenue space.

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Posted by matthewsaggie on Sunday, January 15, 2012 8:53 PM

A FONSI (Finding of No Signifigant Impact) is what you hope to obtain after doing an EIS (Environmantal Impact Study).  Its not the same thing as an EIS. The actual goal of all this is a ROD (Record of Decision) where the federal agency, in this case the FRA, certifies that all environmental issues and rules, human and natural have been considered and mitigated to the maximimum extend feasable. No federal money can be spent on construction, or even final engineering, until there is a ROD signed off on

This project  could possibly get by with an EA (Environmental Assessment) a lesser review often for smaller projects, especially those not adding R/W or tracks. The FONSI and ROD are stil the final goals.    

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Posted by D.Carleton on Sunday, January 15, 2012 9:28 PM

matthewsaggie

A FONSI (Finding of No Signifigant Impact) is what you hope to obtain after doing an EIS (Environmantal Impact Study).  Its not the same thing as an EIS. The actual goal of all this is a ROD (Record of Decision) where the federal agency, in this case the FRA, certifies that all environmental issues and rules, human and natural have been considered and mitigated to the maximimum extend feasable. No federal money can be spent on construction, or even final engineering, until there is a ROD signed off on

This project  could possibly get by with an EA (Environmental Assessment) a lesser review often for smaller projects, especially those not adding R/W or tracks. The FONSI and ROD are stil the final goals.    

My understanding, and what I have seen in other similar situations, if a Federal grant is involved then an EIS is automatic. The Northeast Corridor Improvement Project (NECIP) of 1976 also came with an EIS. There is a distinct possibility that there is a more recent existing EIS which is still in date to cover these 24 miles.

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Posted by oltmannd on Monday, January 16, 2012 6:56 AM

matthewsaggie

A FONSI (Finding of No Signifigant Impact) is what you hope to obtain after doing an EIS (Environmantal Impact Study).  Its not the same thing as an EIS. The actual goal of all this is a ROD (Record of Decision) where the federal agency, in this case the FRA, certifies that all environmental issues and rules, human and natural have been considered and mitigated to the maximimum extend feasable. No federal money can be spent on construction, or even final engineering, until there is a ROD signed off on

This project  could possibly get by with an EA (Environmental Assessment) a lesser review often for smaller projects, especially those not adding R/W or tracks. The FONSI and ROD are stil the final goals.    

Thanks for explaining what I had hopelessly screwed up!

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Posted by oltmannd on Monday, January 16, 2012 7:11 AM

dakotafred

 

 oltmannd:

 

 

 daveklepper:

Buying baggage-dorms does release revenue space in sleepers now occupied by attendants.

 

 

Why don't the attendants just rotate off like the operating crew and release all that space w/o having to buy a thing?

 

 

A very good question, Don, that I remember you asking back in July 2010. I wonder if the answer isn't simply that this is a case of industrial hangover ... the way things were always done. Pullman attendants always made the whole trip, therefore needed sleeping space. It's true that if we changed them as often as engine crews we wouldn't need sleeping space for them ... but we'd need many more crews!

The whole thing needs to be rethought, if we're going to keep long-distance. But I sure wouldn't start the rethinking process with a whole bunch of expensive non-revenue space.

While political pressure may keep the LD trains running for quite a while, in the grand scheme of things, Amtrak LD trains will become increasingly hard to justify in the face of the federal funding needed for SSI, Medicare and the debt.

The best hope for keeping them is to improve their economic performance. Sadly, I don't think Amtrak is up to the task.  The only time they seem to get interested is when they are poked in the eye with a stick.  The latest is the PIIRA requirements of 2008.  And, even then, they only ever seem to nibble around the edges.

Then, when they do manage to find some money, they say and do things that make your head shake.  A huge purchase of non-revenue space.  Replacing the entire fleet of electric locomotives when the current ones could be rebuilt for less (and the same model is still tramping around all over Sweden with a much higher average age).  It is clear the economics don't drive their decision making as much as departmental convenience.

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Posted by matthewsaggie on Monday, January 16, 2012 9:08 AM

Article about the environmental review process and supposedly it's to be sped up:

http://www.app.com/article/20120113/NJNEWS/301130100/White-House-will-speed-approval-of-improvements-to-Northeast-rails

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Posted by DMUinCT on Monday, January 16, 2012 9:45 AM

1.   $450 Million to spend on an upgrade that has to last another 80 years. Budget $90 million a year and take 5 years to complete.

2.  Do the "upgrade" while Amtrak and Local trains whiz by every 20 minutes, it slows down the job.

Don U. TCA 73-5735

  • Member since
    December 2001
  • 8,156 posts
Posted by henry6 on Monday, January 16, 2012 10:23 AM

Real  money is earned in small segments and over long periods of time.  Thus a 25mph increase over a 24 mile segment is not out of order and could bring significant markings to a bottom line be it money, time, or marketing.

As for baggage-dorm cars.  There are times when labor costs have to be weighed and applied.  If a crew can be aboard and available because of a baggage dorm rather than land based hotel or dormatory rooms, then it is the right choice.  This also has to be weighed against income for the space.  If the space can be rented out every night is one thing, but if only once a week, then it is another.  Crew costs...and control...have to be considerd in the operation and not just an offhand chance of taking in revenue.

 

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Posted by blue streak 1 on Monday, January 16, 2012 10:52 AM

matthewsaggie

Article about the environmental review process and supposedly it's to be sped up:

 http://www.app.com/article/20120113/NJNEWS/301130100/White-House-will-speed-approval-of-improvements-to-Northeast-rails

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