• Hoosier State crisis averted

    From Adam H. Kerman@1:2320/100 to All on Mon Apr 6 17:52:16 2015

    From: ahk@chinet.com

    I just received the press release from Indiana DOT: The Hoosier State crisis
    is over. FRA came to Indianapolis last week to negotiate. They have an agreement in principle, that Iowa Pacific Holdings will be responsible for compliance with FRA safety regime, a provision that one really expected
    would have been in the state contract all along.

    State of Indiana will NOT become a railroad for the purpose of complying
    with the federal railroad safety regime. The state will have to designate a staff member whose job it is to ensure compliance with federal standards.

    There's no news as to when IPH rolling stock will be used, and I really have
    no idea what they'll provide, but I'm looking into that.

    In other news, there's no daily service to Cincinatti and certain
    third-world countries have better intercity passenger rail service than
    Amtrak provides.

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  • From Denis Mcmahon@1:2320/100 to Adam H. Kerman on Mon Apr 6 18:38:38 2015

    From: denismfmcmahon@gmail.com

    On Mon, 06 Apr 2015 17:52:14 +0000, Adam H. Kerman wrote:

    In other news ... certain
    third-world countries have better intercity passenger rail service than Amtrak provides.

    That may be a legacy of the fact that in the USA, it seems most long
    distance lines are owned by freight companies, and passenger transport
    outside of metropolitan areas isn't seen as a priority.

    --
    Denis McMahon, denismfmcmahon@gmail.com

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  • From Adam H. Kerman@1:2320/100 to Denis Mcmahon on Mon Apr 6 19:30:38 2015

    From: ahk@chinet.com

    Denis McMahon <denismfmcmahon@gmail.com> wrote:
    On Mon, 06 Apr 2015 17:52:14 +0000, Adam H. Kerman wrote:

    In other news ... certain third-world countries have better intercity >>passenger rail service than Amtrak provides.

    That may be a legacy of the fact that in the USA, it seems most long
    distance lines are owned by freight companies, and passenger transport >outside of metropolitan areas isn't seen as a priority.

    One doesn't preclude the other.

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  • From Jg@1:2320/100 to Adam H. Kerman on Tue Apr 7 16:46:22 2015

    From: jgrove24@hotmail.com

    On Monday, April 6, 2015 at 12:52:15 PM UTC-5, Adam H. Kerman wrote:


    In other news, there's no daily service to Cincinatti and certain
    third-world countries have better intercity passenger rail service than Amtrak provides.

    I'd guess that Megabus and the Hound serve this market demand, without having to stop at sidings waiting for oil trains.

    --- SoupGate/W32 v1.03
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  • From Hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com@1:2320/100 to Adam H. Kerman on Tue Apr 7 19:03:28 2015

    On Monday, April 6, 2015 at 1:52:15 PM UTC-4, Adam H. Kerman wrote:

    In other news, there's no daily service to Cincinatti and certain third-world countries have better intercity passenger rail service than Amtrak provides.

    The lack of Amtrak service (as well as resources to provide quality service) are the direct result of the desire of Congress and some Administrations over the years to limit service to the bare minimum. It is an article of faith among economic
    conservatives that passenger trains are evil. Heck, plenty of postings in this

    newsgroup reflect that attitude.

    We're lucky to have the passenger service we have.

    For a rather modest investment in more track and rolling stock, Amtrak could double its ridership. The demand is there. The political will is not.

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  • From Stephen Sprunk@1:2320/100 to Hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com on Tue Apr 7 22:06:32 2015

    From: stephen@sprunk.org

    On 07-Apr-15 21:03, hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote:
    For a rather modest investment in more track and rolling stock,
    Amtrak could double its ridership. The demand is there. The
    political will is not.

    Unfortunately, railroads are an incredibly capital-intensive business,
    so you need a pretty significant investment in track to make _any_
    difference in speed or capacity, though it should be pointed out that
    the freight RRs _already_ need major track investments for their own
    traffic, and a fairly small contribution by Amtrak would likely sway
    them toward investing in the particular routes Amtrak uses, thus getting
    Amtrak a lot more bang for their buck than you'd expect.

    Adding rolling stock is much simpler, at least until you need to add
    more crew (or especially locos) to a particular run. But many Amtrak
    trains are sold out due to being far too short, and profitability would
    be increased (or losses reduced, for LD routes) by adding a few cars to
    each train--or by adding a few new trainsets and consolidating the
    remaining ones. However, fare revenue will never match expenses when
    Amtrak's trains are competing with bicycles, not cars or buses, on
    speed--and that's where track improvements come in.

    S

    --
    Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein
    CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the
    K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking

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  • From 866013149e@1:2320/100 to Adam H. Kerman on Wed Apr 8 13:32:20 2015

    From: 866013149e@interpring.com

    "Adam H. Kerman" <ahk@chinet.com> writes:

    Denis McMahon <denismfmcmahon@gmail.com> wrote:
    On Mon, 06 Apr 2015 17:52:14 +0000, Adam H. Kerman wrote:

    In other news ... certain third-world countries have better intercity >>>passenger rail service than Amtrak provides.

    That may be a legacy of the fact that in the USA, it seems most long >>distance lines are owned by freight companies, and passenger transport >>outside of metropolitan areas isn't seen as a priority.

    One doesn't preclude the other.

    It does if you only maintain just enough infrastructure to meet your
    freight customers' needs. To carry passengers, track has to be maintained
    to higher standards, and there has to be enough of it that scheduled
    passenger trains can meet their timetables without interfering with
    freight traffic.

    When American railroads got out of the passenger business in the 1960's
    and early '70's, they tore up a lot of track. In some cases, states
    charged property taxes per mile of track, and that gave railroads
    an added incentive to tear up anything they didn't need. If I remember
    right, over 100,000 miles of track has been removed since 1950, including entire routes, such as that of the Erie (-Lackawanna) west of Youngstown.

    What's left isn't enough to carry more than a token passenger train
    on most routes, particularly given the massive increase in freight
    traffic in recent years.


    umar

    --- news://freenews.netfront.net/ - complaints: news@netfront.net ---

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  • From Adam H. Kerman@1:2320/100 to 866013149e@interpring.com on Wed Apr 8 14:56:04 2015

    From: ahk@chinet.com

    866013149e <866013149e@interpring.com> wrote:
    "Adam H. Kerman" <ahk@chinet.com> writes:
    Denis McMahon <denismfmcmahon@gmail.com> wrote:
    On Mon, 06 Apr 2015 17:52:14 +0000, Adam H. Kerman wrote:

    In other news ... certain third-world countries have better intercity >>>>passenger rail service than Amtrak provides.

    That may be a legacy of the fact that in the USA, it seems most long >>>distance lines are owned by freight companies, and passenger transport >>>outside of metropolitan areas isn't seen as a priority.

    One doesn't preclude the other.

    It does if you only maintain just enough infrastructure to meet your
    freight customers' needs. To carry passengers, track has to be maintained
    to higher standards, and there has to be enough of it that scheduled >passenger trains can meet their timetables without interfering with
    freight traffic. . . .

    It was a statement about priorities. If having adequate intercity passenger rail was domestic policy in this country at both federal and state level,
    it certainly doesn't preclude either freight service nor un-nationalized railroads. It just requires a commitment of all parties to using railroads
    for all appropriate forms of transportation and adequate access to capital, even to the extent that additional capital would have to come from the taxpayers.

    --- SoupGate/W32 v1.03
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  • From Hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com@1:2320/100 to Stephen Sprunk on Wed Apr 8 20:49:08 2015

    On Tuesday, April 7, 2015 at 11:07:38 PM UTC-4, Stephen Sprunk wrote:

    Unfortunately, railroads are an incredibly capital-intensive business,
    so you need a pretty significant investment in track to make _any_
    difference in speed or capacity, though it should be pointed out that
    the freight RRs _already_ need major track investments for their own
    traffic, and a fairly small contribution by Amtrak would likely sway
    them toward investing in the particular routes Amtrak uses, thus getting Amtrak a lot more bang for their buck than you'd expect.

    Unfortunately, it seems most modern railroad managements are pre-conditioned to

    hate passenger trains and will have nothing to do with it, even if reasonable negotiations could result in Amtrak picking up much of the tab for track improvements.

    On a section of busy bi-directional double track that CSX shares with SEPTA, CSX is spending money to build a third track dedicated for its trains. I think

    this is foolish. CSX will go from a very fluid two-track line to a single track line that will
    hurt, not help its freight trains. The two-track line was busy, but not over-crowded, and the bi-directional signalling made it flexible.

    But this attitude is nothing new. Back in the 1950s, some railroad managers were convinced their passenger trains lost money, even when in fact they were profitable, including with overhead. (Ref "Twilight of the Psgr Train" by Fraily).

    Not helping the situation was the ICC, forcing the railroads to carry extremely

    expensive trains no one rode, for years.



    Adding rolling stock is much simpler, at least until you need to add
    more crew (or especially locos) to a particular run. But many Amtrak
    trains are sold out due to being far too short, and profitability would
    be increased (or losses reduced, for LD routes) by adding a few cars to
    each train--or by adding a few new trainsets and consolidating the
    remaining ones. However, fare revenue will never match expenses when Amtrak's trains are competing with bicycles, not cars or buses, on
    speed--and that's where track improvements come in.

    Amtrak has new rolling stock on order, but the order is delayed.

    One problem is the "feast or famine" nature of building passenger cars. There isn't enough standardization and on-going orders to keep carbuilders in business and healthy. So, too many orders go to start-ups and thre are long delays.

    (However, I don't understand the screwup with the PATCO rebuild order, which is

    YEARS late, by an experienced builder. And it's a rebuild of a rapid transit car of 45 y/o technology, not even a new design, though I think they're doing it all with
    computers.)

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  • From Adam H. Kerman@1:2320/100 to Hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com on Thu Apr 9 04:24:26 2015

    From: ahk@chinet.com

    hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote:

    Unfortunately, it seems most modern railroad managements are
    pre-conditioned to hate passenger trains and will have nothing to do
    with it, even if reasonable negotiations could result in Amtrak picking
    up much of the tab for track improvements.

    Are you insane? Congress doesn't appropriate monies for Amtrak service for significant track improvement. Clearly this should be done, but it's not.

    Passenger trains should be slotted like UPS or intermodal service, which
    are essentially scheduled freight trains. So this can be done on
    modern freight railroads.

    --- SoupGate/W32 v1.03
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  • From Stephen Sprunk@1:2320/100 to Adam H. Kerman on Thu Apr 9 14:48:54 2015

    From: stephen@sprunk.org

    On 08-Apr-15 09:56, Adam H. Kerman wrote:
    It was a statement about priorities. If having adequate intercity
    passenger rail was domestic policy in this country at both federal
    and state level, it certainly doesn't preclude either freight service
    nor un-nationalized railroads. It just requires a commitment of all
    parties to using railroads for all appropriate forms of
    transportation and adequate access to capital, even to the extent
    that additional capital would have to come from the taxpayers.

    Notably, the sorts of improvements necessary to make passenger service
    viable are the same as what the railroads _already_ need to keep up with
    the existing demand for freight service. And helping them with the
    latter would cost taxpayers _less_ than expanding and repairing highways
    every year for trucks. It's only the anti-rail bigots in Congress (and,
    to be fair, the Teamsters' lobbyists lining their pockets) that prevent
    this win-win-win scenario from happening.

    S

    --
    Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein
    CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the
    K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking

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  • From Stephen Sprunk@1:2320/100 to Adam H. Kerman on Thu Apr 9 15:08:52 2015

    From: stephen@sprunk.org

    On 08-Apr-15 23:24, Adam H. Kerman wrote:
    hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote:
    Unfortunately, it seems most modern railroad managements are
    pre-conditioned to hate passenger trains and will have nothing to
    do with it, even if reasonable negotiations could result in Amtrak
    picking up much of the tab for track improvements.

    Are you insane? Congress doesn't appropriate monies for Amtrak
    service for significant track improvement. Clearly this should be
    done, but it's not.

    Passenger trains should be slotted like UPS or intermodal service,
    which are essentially scheduled freight trains. So this can be done
    on modern freight railroads.

    That may be how some freight RRs run, but not all of them. On UP, for instance, trains leave yards/sidings whenever they're ready (which can
    be several hours earlier or later than planned) and it's up to the
    dispatchers to sort things out.

    BNSF is closer to running on a schedule, but they still don't use fixed
    slots. This becomes glaringly obvious when their trains hit TRE's
    tracks, which _do_ have explicit slots for both passenger and freight
    trains during the day. Depending on when freight trains arrive, they
    may have to wait an hour before the next slot opens. OTOH, they do
    know--to the minute--when the entry signal will clear and when they'll
    exit on the other end. DGNO also uses TRE's (and DCTA's) tracks but
    almost exclusively at night, when slots aren't used.

    S

    --
    Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein
    CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the
    K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking

    --- SoupGate/W32 v1.03
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  • From Stephen Sprunk@1:2320/100 to Hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com on Thu Apr 9 15:30:32 2015

    From: stephen@sprunk.org

    On 08-Apr-15 22:49, hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk wrote:
    ... it should be pointed out that the freight RRs _already_ need
    major track investments for their own traffic, and a fairly small
    contribution by Amtrak would likely sway them toward investing in
    the particular routes Amtrak uses, thus getting Amtrak a lot more
    bang for their buck than you'd expect.

    Unfortunately, it seems most modern railroad managements are
    pre-conditioned to hate passenger trains and will have nothing to do
    with it, even if reasonable negotiations could result in Amtrak
    picking up much of the tab for track improvements.

    Well, I'd agree that most of them hate passenger trains, with the
    notable exception of BNSF.

    However, they've been living in a world where they've been forced to
    accept Amtrak's trains at a loss, so that's not surprising. Their job
    is to maximize profits for their shareholders, so you have to present a
    deal that gives them what _they_ want rather than what _you_ want. And
    Amtrak has, to date, not been able to do so because Congress won't give
    them the necessary funds.

    On a section of busy bi-directional double track that CSX shares with
    SEPTA, CSX is spending money to build a third track dedicated for its
    trains. I think this is foolish. CSX will go from a very fluid
    two-track line to a single track line that will hurt, not help its
    freight trains. The two-track line was busy, but not over-crowded,
    and the bi-directional signalling made it flexible.

    I agree; that's a poor decision on CSX's part. OTOH, it may be due to
    SEPTA's limited funding or poor negotiation skills rather than CSX's
    supposed hatred for passenger trains.

    Adding rolling stock is much simpler, at least until you need to
    add more crew (or especially locos) to a particular run. But many
    Amtrak trains are sold out due to being far too short, and
    profitability would be increased (or losses reduced, for LD routes)
    by adding a few cars to each train--or by adding a few new
    trainsets and consolidating the remaining ones. However, fare
    revenue will never match expenses when Amtrak's trains are
    competing with bicycles, not cars or buses, on speed--and that's
    where track improvements come in.

    Amtrak has new rolling stock on order, but the order is delayed.

    Is that order just enough to replace what has been damaged over the
    years, or would it actually expand the fleet in a significant way?

    One problem is the "feast or famine" nature of building passenger
    cars. There isn't enough standardization and on-going orders to keep carbuilders in business and healthy. So, too many orders go to
    start-ups and thre are long delays.

    That's one of the many reasons why the FRA needs to start accepting
    standard UIC passenger cars. Not only would it give our operators
    access to stable suppliers, but it would also reduce the cost of
    equipment due to economy of scale. And it might even help get some US manufacturers back in the business, once they could compete on an even
    playing field with foreign makers.

    US operators have no problem getting light or heavy rail equipment; they
    don't have to deal with the FRA like commuter and intercity rail ones.

    S

    --
    Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein
    CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the
    K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking

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  • From Jg@1:2320/100 to Stephen Sprunk on Thu Apr 9 17:19:52 2015

    From: jgrove24@hotmail.com

    On Thursday, April 9, 2015 at 3:31:39 PM UTC-5, Stephen Sprunk wrote:
    On 08-Apr-15 22:49, hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk wrote


    Well, I'd agree that most of them hate passenger trains, with the
    notable exception of BNSF.

    Avoiding any BNSF staffed commuter line is a good move. Winter time brings cars

    that haven't been cleaned and frozen switches. And tracks being blocked by freight trains is a year around bummer.


    On a section of busy bi-directional double track that CSX shares with SEPTA, CSX is spending money to build a third track dedicated for its trains. I think this is foolish. CSX will go from a very fluid
    two-track line to a single track line that will hurt, not help its
    freight trains. The two-track line was busy, but not over-crowded,
    and the bi-directional signalling made it flexible.

    I agree; that's a poor decision on CSX's part. OTOH, it may be due to SEPTA's limited funding or poor negotiation skills rather than CSX's
    supposed hatred for passenger trains.

    Any improvements that separate passenger from oil trains is a GOOD move.

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  • From Hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com@1:2320/100 to Stephen Sprunk on Thu Apr 9 18:26:20 2015

    On Thursday, April 9, 2015 at 4:31:39 PM UTC-4, Stephen Sprunk wrote:

    Is that order just enough to replace what has been damaged over the
    years, or would it actually expand the fleet in a significant way?

    Good question.

    I believe it is to replace damaged or ancient cars, including 60 year old diners and baggage cars. It may free up some space, since it includes dorm cars for crew who currently occupy revenue space. There _may_ be some new Viewliner sleepers*, but I'm
    not sure. In any event, the order is running late, like so many other railcar orders. <sigh>


    That's one of the many reasons why the FRA needs to start accepting
    standard UIC passenger cars.

    Good point.


    * Unlike current Viewliners, the roomettes won't have a toilet in each room, the passenger will have to go down the hall. Apparently this is actually better when two people share a roomette, but it is a step backward when there is only one person. I
    don't know the ratio of usage of roomettes--one or two people. Pre-viewliner roomettes only held one person; two people would get a bedroom. The old 10-6 design was very popular.

    I think in Canada they still use sections. I wonder if they can rent out the upper berth--in the U.S., back in the 1930s the upper berth lost favor, which is why they came up with the roomette for single travelers.

    --- SoupGate/W32 v1.03
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  • From Adam H. Kerman@1:2320/100 to Stephen Sprunk on Thu Apr 9 22:05:22 2015

    From: ahk@chinet.com

    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:
    On 08-Apr-15 23:24, Adam H. Kerman wrote:
    hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote:

    Unfortunately, it seems most modern railroad managements are >>>pre-conditioned to hate passenger trains and will have nothing to
    do with it, even if reasonable negotiations could result in Amtrak >>>picking up much of the tab for track improvements.

    Are you insane? Congress doesn't appropriate monies for Amtrak
    service for significant track improvement. Clearly this should be
    done, but it's not.

    Passenger trains should be slotted like UPS or intermodal service,
    which are essentially scheduled freight trains. So this can be done
    on modern freight railroads.

    That may be how some freight RRs run, but not all of them. On UP, for >instance, trains leave yards/sidings whenever they're ready (which can
    be several hours earlier or later than planned) and it's up to the >dispatchers to sort things out.

    I'm not disagreeing, but intermodals tend to be scheduled, even on UP.

    BNSF is closer to running on a schedule, but they still don't use fixed >slots. This becomes glaringly obvious when their trains hit TRE's
    tracks, which _do_ have explicit slots for both passenger and freight
    trains during the day. Depending on when freight trains arrive, they
    may have to wait an hour before the next slot opens. OTOH, they do
    know--to the minute--when the entry signal will clear and when they'll
    exit on the other end. DGNO also uses TRE's (and DCTA's) tracks but
    almost exclusively at night, when slots aren't used.

    Right. There are more disciplined ways to do things. Intercity rail
    enforced rather a lot of discipline upon railroads and they were
    better off for it.

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  • From Clark F Morris@1:2320/100 to Hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com on Fri Apr 10 10:54:04 2015

    From: cfmpublic@ns.sympatico.ca

    On Wed, 8 Apr 2015 20:49:06 -0700 (PDT), hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote:

    On Tuesday, April 7, 2015 at 11:07:38 PM UTC-4, Stephen Sprunk wrote:

    Unfortunately, railroads are an incredibly capital-intensive business,
    so you need a pretty significant investment in track to make _any_
    difference in speed or capacity, though it should be pointed out that
    the freight RRs _already_ need major track investments for their own
    traffic, and a fairly small contribution by Amtrak would likely sway
    them toward investing in the particular routes Amtrak uses, thus getting
    Amtrak a lot more bang for their buck than you'd expect.

    Unfortunately, it seems most modern railroad managements are pre-conditioned to hate passenger trains and will have nothing to do with it, even if reasonable negotiations could result in Amtrak picking up much of the tab for track improvements.

    On a section of busy bi-directional double track that CSX shares with SEPTA, CSX is spending money to build a third track dedicated for its trains. I think

    this is foolish. CSX will go from a very fluid two-track line to a single track line that will
    hurt, not help its freight trains. The two-track line was busy, but not over-crowded, and the bi-directional signalling made it flexible.

    Given that SEPTA needs to upgrade to high level platforms for ADA and performance reasons, this could make a lot of sense. Differing speed
    bands and maintenance needs (50 mph heavy haul versus 80 - 90 mph
    every 15 minute or half hourly passenger service) can make separate
    lines the best answer. Switches are expensive.

    Clark Morris

    But this attitude is nothing new. Back in the 1950s, some railroad managers were convinced their passenger trains lost money, even when in fact they were profitable, including with overhead. (Ref "Twilight of the Psgr Train" by Fraily).

    Not helping the situation was the ICC, forcing the railroads to carry extremely expensive trains no one rode, for years.



    Adding rolling stock is much simpler, at least until you need to add
    more crew (or especially locos) to a particular run. But many Amtrak
    trains are sold out due to being far too short, and profitability would
    be increased (or losses reduced, for LD routes) by adding a few cars to
    each train--or by adding a few new trainsets and consolidating the
    remaining ones. However, fare revenue will never match expenses when
    Amtrak's trains are competing with bicycles, not cars or buses, on
    speed--and that's where track improvements come in.

    Amtrak has new rolling stock on order, but the order is delayed.

    One problem is the "feast or famine" nature of building passenger cars. There

    isn't enough standardization and on-going orders to keep carbuilders in business and healthy. So, too many orders go to start-ups and thre are long delays.

    (However, I don't understand the screwup with the PATCO rebuild order, which is YEARS late, by an experienced builder. And it's a rebuild of a rapid transit car of 45 y/o technology, not even a new design, though I think they're

    doing it all with
    computers.)



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  • From Stephen Sprunk@1:2320/100 to Clark F Morris on Fri Apr 10 12:17:30 2015

    From: stephen@sprunk.org

    On 10-Apr-15 08:54, Clark F Morris wrote:
    hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote:
    On a section of busy bi-directional double track that CSX shares
    with SEPTA, CSX is spending money to build a third track dedicated
    for its trains. I think this is foolish. CSX will go from a very
    fluid two-track line to a single track line that will hurt, not
    help its freight trains. The two-track line was busy, but not
    over-crowded, and the bi-directional signalling made it flexible.

    Given that SEPTA needs to upgrade to high level platforms for ADA
    and performance reasons, this could make a lot of sense.

    For the high platform issue, gauntlet tracks are cheaper and take up a
    lot less space than building a separate track, and the performance of
    freights will be a lot better if they can still use two tracks, rather
    than have to use a single track bidirectionally.

    Differing speed bands and maintenance needs (50 mph heavy haul
    versus 80 - 90 mph every 15 minute or half hourly passenger service)
    can make separate lines the best answer.

    No, you just need to learn how to use fixed slots. Those "faster"
    commuter trains probably average about the same speed once you factor in
    all the stops they make--especially on SEPTA, which has closer stops
    than most other "commuter" systems.

    Intercity trains they have a much higher average speed, but you _can_
    create slots that move at different speeds; the math is a bit more
    difficult, but it's still cheaper than additional tracks.

    Switches are expensive.

    Not as expensive as adding an entirely new track, especially once you
    figure in having to widen every bridge and crossing on the route.

    That's why many trunk lines are still mostly single tracked, even though
    that requires frequent sidings (with two switches each) for passing.

    S

    --
    Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein
    CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the
    K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking

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  • From Stephen Sprunk@1:2320/100 to Hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com on Fri Apr 10 12:33:50 2015

    From: stephen@sprunk.org

    On 09-Apr-15 20:26, hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote:
    * Unlike current Viewliners, the [new] roomettes won't have a toilet
    in each room, the passenger will have to go down the hall. Apparently
    this is actually better when two people share a roomette,

    I wouldn't want to stand out in the hall every time my companion needed
    to use the toilet. If they're the one that needs to go, they should be
    the one to walk down the corridor--and they'd get more privacy, too.

    but it is a step backward when there is only one person.

    It still disturbed me to have a toilet in the room I was sitting or
    sleeping in, even though I was alone; I actually used the one in the
    corridor anyway, just so I didn't have to think about it.

    Granted, if I woke up in the middle of the night, I'd be slightly
    annoyed at having to get at least minimally dressed to do that, but I'd
    still prefer that over trying to get back to sleep knowing the toilet I
    just used was mere inches from my bed.

    I think in Canada they still use sections. I wonder if they can rent
    out the upper berth--in the U.S., back in the 1930s the upper berth
    lost favor, which is why they came up with the roomette for single
    travelers.

    What's a "section"?

    I traveled overnight from Paris to Amsterdam in a couchette, and I
    really liked that concept. There was absolutely no privacy (5 other
    strangers in the same room), but it was a _lot_ cheaper than having a
    room to myself and more comfortable than a coach seat; I probably
    wouldn't have made the trip at all if that option weren't available, so
    it was a good trade-off for me. The fare was about the same as another
    night in either hotel, so that side trip was effectively free!

    S

    --
    Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein
    CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the
    K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking

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  • From Hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com@1:2320/100 to Clark F Morris on Fri Apr 10 13:21:28 2015

    On Friday, April 10, 2015 at 9:54:00 AM UTC-4, Clark F Morris wrote:

    Given that SEPTA needs to upgrade to high level platforms for ADA and performance reasons, this could make a lot of sense.

    SEPTA does NOT need to upgrade to high level platforms for ADA. A small mini platform is all that is needed, which is much cheaper to build.

    High level would not significantly improve SEPTA times as the passenger count at an individual station isn't that high. Further, high level paltforms get out of alignment (visit Princeton Jct) and cease being an improvement.


    Differing speed
    bands and maintenance needs (50 mph heavy haul versus 80 - 90 mph
    every 15 minute or half hourly passenger service) can make separate
    lines the best answer. Switches are expensive.

    SEPTA trains run at the same speed as freights--60 mph. Double track easily handles 20 minute rush hour headways mixed with freight.

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  • From Hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com@1:2320/100 to Stephen Sprunk on Fri Apr 10 13:33:18 2015

    On Friday, April 10, 2015 at 1:34:59 PM UTC-4, Stephen Sprunk wrote:

    It still disturbed me to have a toilet in the room I was sitting or
    sleeping in, even though I was alone; I actually used the one in the
    corridor anyway, just so I didn't have to think about it.

    Given the popularity of the roomette and slumbercoach over the years, I gather that the vast majority of travellers didn't mind the toilet in the room. It folds out of the way neatly.

    Granted, if I woke up in the middle of the night, I'd be slightly
    annoyed at having to get at least minimally dressed to do that, but I'd
    still prefer that over trying to get back to sleep knowing the toilet I
    just used was mere inches from my bed.

    Lots of people need to 'go' more often when they travel, especially older people, who may need to go several times overnight. A toilet in the roomo helps.

    FWIW, for myself, having used rooms with both styles, I much preferred the toilet in the room.



    What's a "section"?

    A "section" is the old style Pullman accomodation. It had two large seats facing each other for two passengers. At night, the upper berth was lowered down and the bottom seats were converted to a bed for the lower berth. A heavy

    aisle curtain provided
    privacy. The upper berth was the cheapest accomodation, but it was rather claustrophobic (no windows, tight fit). By the 1930s, it became very unpopular

    and hard to sell, thus the roomette was born. A common arrangement was the 12-1, twelve sections
    and one drawing room.

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  • From Adam H. Kerman@1:2320/100 to Stephen Sprunk on Fri Apr 10 17:28:52 2015

    From: ahk@chinet.com

    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:
    On 10-Apr-15 08:54, Clark F Morris wrote:
    hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote:

    On a section of busy bi-directional double track that CSX shares
    with SEPTA, CSX is spending money to build a third track dedicated
    for its trains. I think this is foolish. CSX will go from a very
    fluid two-track line to a single track line that will hurt, not
    help its freight trains. The two-track line was busy, but not >>>over-crowded, and the bi-directional signalling made it flexible.

    Given that SEPTA needs to upgrade to high level platforms for ADA
    and performance reasons, this could make a lot of sense.

    For the high platform issue, gauntlet tracks are cheaper and take up a
    lot less space than building a separate track, and the performance of >freights will be a lot better if they can still use two tracks, rather
    than have to use a single track bidirectionally.

    The solution at newly-installed floor-height platforms on Chicago South
    Shore and South Bend Railroad put freight on the tangent and commuter
    trains on the gauntlet, with the platform well outside clearance required
    for wide loads. Both mains clear wide loads in double-track territory.

    I'll agree with hancock on this one.

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  • From Stephen Sprunk@1:2320/100 to Hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com on Fri Apr 10 19:29:40 2015

    From: stephen@sprunk.org

    On 10-Apr-15 15:33, hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote:
    On Friday, April 10, 2015 at 1:34:59 PM UTC-4, Stephen Sprunk wrote:
    Granted, if I woke up in the middle of the night, I'd be slightly
    annoyed at having to get at least minimally dressed to do that, but
    I'd still prefer that over trying to get back to sleep knowing the
    toilet I just used was mere inches from my bed.

    Lots of people need to 'go' more often when they travel, especially
    older people, who may need to go several times overnight. A toilet
    in the roomo helps.

    Still, it takes only seconds to pull on some pants and a shirt, and it's
    not a long walk down the hall.

    What's a "section"?

    A "section" is the old style Pullman accomodation. It had two large
    seats facing each other for two passengers. At night, the upper
    berth was lowered down and the bottom seats were converted to a bed
    for the lower berth. A heavy aisle curtain provided privacy. The
    upper berth was the cheapest accomodation, but it was rather
    claustrophobic (no windows, tight fit). By the 1930s, it became very unpopular and hard to sell, thus the roomette was born.

    That sounds exactly like my roomette from a few years ago, aside from
    having a locking door rather than a curtain. What other differences
    were there?

    S

    --
    Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein
    CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the
    K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking

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  • From Stephen Sprunk@1:2320/100 to Hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com on Fri Apr 10 19:33:36 2015

    From: stephen@sprunk.org

    On 10-Apr-15 15:21, hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote:
    On Friday, April 10, 2015 at 9:54:00 AM UTC-4, Clark F Morris wrote:
    Given that SEPTA needs to upgrade to high level platforms for ADA
    and performance reasons, this could make a lot of sense.

    SEPTA does NOT need to upgrade to high level platforms for ADA. A
    small mini platform is all that is needed, which is much cheaper to
    build.

    A mini high block requires bridge plates if it's not going to conflict
    with freight trains, and that slows boarding--and unpredictably so,
    which is worse.

    High level would not significantly improve SEPTA times as the
    passenger count at an individual station isn't that high.

    With a mix of platform heights, the crew still has to operate the doors
    and traps, which adds time to every stop. It also increases labor
    costs--money that should be invested into capital improvements.

    Further, high level paltforms get out of alignment (visit Princeton
    Jct) and cease being an improvement.

    That some operators are incompetent does not prove the idea bad.

    S

    --
    Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein
    CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the
    K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking

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  • From Adam H. Kerman@1:2320/100 to Hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com on Fri Apr 10 20:36:56 2015

    From: ahk@chinet.com

    hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote:
    On Friday, April 10, 2015 at 9:54:00 AM UTC-4, Clark F Morris wrote:

    Given that SEPTA needs to upgrade to high level platforms for ADA and >>performance reasons, this could make a lot of sense.

    SEPTA does NOT need to upgrade to high level platforms for ADA. A small
    mini platform is all that is needed, which is much cheaper to build.

    There's nothing inexpensive about such platforms. There's one at
    Ogden Dunes CSS&SB, a notoriously expensive station. It also has moving
    parts to lower that bridge, breaks down often. It was so expensive,
    they didn't build any others.

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  • From Hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com@1:2320/100 to Stephen Sprunk on Fri Apr 10 21:41:32 2015

    On Friday, April 10, 2015 at 8:34:45 PM UTC-4, Stephen Sprunk wrote:

    A mini high block requires bridge plates if it's not going to conflict
    with freight trains, and that slows boarding--and unpredictably so,
    which is worse.

    Many high platform stations require bridge plate because for wheelchairs (1) the gap between the platform and doorway is too wide and (2) the doorway and platform are not in vertical alignment. On NJT in the NEC, there could be as much as a 6" step up
    to the train car. Apparently ballast gets higher over time, and this is nothing new (I've seen it over 40 years). On SEPTA low platform stations they had to add step boxes, and other carriers have done so, too.



    With a mix of platform heights, the crew still has to operate the doors
    and traps, which adds time to every stop. It also increases labor costs--money that should be invested into capital improvements.

    On SEPTA, the short platform lengths require manual operation by the crew to ensure only desired doors open on long trains (e.g. a six-seven car train at the typical four car platform). Since the crew is ready at the doors, it does not add any dwell
    time.

    FWIW, the SL 5 cars have powered traps for low platform use.

    Until SEPTA has the substantial capital funds to build--and maintain*--every station to full length high platform, it will need bigger crews. *Maintenance will include lighting, repair, and snow removal and these are added costs.

    FWIW, MNRR, LIRR, and NJT all have converted most of their networks to full length high level platform, and, run much longer trains than SEPTA (10-12 cars), yet still have large train crews. Indeed, NJT tried cutting back crew sizes and found it didn't
    work out.

    SEPTA may reduce railroad crew size when it introduces its new fare collection system.


    Further, high level paltforms get out of alignment (visit Princeton
    Jct) and cease being an improvement.

    That some operators are incompetent does not prove the idea bad.

    True, but are the other operators (eg NJT, LIRR, and MNRR) truly incompetent or

    just working in the real world? For instance, NJT doesn't control ballast height on the NEC, that's a function of Amtrak. I believe it is not an issue in places like Penna
    Station or Newark where the tracks are set in concrete; likewise in SEPTA's downtwon stations.

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  • From Stephen Sprunk@1:2320/100 to Adam H. Kerman on Sat Apr 11 10:20:02 2015

    From: stephen@sprunk.org

    On 11-Apr-15 08:36, Adam H. Kerman wrote:
    CTA discourages passengers from changing cars once they're on board.

    I agree in part and disagree in part. Platforms should be sized for
    expected boarding at the station, not the longest train. Passengers
    should be in the car with the doors that will open.

    ... but when you combine that with the above, that means passengers are supposed to know _when they board_ what cars will allow them to exit at
    the destination. That isn't an issue for daily commuters, but how are
    tourists or occasional riders supposed to know this? It's simpler and
    more passenger-friendly to make all your platforms as long as the
    longest train that stops there.

    DART's at-grade stations have 300ft* platforms because that was the
    longest train they currently operate; however, they knew they will
    eventually have 400ft long trains, so above- and below-grade stations
    (which are expensive to alter) have 400ft platforms, and the platforms
    at most* at-grade stations were designed to be easily expanded.

    * That's the length of a city block in downtown Dallas, where DART
    currently operates in the streets. That section will be made below
    grade someday, which will allow longer trains.

    S

    --
    Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein
    CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the
    K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking

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  • From Stephen Sprunk@1:2320/100 to Hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com on Sat Apr 11 10:28:32 2015

    From: stephen@sprunk.org

    On 10-Apr-15 23:41, hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk wrote:
    A mini high block requires bridge plates if it's not going to
    conflict with freight trains, and that slows boarding--and
    unpredictably so, which is worse.

    Many high platform stations require bridge plate because for
    wheelchairs (1) the gap between the platform and doorway is too wide
    and (2) the doorway and platform are not in vertical alignment.

    Incompetent maintenance.

    With a mix of platform heights, the crew still has to operate the
    doors and traps, which adds time to every stop. It also increases
    labor costs--money that should be invested into capital
    improvements.

    ...
    Until SEPTA has the substantial capital funds to build--and
    maintain*--every station to full length high platform, it will need
    bigger crews.

    ... and paying for those larger crews robs them of the funds they need
    to improve the situation. That's why you use bonds for such things.

    *Maintenance will include lighting, repair, and snow removal and
    these are added costs.

    The difference in cost to maintain short vs high platforms is
    negligible. Longer platforms will cost a bit more to maintain, but not
    enough to matter in the long run.

    FWIW, MNRR, LIRR, and NJT all have converted most of their networks
    to full length high level platform, and, run much longer trains than
    SEPTA (10-12 cars), yet still have large train crews. Indeed, NJT
    tried cutting back crew sizes and found it didn't work out.

    SEPTA may reduce railroad crew size when it introduces its new fare collection system.

    Yet many FRA systems manage to run trains just as long with crews of 2,
    and the second crewmember is only "required" by FRA and union rules;
    non-FRA systems often run trains with crews of just 1, and we have
    existence proof (BCTA) that it can be done safely with _zero_ crew.

    Further, high level paltforms get out of alignment (visit
    Princeton Jct) and cease being an improvement.

    That some operators are incompetent does not prove the idea bad.

    True, but are the other operators (eg NJT, LIRR, and MNRR) truly
    incompetent or just working in the real world? For instance, NJT
    doesn't control ballast height on the NEC, that's a function of
    Amtrak. I believe it is not an issue in places like Penna Station or
    Newark where the tracks are set in concrete; likewise in SEPTA's
    downtwon stations.

    If direct fixation is the only solution that works within your
    incompetent maintenance regime, then that's what you should do.

    Many operators have no problem maintaining proper platform/floor alignment.

    S

    --
    Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein
    CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the
    K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking

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  • From Stephen Sprunk@1:2320/100 to Adam H. Kerman on Sat Apr 11 12:26:40 2015

    From: stephen@sprunk.org

    On 11-Apr-15 11:08, Adam H. Kerman wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:
    On 11-Apr-15 08:36, Adam H. Kerman wrote:
    CTA discourages passengers from changing cars once they're on
    board.

    I agree in part and disagree in part. Platforms should be sized
    for expected boarding at the station, not the longest train.
    Passengers should be in the car with the doors that will open.

    ... but when you combine that with the above, that means passengers
    are supposed to know _when they board_ what cars will allow them to
    exit at the destination. That isn't an issue for daily commuters,
    but how are tourists or occasional riders supposed to know this?
    It's simpler and more passenger-friendly to make all your platforms
    as long as the longest train that stops there.

    I'm trying to reduce station construction costs on your railroad.

    Platform height/length has a negligible impact on cost, compared to all
    the other (much larger) station expenses that aren't affected at all.

    DART raised every platform on the Red and Blue lines for <$100k/ea, in
    less than a year. Extending the short at-grade platforms would be a
    similarly trivial exercise.

    Doesn't apply in the Midwest, but in hilly areas, you don't always
    have sufficient tangent track (without both vertical and horizontal
    curves) for a full-length platform and there's no reason to attempt
    to build one for a low volume stop.

    I'm very much opposed to "doing without" when we've raised costs to
    excessive levels or geography prevents construction because of one-size-fits-all rules that don't apply to the situation at that
    location.

    Hancock was complaining about the cost of longer/higher platforms, not
    genuine physical limitations.

    On Metra, they expect passengers to follow instructions. There are announcements with regard to which doors will open and which car the passengers must be in to get off the train.

    Do they announce that at every station where you board, so that you know
    which car to get on? Or do they expect you to hear the announcement on
    board and change cars at an intermediate station with a long platform?

    DART's at-grade stations have 300ft* platforms because that was
    the longest train they currently operate; however, they knew they
    will eventually have 400ft long trains, so above- and below-grade
    stations (which are expensive to alter) have 400ft platforms, and
    the platforms at most* at-grade stations were designed to be easily
    expanded.

    * That's the length of a city block in downtown Dallas, where DART
    currently operates in the streets. That section will be made
    below grade someday, which will allow longer trains.

    If it's in subway,

    It's not, today. The latest plans I've seen have them dropping the
    tracks into an open cut, which is cheaper than subway but still quite expensive. It's an open question whether they'll do that first for the
    current route or for the new "second downtown" route.

    DART's only subway is under US-75, which is itself below grade. That
    section includes one active station and one planned (but apparently
    abandoned) station. DART didn't have a choice in that case, but it's
    clear that they don't want to repeat that elsewhere due to cost.

    then why can't trains be operated more frequently? You're no longer
    concerned with intersection capacity.

    That is one of the reasons DART (and the City of Dallas) want to move
    the trains below grade. Trains have to stop for traffic lights, which
    limits train length to the shortest city block. The stations were
    deliberately located on unusually long (400ft+) blocks.

    The signal system limits train frequency for the rest of the system; as
    it stands, they are already at headways of 2-3 minutes during rush hour,
    with most trains "riding the yellows". That is why DART wants 400ft
    trains in the first place.

    S

    --
    Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein
    CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the
    K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking

    --- SoupGate/W32 v1.03
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  • From Stephen Sprunk@1:2320/100 to Adam H. Kerman on Sat Apr 11 12:40:44 2015

    From: stephen@sprunk.org

    On 11-Apr-15 11:25, Adam H. Kerman wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:
    On 10-Apr-15 23:41, hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote:
    Many high platform stations require bridge plate because for
    wheelchairs (1) the gap between the platform and doorway is too wide
    and (2) the doorway and platform are not in vertical alignment.

    Incompetent maintenance.

    No, it's not. It's nothing to do with maintenance. It has to do with horizontal curves, and weight shifting in the passenger car.

    There are plenty of places in the Northeast where even empty trains on
    tangent track have floors that are many inches off from the proper
    horizontal _and_ vertical alignments.

    _That_ is incompetent track maintenance, and that is what Hancock is complaining about. Of course, rather than fix that incompetency, he
    prefers to pay extra crew to operate traps and bridge plates.

    Until SEPTA has the substantial capital funds to build--and
    maintain*--every station to full length high platform, it will need
    bigger crews.

    ... and paying for those larger crews robs them of the funds they need
    to improve the situation. That's why you use bonds for such things.

    Actually, CSS&SB reduced train crew staffing levels a number of years
    ago. Traps are in the end doors, like Metra Electric Highliners but not
    like Metra Electric Nippon-Sharyo MU cars where they are in the center.
    On Metra Electric, traps are for use in unusual situations as it's all floor-height platforms.

    With reduced staffing, just one trap is used per car.

    With floor-height platforms (and proper maintenance), traps (and bridge
    plates) are not needed at all.

    *Maintenance will include lighting, repair, and snow removal and
    these are added costs.

    The difference in cost to maintain short vs high platforms is
    negligible.

    I don't agree, because we don't build platforms in this country
    English style, in which platforms are expected to last for centuries.
    So floor-height platforms are structures, not asphalt over deep
    grading for standard height platforms.

    Maybe they don't in Chicago, but they do around here.

    Longer platforms will cost a bit more to maintain, but not
    enough to matter in the long run.

    Spoken like someone who has never been through a winter with
    very heavy snowfall.

    If you build the platforms right, it doesn't matter how high they are;
    heavy snow on a high platform is the same as heavy snow on a high one.

    FWIW, MNRR, LIRR, and NJT all have converted most of their networks
    to full length high level platform, and, run much longer trains than
    SEPTA (10-12 cars), yet still have large train crews. Indeed, NJT
    tried cutting back crew sizes and found it didn't work out.

    SEPTA may reduce railroad crew size when it introduces its new fare
    collection system.

    Yet many FRA systems manage to run trains just as long with crews of 2,
    and the second crewmember is only "required" by FRA and union rules;
    non-FRA systems often run trains with crews of just 1, and we have
    existence proof (BCTA) that it can be done safely with _zero_ crew.

    Eh. It depends. And then there's Lac Megantic... Your engineer has
    to know how to tie up the consist if there's no conductor.

    (I wish you'd speak of engine and train crews, as they are separate
    crews and not the same crew.)

    There is an engineer, who runs the train, and a conductor, who collects
    a paycheck for doing nothing, thanks to FRA/union rules. There are
    transit cops and fare inspectors that occasionally pop in (just like on
    non-FRA trains), but they're not part of the train crew at all.

    S

    --
    Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein
    CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the
    K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking

    --- SoupGate/W32 v1.03
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  • From Hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com@1:2320/100 to Stephen Sprunk on Sat Apr 11 13:13:14 2015

    On Saturday, April 11, 2015 at 11:29:41 AM UTC-4, Stephen Sprunk wrote:
    On 10-Apr-15 23:41, hancock4 wrote:

    Until SEPTA has the substantial capital funds to build--and maintain*--every station to full length high platform, it will need
    bigger crews.

    ... and paying for those larger crews robs them of the funds they need
    to improve the situation. That's why you use bonds for such things.

    But will the amortized cost of building and maintaining long high platforms at every station result in a net savings of money in crew size?

    While some stations have plenty of room, some are squeezed in.


    *Maintenance will include lighting, repair, and snow removal and
    these are added costs.

    The difference in cost to maintain short vs high platforms is
    negligible. Longer platforms will cost a bit more to maintain, but not enough to matter in the long run.

    Given that many SEPTA platforms are only four cars long but some rush hour trains are seven cars long, many platforms will be nearly doubled in length. There is an additional cost to that. Snow shoveling and salting ain't cheap.

    I don't think the power cost for the extra lighting would be too much (I figure

    an extra 600 KW per station, but multiply that over 12 hours, all the stations,

    and 365 days a year and it adds up).

    --- SoupGate/W32 v1.03
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  • From Hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com@1:2320/100 to Adam H. Kerman on Sat Apr 11 13:21:58 2015

    On Saturday, April 11, 2015 at 12:25:30 PM UTC-4, Adam H. Kerman wrote:

    I guess I don't understand what hancock's complaint is here. I mean,
    ballast regulators are computerized and the ballast is laid to the
    height specified within a narrow tolerance that doesn't account for
    changes in level, except when it's very very fresh.

    At Princeton Jct, where the high platforms are about 20 years old, the platform

    is now about 6" below the level of the train car. At other stations on _several carriers_, they had to put in step boxes to aid passengers in boarding. FWIW, Engineers have
    told me that is due to increased ballast height added over the years.

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  • From Adam H. Kerman@1:2320/100 to Hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com on Sat Apr 11 13:36:48 2015

    From: ahk@chinet.com

    hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote:
    On Friday, April 10, 2015 at 8:34:45 PM UTC-4, Stephen Sprunk wrote:

    With a mix of platform heights, the crew still has to operate the doors
    and traps, which adds time to every stop. It also increases labor >>costs--money that should be invested into capital improvements.

    On SEPTA, the short platform lengths require manual operation by the
    crew to ensure only desired doors open on long trains (e.g. a six-seven
    car train at the typical four car platform). Since the crew is ready at
    the doors, it does not add any dwell time.

    FWIW, the SL 5 cars have powered traps for low platform use.

    Until SEPTA has the substantial capital funds to build--and
    maintain*--every station to full length high platform, it will need
    bigger crews. *Maintenance will include lighting, repair, and snow
    removal and these are added costs.

    Amazing. And yet on Chicago's rapid transit, the one-man PCCs used on
    various parts of the "L" system had individual door controls in the
    motorman's cab. The motorman would open the door closest to him so
    that boarding passengers would pass by his window and deposit their fares.

    He might open the distant doors after dealing with passengers waiting
    on the platform in case a passenger was getting off, but most passengers figured out how to exit through the doors near the motorman.

    There are other types of door controls out there. CTA has nothing like this today, so all platforms must be as long as the longest train operating
    on the route because the motorman opens all doors. Even with conductors
    and MU'd door controls, all platform doors were opened except when the conductor had to collect fares. Sometimes the conductor would pull the
    cherry in lieu of using door controls to control where passengers boarded.

    CTA discourages passengers from changing cars once they're on board.

    I agree in part and disagree in part. Platforms should be sized for
    expected boarding at the station, not the longest train. Passengers should
    be in the car with the doors that will open. Floor-height platforms
    everywhere aren't the only solution to reducing dwell time, but if
    that's what you've built, mind the gap.

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  • From Stephen Sprunk@1:2320/100 to Adam H. Kerman on Sat Apr 11 14:01:54 2015

    From: stephen@sprunk.org

    On 11-Apr-15 13:05, Adam H. Kerman wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:
    On 11-Apr-15 11:25, Adam H. Kerman wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:
    Incompetent maintenance.

    No, it's not. It's nothing to do with maintenance. It has to do
    with horizontal curves, and weight shifting in the passenger car.


    There are plenty of places in the Northeast where even empty trains
    on tangent track have floors that are many inches off from the
    proper horizontal _and_ vertical alignments.

    _That_ is incompetent track maintenance, and that is what Hancock
    is complaining about. Of course, rather than fix that
    incompetency, he prefers to pay extra crew to operate traps and
    bridge plates.

    Sigh.

    You always say things like this, Stephen. It doesn't make it true.

    Then how is it _some_ operators are able to do it? And, notably,
    operators that are a lot more competent at other things, too.

    It can be done. I'm sure it costs a little more money, but it pales in comparison to the cost of adding crew to every train.

    With reduced staffing, just one trap is used per car.

    With floor-height platforms (and proper maintenance), traps (and
    bridge plates) are not needed at all.

    You know CSS&SB has gauntlet tracks and Metra Electric has dedicated
    suburban (commuter) mains? You're ignoring tons of extra expense.

    So perhaps you should investigate standard 55cm platforms, which don't
    conflict with freight trains, rather than high platforms.

    They work great for CMTA, DCTA, NJT's River Line, and operators all over
    Europe and elsewhere.

    The difference in cost to maintain short vs high platforms is
    negligible.

    I don't agree, because we don't build platforms in this country
    English style, in which platforms are expected to last for
    centuries. So floor-height platforms are structures, not asphalt
    over deep grading for standard height platforms.

    Maybe they don't in Chicago, but they do around here.

    Fine. Give me a call 100 years from now and tell me how many
    original platforms survived.

    Actually, our platforms are concrete topped with brick and/or tile, not asphalt. There are concrete sidewalks around town that are 100+ years
    old, and we have much better materials now, so there's no reason to
    think the platforms wouldn't last even longer.

    That said, I doubt the original platforms will still be there 100+ years
    from now, but that's because they'll be replaced for other reasons, just
    like we rip up perfectly good highways every few decades because we need
    to widen them.

    Spoken like someone who has never been through a winter with very
    heavy snowfall.

    If you build the platforms right, it doesn't matter how high they
    are; heavy snow on a high platform is the same as heavy snow on a
    high one.

    Right. The longer platform requires more shoveling. That's higher
    operating cost right there.

    If they're using a shovel, you're doing it wrong.

    We do have maintenance folks who run motorized plows and salt spreaders
    around, but most of the labor cost goes to transportation from one
    station to the next; they only spend a few minutes on each platform, so
    even doubling the length of those platforms has negligible cost.

    (I wish you'd speak of engine and train crews, as they are
    separate crews and not the same crew.)

    There is an engineer, who runs the train, and a conductor, who
    collects a paycheck for doing nothing, thanks to FRA/union rules.

    This is totally false. Conductors aren't featherbedding like two-man
    engine crews, with the second man the fireman on the diesel
    locomotive.

    Requiring railroads to pay someone union wages for doing nothing but
    reading the newspaper every day sounds like featherbedding to me.

    Technically, the conductor runs the train, and if the engineer does
    something wrong, the conductor can get fired too.

    Technically, yes, but the only reason he's there in the first place is antiquated FRA/union rules. And it seems silly to fire a guy whose only
    job duty is reading a newspaper when some other guy, who actually has
    real job duties, screws up.

    S

    --
    Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein
    CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the
    K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking

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  • From Stephen Sprunk@1:2320/100 to Adam H. Kerman on Sat Apr 11 14:07:28 2015

    From: stephen@sprunk.org

    On 11-Apr-15 12:56, Adam H. Kerman wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:
    On 11-Apr-15 11:08, Adam H. Kerman wrote:
    I'm trying to reduce station construction costs on your
    railroad.

    Platform height/length has a negligible impact on cost, compared to
    all the other (much larger) station expenses that aren't affected
    at all.

    Platforms are hideously expensive. Metra has had standard-height
    platform replacement projects over the last several years, and they
    take an amazing 13 weeks under traffic.

    Then someone needs to get fired. DART replaced _dozens_ of platforms
    while they were in service, closing them just two weekends each plus
    working nights when there were no trains. Start to finish for each
    station was under a month.

    Then again, you're saddled with unions, so taking three-plus times as
    long (and probably ten-plus times as much money) is to be expected.
    That's the price you pay for living in the Rust Belt.

    S

    --
    Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein
    CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the
    K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking

    --- SoupGate/W32 v1.03
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  • From Stephen Sprunk@1:2320/100 to Adam H. Kerman on Sat Apr 11 14:49:00 2015

    From: stephen@sprunk.org

    On 11-Apr-15 14:28, Adam H. Kerman wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:
    On 11-Apr-15 12:56, Adam H. Kerman wrote:
    Platforms are hideously expensive. Metra has had standard-height
    platform replacement projects over the last several years, and
    they take an amazing 13 weeks under traffic.

    Then someone needs to get fired. DART replaced _dozens_ of
    platforms while they were in service, closing them just two
    weekends each plus working nights when there were no trains. Start
    to finish for each station was under a month.

    Then again, you're saddled with unions, so taking three-plus times
    as long (and probably ten-plus times as much money) is to be
    expected. That's the price you pay for living in the Rust Belt.

    We don't close freight railroads for weekends.

    Neither do we; that'd be silly.

    It was just the stations that were closed, to give the crews longer
    periods for heavy work on the platforms. Trains still ran through every
    few minutes, and there were shuttle buses to/from the next stations in
    both directions so folks could still get where they needed to go.

    S

    --
    Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein
    CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the
    K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking

    --- SoupGate/W32 v1.03
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  • From Stephen Sprunk@1:2320/100 to Hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com on Sat Apr 11 15:32:46 2015

    From: stephen@sprunk.org

    On 11-Apr-15 15:13, hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk wrote:
    On 10-Apr-15 23:41, hancock4 wrote:
    Until SEPTA has the substantial capital funds to build--and
    maintain*--every station to full length high platform, it will
    need bigger crews.

    ... and paying for those larger crews robs them of the funds they
    need to improve the situation. That's why you use bonds for such
    things.

    But will the amortized cost of building and maintaining long high
    platforms at every station result in a net savings of money in crew
    size?

    Maintenance (and utilities) isn't amortized, but it's not that large an
    expense in the first place. Building new platforms would be amortized
    over 30-50 years.

    Combined, it should be _far_ lower than extra crew on every train,
    especially at union wages. Heck, just taking _one_ crew member off
    _one_ train would easily pay for improving one station, and you have a
    lot more trains than stations.

    While some stations have plenty of room, some are squeezed in.

    That's the problem: you have to improve _every_ station to get the
    benefits. Still, while some will be more expensive than others (you may
    even have to relocate some), what matters is the average cost.

    *Maintenance will include lighting, repair, and snow removal and
    these are added costs.

    The difference in cost to maintain short vs high platforms is
    negligible. Longer platforms will cost a bit more to maintain, but
    not enough to matter in the long run.

    Given that many SEPTA platforms are only four cars long but some rush
    hour trains are seven cars long, many platforms will be nearly
    doubled in length. There is an additional cost to that.

    The amortized capital costs are negligible unless you're out of physical
    space, and based on your past comments (and my own observations when I visited), SEPTA is amazingly incompetent at maximizing the use of the
    space they do have available. They need to get out some and see what
    folks are doing elsewhere--both good and bad.

    Snow shoveling and salting ain't cheap.

    Salt ain't cheap, but you can reduce the need by covering and enclosing
    the platforms--and that cost can be amortized. It also makes the
    stations more comfortable on windy or rainy days, and it makes things
    like heaters more effective, which in turn reduces the salt needed.

    Snow removal and salt application should be done by powered equipment,
    the cost of which can also be amortized, to reduce labor costs.

    I don't think the power cost for the extra lighting would be too much
    (I figure an extra 600 KW per station, but multiply that over 12
    hours, all the stations, and 365 days a year and it adds up).

    Doubling a tiny figure results in another tiny figure. You'll spend
    more money on labor to replace burned-out bulbs than on the bulbs
    themselves plus the electricity to run all of them.

    S

    --
    Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein
    CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the
    K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking

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  • From Adam H. Kerman@1:2320/100 to Stephen Sprunk on Sat Apr 11 16:08:08 2015

    From: ahk@chinet.com

    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:
    On 11-Apr-15 08:36, Adam H. Kerman wrote:

    CTA discourages passengers from changing cars once they're on board.

    I agree in part and disagree in part. Platforms should be sized for >>expected boarding at the station, not the longest train. Passengers
    should be in the car with the doors that will open.

    ... but when you combine that with the above, that means passengers are >supposed to know _when they board_ what cars will allow them to exit at
    the destination. That isn't an issue for daily commuters, but how are >tourists or occasional riders supposed to know this? It's simpler and
    more passenger-friendly to make all your platforms as long as the
    longest train that stops there.

    I'm trying to reduce station construction costs on your railroad. Doesn't
    apply in the Midwest, but in hilly areas, you don't always have
    sufficient tangent track (without both vertical and horizontal curves)
    for a full-length platform and there's no reason to attempt to build
    one for a low volume stop.

    I'm very much opposed to "doing without" when we've raised costs to
    excessive levels or geography prevents construction because of one-size-fits-all rules that don't apply to the situation at that location.

    On Metra, they expect passengers to follow instructions. There are announcements with regard to which doors will open and which car the
    passengers must be in to get off the train.

    On the platform, there a bit of weirdness at one station served by
    two lines with different designated boarding areas for handicapped.

    DART's at-grade stations have 300ft* platforms because that was the
    longest train they currently operate; however, they knew they will
    eventually have 400ft long trains, so above- and below-grade stations
    (which are expensive to alter) have 400ft platforms, and the platforms
    at most* at-grade stations were designed to be easily expanded.

    * That's the length of a city block in downtown Dallas, where DART
    currently operates in the streets. That section will be made below
    grade someday, which will allow longer trains.

    If it's in subway, then why can't trains be operated more frequently?
    You're no longer concerned with intersection capacity.

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  • From Adam H. Kerman@1:2320/100 to Stephen Sprunk on Sat Apr 11 16:25:30 2015

    From: ahk@chinet.com

    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:
    On 10-Apr-15 23:41, hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk wrote:

    A mini high block requires bridge plates if it's not going to
    conflict with freight trains, and that slows boarding--and
    unpredictably so, which is worse.

    Many high platform stations require bridge plate because for
    wheelchairs (1) the gap between the platform and doorway is too wide
    and (2) the doorway and platform are not in vertical alignment.

    Incompetent maintenance.

    No, it's not. It's nothing to do with maintenance. It has to do with
    horizontal curves, and weight shifting in the passenger car. This is
    avoided with leveling systems in railcars, but this is expensive.

    CTA's 5000 series "L" cars are self leveling, but it's hardly a
    perfect system and I don't know that it was worth the extra expense.

    With a mix of platform heights, the crew still has to operate the
    doors and traps, which adds time to every stop. It also increases
    labor costs--money that should be invested into capital
    improvements.

    ...
    Until SEPTA has the substantial capital funds to build--and >>maintain*--every station to full length high platform, it will need
    bigger crews.

    ... and paying for those larger crews robs them of the funds they need
    to improve the situation. That's why you use bonds for such things.

    Actually, CSS&SB reduced train crew staffing levels a number of years
    ago. Traps are in the end doors, like Metra Electric Highliners but not
    like Metra Electric Nippon-Sharyo MU cars where they are in the center.
    On Metra Electric, traps are for use in unusual situations as it's all floor-height platforms.

    With reduced staffing, just one trap is used per car. The conductor is positioned at the end of one car, opens the trap, then opens the
    trap on the adjacent car's end door.

    In the 1970s, for the floor-height platforms in the Muni Metro subway,
    there was an automatic step system to avoid traps; didn't always work.

    *Maintenance will include lighting, repair, and snow removal and
    these are added costs.

    The difference in cost to maintain short vs high platforms is
    negligible.

    I don't agree, because we don't build platforms in this country English style, in which platforms are expected to last for centuries. So floor-height platforms are structures, not asphalt over deep grading for standard
    height platforms. Any horizontal support element on a structure will fail
    in time due to exposure to rain.

    Longer platforms will cost a bit more to maintain, but not
    enough to matter in the long run.

    Spoken like someone who has never been through a winter with
    very heavy snowfall.

    FWIW, MNRR, LIRR, and NJT all have converted most of their networks
    to full length high level platform, and, run much longer trains than
    SEPTA (10-12 cars), yet still have large train crews. Indeed, NJT
    tried cutting back crew sizes and found it didn't work out.

    SEPTA may reduce railroad crew size when it introduces its new fare >>collection system.

    Yet many FRA systems manage to run trains just as long with crews of 2,
    and the second crewmember is only "required" by FRA and union rules;
    non-FRA systems often run trains with crews of just 1, and we have
    existence proof (BCTA) that it can be done safely with _zero_ crew.

    Eh. It depends. And then there's Lac Megantic... Your engineer has
    to know how to tie up the consist if there's no conductor.

    (I wish you'd speak of engine and train crews, as they are separate
    crews and not the same crew.)

    Further, high level paltforms get out of alignment (visit
    Princeton Jct) and cease being an improvement.

    That some operators are incompetent does not prove the idea bad.

    True, but are the other operators (eg NJT, LIRR, and MNRR) truly >>incompetent or just working in the real world? For instance, NJT
    doesn't control ballast height on the NEC, that's a function of
    Amtrak. I believe it is not an issue in places like Penna Station or >>Newark where the tracks are set in concrete; likewise in SEPTA's
    downtwon stations.

    If direct fixation is the only solution that works within your
    incompetent maintenance regime, then that's what you should do.

    Many operators have no problem maintaining proper platform/floor alignment.

    I guess I don't understand what hancock's complaint is here. I mean,
    ballast regulators are computerized and the ballast is laid to the
    height specified within a narrow tolerance that doesn't account for
    changes in level, except when it's very very fresh.

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  • From Adam H. Kerman@1:2320/100 to Stephen Sprunk on Sat Apr 11 17:56:20 2015

    From: ahk@chinet.com

    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:
    On 11-Apr-15 11:08, Adam H. Kerman wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:
    On 11-Apr-15 08:36, Adam H. Kerman wrote:

    CTA discourages passengers from changing cars once they're on
    board.

    I agree in part and disagree in part. Platforms should be sized
    for expected boarding at the station, not the longest train.
    Passengers should be in the car with the doors that will open.

    ... but when you combine that with the above, that means passengers
    are supposed to know _when they board_ what cars will allow them to
    exit at the destination. That isn't an issue for daily commuters,
    but how are tourists or occasional riders supposed to know this?
    It's simpler and more passenger-friendly to make all your platforms
    as long as the longest train that stops there.

    I'm trying to reduce station construction costs on your railroad.

    Platform height/length has a negligible impact on cost, compared to all
    the other (much larger) station expenses that aren't affected at all.

    Platforms are hideously expensive. Metra has had standard-height platform replacement projects over the last several years, and they take an amazing
    13 weeks under traffic.

    The B&B crews on Metra Electric might do the job faster than that, perhaps.

    DART raised every platform on the Red and Blue lines for <$100k/ea, in
    less than a year. Extending the short at-grade platforms would be a >similarly trivial exercise.

    Did you have the luxury of no curves at the station location? Again,
    that doesn't describe every single railroad location at which a
    station might be desireable.

    On Metra, they expect passengers to follow instructions. There are >>announcements with regard to which doors will open and which car the >>passengers must be in to get off the train.

    Do they announce that at every station where you board, so that you know >which car to get on? Or do they expect you to hear the announcement on
    board and change cars at an intermediate station with a long platform?

    Neither. They're ordinary railroad cars with train doors and diaphrams,
    so passengers walk from one to the next. It's safe to do between stations
    while the train is in motion as long as you watch the step on the threshold
    if the train is on a curve.

    They make the announcement before the affected station. In a few locations,
    one platform in one direction is shorter than the other platform due to industrial leads. It's not practical to have full-length platforms
    everywhere for a variety of reasons.

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  • From Adam H. Kerman@1:2320/100 to Stephen Sprunk on Sat Apr 11 18:05:14 2015

    From: ahk@chinet.com

    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:
    On 11-Apr-15 11:25, Adam H. Kerman wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:
    On 10-Apr-15 23:41, hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote:

    Many high platform stations require bridge plate because for >>>>wheelchairs (1) the gap between the platform and doorway is too wide >>>>and (2) the doorway and platform are not in vertical alignment.

    Incompetent maintenance.

    No, it's not. It's nothing to do with maintenance. It has to do with >>horizontal curves, and weight shifting in the passenger car.

    There are plenty of places in the Northeast where even empty trains on >tangent track have floors that are many inches off from the proper
    horizontal _and_ vertical alignments.

    _That_ is incompetent track maintenance, and that is what Hancock is >complaining about. Of course, rather than fix that incompetency, he
    prefers to pay extra crew to operate traps and bridge plates.

    Sigh.

    You always say things like this, Stephen. It doesn't make it true.

    Until SEPTA has the substantial capital funds to build--and >>>>maintain*--every station to full length high platform, it will need >>>>bigger crews.

    ... and paying for those larger crews robs them of the funds they need
    to improve the situation. That's why you use bonds for such things.

    Actually, CSS&SB reduced train crew staffing levels a number of years
    ago. Traps are in the end doors, like Metra Electric Highliners but not >>like Metra Electric Nippon-Sharyo MU cars where they are in the center.
    On Metra Electric, traps are for use in unusual situations as it's all >>floor-height platforms.

    With reduced staffing, just one trap is used per car.

    With floor-height platforms (and proper maintenance), traps (and bridge >plates) are not needed at all.

    You know CSS&SB has gauntlet tracks and Metra Electric has dedicated
    suburban (commuter) mains? You're ignoring tons of extra expense.

    *Maintenance will include lighting, repair, and snow removal and
    these are added costs.

    The difference in cost to maintain short vs high platforms is
    negligible.

    I don't agree, because we don't build platforms in this country
    English style, in which platforms are expected to last for centuries.
    So floor-height platforms are structures, not asphalt over deep
    grading for standard height platforms.

    Maybe they don't in Chicago, but they do around here.

    Fine. Give me a call 100 years from now and tell me how many original
    platforms survived.

    Longer platforms will cost a bit more to maintain, but not
    enough to matter in the long run.

    Spoken like someone who has never been through a winter with
    very heavy snowfall.

    If you build the platforms right, it doesn't matter how high they are;
    heavy snow on a high platform is the same as heavy snow on a high one.

    Right. The longer platform requires more shoveling. That's
    higher operating cost right there.

    FWIW, MNRR, LIRR, and NJT all have converted most of their networks
    to full length high level platform, and, run much longer trains than >>>>SEPTA (10-12 cars), yet still have large train crews. Indeed, NJT >>>>tried cutting back crew sizes and found it didn't work out.

    SEPTA may reduce railroad crew size when it introduces its new fare >>>>collection system.

    Yet many FRA systems manage to run trains just as long with crews of 2, >>>and the second crewmember is only "required" by FRA and union rules; >>>non-FRA systems often run trains with crews of just 1, and we have >>>existence proof (BCTA) that it can be done safely with _zero_ crew.

    Eh. It depends. And then there's Lac Megantic... Your engineer has
    to know how to tie up the consist if there's no conductor.

    (I wish you'd speak of engine and train crews, as they are separate
    crews and not the same crew.)

    There is an engineer, who runs the train, and a conductor, who collects
    a paycheck for doing nothing, thanks to FRA/union rules.

    This is totally false. Conductors aren't featherbedding like two-man
    engine crews, with the second man the fireman on the diesel locomotive.

    If you have one-man train crews, well, we have two-man train crews,
    with extra crews for additional fare collection duties on very long
    rush hour trains. You're actually ahead.

    Technically, the conductor runs the train, and if the engineer does
    something wrong, the conductor can get fired too.

    There are transit cops and fare inspectors that occasionally pop in (just >like on non-FRA trains), but they're not part of the train crew at all.

    That's correct. Just like on-board services on Amtrak aren't part of
    the train crew.

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  • From Adam H. Kerman@1:2320/100 to Stephen Sprunk on Sat Apr 11 19:28:16 2015

    From: ahk@chinet.com

    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:
    On 11-Apr-15 12:56, Adam H. Kerman wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:
    On 11-Apr-15 11:08, Adam H. Kerman wrote:

    I'm trying to reduce station construction costs on your
    railroad.

    Platform height/length has a negligible impact on cost, compared to
    all the other (much larger) station expenses that aren't affected
    at all.

    Platforms are hideously expensive. Metra has had standard-height
    platform replacement projects over the last several years, and they
    take an amazing 13 weeks under traffic.

    Then someone needs to get fired. DART replaced _dozens_ of platforms
    while they were in service, closing them just two weekends each plus
    working nights when there were no trains. Start to finish for each
    station was under a month.

    Then again, you're saddled with unions, so taking three-plus times as
    long (and probably ten-plus times as much money) is to be expected.
    That's the price you pay for living in the Rust Belt.

    We don't close freight railroads for weekends.

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  • From Adam H. Kerman@1:2320/100 to Stephen Sprunk on Sat Apr 11 20:19:56 2015

    From: ahk@chinet.com

    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:
    On 11-Apr-15 14:28, Adam H. Kerman wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:
    On 11-Apr-15 12:56, Adam H. Kerman wrote:

    Platforms are hideously expensive. Metra has had standard-height >>>>platform replacement projects over the last several years, and
    they take an amazing 13 weeks under traffic.

    Then someone needs to get fired. DART replaced _dozens_ of
    platforms while they were in service, closing them just two
    weekends each plus working nights when there were no trains. Start
    to finish for each station was under a month.

    Then again, you're saddled with unions, so taking three-plus times
    as long (and probably ten-plus times as much money) is to be
    expected. That's the price you pay for living in the Rust Belt.

    We don't close freight railroads for weekends.

    Neither do we; that'd be silly.

    It was just the stations that were closed, to give the crews longer
    periods for heavy work on the platforms. Trains still ran through every
    few minutes, and there were shuttle buses to/from the next stations in
    both directions so folks could still get where they needed to go.

    They didn't rebuild platforms as passengers were standing on them.
    They replaced half of one side at a time; took an absurdly long time.
    Anyway, they use outside labor for a hell of a lot of this stuff these days, and they aren't necessarily unionized.

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  • From Stephen Sprunk@1:2320/100 to Adam H. Kerman on Sat Apr 11 21:28:04 2015

    From: stephen@sprunk.org

    On 11-Apr-15 17:13, Adam H. Kerman wrote:
    hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote:
    Adam H. Kerman wrote:
    I guess I don't understand what hancock's complaint is here. I
    mean, ballast regulators are computerized and the ballast is laid
    to the height specified within a narrow tolerance that doesn't
    account for changes in level, except when it's very very fresh.

    At Princeton Jct, where the high platforms are about 20 years old,
    the platform is now about 6" below the level of the train car. At
    other stations on _several carriers_, they had to put in step boxes
    to aid passengers in boarding. FWIW, Engineers have told me that
    is due to increased ballast height added over the years.

    So that's deliberate.

    "Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by
    stupidity." --Hanlon's Razor

    S

    --
    Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein
    CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the
    K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking

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  • From Adam H. Kerman@1:2320/100 to Hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com on Sat Apr 11 22:13:46 2015

    From: ahk@chinet.com

    hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote:
    On Saturday, April 11, 2015 at 12:25:30 PM UTC-4, Adam H. Kerman wrote:

    I guess I don't understand what hancock's complaint is here. I mean, >>ballast regulators are computerized and the ballast is laid to the
    height specified within a narrow tolerance that doesn't account for
    changes in level, except when it's very very fresh.

    At Princeton Jct, where the high platforms are about 20 years old, the >platform is now about 6" below the level of the train car. At other
    stations on _several carriers_, they had to put in step boxes to aid >passengers in boarding. FWIW, Engineers have told me that is due to >increased ballast height added over the years.

    So that's deliberate.

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  • From Mroberds@att.net@1:2320/100 to Hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com on Sun Apr 12 04:49:58 2015

    hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote:
    On Saturday, April 11, 2015 at 11:29:41 AM UTC-4, Stephen Sprunk wrote:

    Longer platforms will cost a bit more to maintain, but not enough to
    matter in the long run.

    I don't think the power cost for the extra lighting would be too much
    (I figure an extra 600 KW per station, but multiply that over 12
    hours, all the stations, and 365 days a year and it adds up).

    Yeah, but with 600 kW of *extra* lighting, those 3-strip Technicolor
    railfan films will look *great*! :)

    (In other words, I think perhaps the "kilo" is not needed here.)

    Matt Roberds

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  • From Hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com@1:2320/100 to Mrob...@att.net on Sun Apr 12 13:26:00 2015

    On Sunday, April 12, 2015 at 12:50:53 AM UTC-4, mrob...@att.net wrote:

    Yeah, but with 600 kW of *extra* lighting, those 3-strip Technicolor
    railfan films will look *great*! :)
    (In other words, I think perhaps the "kilo" is not needed here.)

    Yes, that is a bit much.

    A four car platform uses seven fixtures, we'll assume a 100 watt lamp. To double the length to serve eight cars, we'll need another fourteen fixtures (seven on each side). That's a total of 1,400 watts, or 1.4 KW.

    In terms of incremental cost, 1.4 KW x 12 hours/day x 10c/KWH x 365 days/year x

    200 stations = $800 annually. While the lamps are generally long-life, there is some periodic service and sending out a bucket truck ain't cheap.

    Night photography is tough in such stations because they use the yellowish high

    intensity streetlight lamps (I think they're sodium vapor). That is very hard to correct for a natural look.

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  • From Jimmygeldburg@gmail.com@1:2320/100 to Stephen Sprunk on Sun Apr 12 20:01:06 2015

    Stephen Sprunk wrote:
    I traveled overnight from Paris to Amsterdam in a couchette, and I
    really liked that concept. There was absolutely no privacy (5 other strangers in the same room), but it was a _lot_ cheaper than having a
    room to myself and more comfortable than a coach seat; I probably
    wouldn't have made the trip at all if that option weren't available

    The Thalys makes that trip in 3:18. Why do you need an overnight train?

    Jimmy

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  • From Jimmygeldburg@gmail.com@1:2320/100 to Stephen Sprunk on Sun Apr 12 20:05:10 2015

    Stephen Sprunk wrote:
    A mini high block requires bridge plates if it's not going to conflict
    with freight trains, and that slows boarding--and unpredictably so,
    which is worse.

    If the vast majority of trains are passenger trains (or freight trains that clear high platforms), and a wide freight is a rarity, they can leave the flip-down high platform edges deployed most of the time, and only retract them before a freight comes
    through.

    Jimmy

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  • From Jimmygeldburg@gmail.com@1:2320/100 to Stephen Sprunk on Sun Apr 12 20:14:52 2015

    Stephen Sprunk wrote:
    Yet many FRA systems manage to run trains just as long with crews of 2,
    and the second crewmember is only "required" by FRA and union rules;

    Which railroads?

    Also, are there any railroads that use low platforms and traps, and don't have an employee stationed at every boarding door?

    Jimmy

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  • From Hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com@1:2320/100 to Jimmyg...@gmail.com on Sun Apr 12 20:49:38 2015

    On Sunday, April 12, 2015 at 11:14:52 PM UTC-4, jimmyg...@gmail.com wrote:

    Also, are there any railroads that use low platforms and traps, and don't
    have an employee stationed at every boarding door?

    On SEPTA, on the older cars, the doors are at the car end. Thus, a crewman can

    watch a pair of doors of two cars.

    On the new SL5 cars, the doors are quarter point, with automatic traps. A crewman is not near every opened door.


    As mentioned, on NJT, MNRR, and LIRR, they have mostly high platforms, but still use a lot of crew. Long trains are run. NJT tried reducing crew sizes, but after some incidents realized some crew is necessary on long trains.

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  • From Stephen Sprunk@1:2320/100 to Jimmygeldburg@gmail.com on Mon Apr 13 00:26:06 2015

    From: stephen@sprunk.org

    On 12-Apr-15 22:14, jimmygeldburg@gmail.com wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk wrote:
    Yet many FRA systems manage to run trains just as long with crews
    of 2, and the second crewmember is only "required" by FRA and union
    rules;

    Which railroads?

    Nearly all of them outside the Rust Belt, at least 14.

    Amtrak LD is the main exception; they don't have traps on trains with
    low floors, but they still have a crewman to place a step box at every
    door (even where not needed), so it's roughly the same problem.

    S

    --
    Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein
    CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the
    K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking

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  • From Stephen Sprunk@1:2320/100 to Jimmygeldburg@gmail.com on Mon Apr 13 00:43:10 2015

    From: stephen@sprunk.org

    On 12-Apr-15 22:05, jimmygeldburg@gmail.com wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk wrote:
    A mini high block requires bridge plates if it's not going to
    conflict with freight trains, and that slows boarding--and
    unpredictably so, which is worse.

    If the vast majority of trains are passenger trains (or freight
    trains that clear high platforms), and a wide freight is a rarity,
    they can leave the flip-down high platform edges deployed most of the
    time, and only retract them before a freight comes through.

    A bridge plate needs support at both ends; it doesn't just hang out in
    space by itself. What you're describing is more like a retractable gap
    filler, which would extend on arrival and retract before departure; you wouldn't want to leave it extended between passenger trains and count on
    it being retracting remotely before the next freight passed through.

    Now that the old South Ferry is closed, I'm not sure there are any
    remaining examples of such gap fillers in the US.

    S

    --
    Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein
    CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the
    K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking

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  • From Stephen Sprunk@1:2320/100 to Jimmygeldburg@gmail.com on Mon Apr 13 00:59:44 2015

    From: stephen@sprunk.org

    On 12-Apr-15 22:01, jimmygeldburg@gmail.com wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk wrote:
    I traveled overnight from Paris to Amsterdam in a couchette, and I
    really liked that concept. There was absolutely no privacy (5
    other strangers in the same room), but it was a _lot_ cheaper than
    having a room to myself and more comfortable than a coach seat; I
    probably wouldn't have made the trip at all if that option weren't
    available

    The Thalys makes that trip in 3:18. Why do you need an overnight
    train?

    The couchette saved me a night in a hotel each way, which meant that
    side trip actually had a _negative_ cost. That's hard to beat.

    If I took Thalys, the fare would be higher _and_ I'd still need those
    hotel rooms, so the cost would have been prohibitive. Also, if I'd
    spent 6.5 hours of daylight traveling, I'd not have been left with
    enough time in Amsterdam to make the side trip worth doing anyway.

    S

    --
    Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein
    CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the
    K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking

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  • From Stephen Sprunk@1:2320/100 to Adam H. Kerman on Mon Apr 13 09:05:58 2015

    From: stephen@sprunk.org

    On 13-Apr-15 08:25, Adam H. Kerman wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:
    On 12-Apr-15 22:14, jimmygeldburg@gmail.com wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk wrote:
    Yet many FRA systems manage to run trains just as long with
    crews of 2, and the second crewmember is only "required" by FRA
    and union rules;

    Which railroads?

    Nearly all of them outside the Rust Belt, at least 14.

    Amtrak LD is the main exception; they don't have traps on trains
    with low floors, but they still have a crewman to place a step box
    at every door (even where not needed), so it's roughly the same
    problem.

    Since when does Amtrak open every door, except at a terminal?

    The times I've taken Amtrak LD, they opened every door at every stop.
    That makes sense, since you're only allowed to board at the correct
    door; most of the "boarding" time is consumed by passengers walking up
    and down the length of the train, being refused boarding at each door by
    surly crew members despite valid tickets. It would be a lot faster if
    they'd let people board anywhere and sort out where they're supposed to
    sit once the train is moving again.

    The step boxes seem to be helpful, might be nice for some passengers
    not to stretch for the first step even on commuter rail.

    On an 8in platform, the top of the step boxes is the same height as the
    floor of the car, making it no easier to board. In fact, since the step
    boxes are so narrow compared to the door width, they actually make it
    _more_ difficult to board.

    BBD bilevel cars (i.e. nearly all commuter trains outside the Rust Belt)
    have a built-in, full-width step below the door at half the height
    difference; no step boxes are required. Why Amtrak LD trains don't have
    such (which would remove the need for those step boxes--and a dozen or
    so crew members per train) is mystifying.

    S

    --
    Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein
    CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the
    K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking

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  • From Stephen Sprunk@1:2320/100 to Adam H. Kerman on Mon Apr 13 11:25:18 2015

    From: stephen@sprunk.org

    On 13-Apr-15 10:07, Adam H. Kerman wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:
    BBD bilevel cars (i.e. nearly all commuter trains outside the Rust
    Belt) have a built-in, full-width step below the door at half the
    height difference; no step boxes are required. Why Amtrak LD
    trains don't have such (which would remove the need for those step
    boxes--and a dozen or so crew members per train) is mystifying.

    This was an innovation from streetcars. The reason folding stepwells
    are impractical is what you just wrote: Rust. You could have them in California.

    The steps are fixed, and none of the ones I've seen exhibit any signs of
    rust; the coloring makes them look anodized (virtually rust-proof), and
    there are plenty of alloys that don't rust anyway--such the the one used
    for the _bodies_ of those same cars.

    Steps are more challenging because the cheapest way of protecting metal
    (i.e. paint) won't work, but there are other options.

    MATA's vintage streetcars have folding wooden steps; that works too,
    though we have to replace them every few years due to water/rot. Metal
    would be a much better choice, but MATA can't do that since the entire
    point of our operation is the authentic vintage look. (Some parts
    aren't vintage, such as self-lapping brakes for improved safety, but few passengers would know the difference.)

    Now, I'd just put up with the maintenance tasks,

    Indeed; replacing a step every 10-20 years would cost, what, a _week's_
    worth of wages for a step-box operator? It's a no-brainer.

    but you know that maintenance is anathema to passenger service.

    Amtrak doesn't seem to have any trouble keeping their rolling stock in
    good condition; it's new equipment, overhauls and collision repair that
    they have problems with due to lack of capital funding.

    S

    --
    Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein
    CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the
    K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking

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  • From Stephen Sprunk@1:2320/100 to Adam H. Kerman on Mon Apr 13 11:29:10 2015

    From: stephen@sprunk.org

    On 11-Apr-15 15:19, Adam H. Kerman wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:
    On 11-Apr-15 14:28, Adam H. Kerman wrote:
    We don't close freight railroads for weekends.

    Neither do we; that'd be silly.

    It was just the stations that were closed, to give the crews
    longer periods for heavy work on the platforms. Trains still ran
    through every few minutes, and there were shuttle buses to/from the
    next stations in both directions so folks could still get where
    they needed to go.

    They didn't rebuild platforms as passengers were standing on them.

    Thank you, Captain Obvious.

    They replaced half of one side at a time; took an absurdly long
    time.

    But ... why?

    DART used a week of nights to prepare, then a weekend to demolish the
    old platform and build a temporary wooden one, then a week of nights for
    more prep work, then a weekend to remove the wooden platform and build a
    new concrete and tile/brick one, and then a week of nights to clean up.
    Then the gang moved on to the next station and repeated the process; it
    took most of a year in total, but each station went _very_ quickly.

    S

    --
    Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein
    CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the
    K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking

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  • From Adam H. Kerman@1:2320/100 to Stephen Sprunk on Mon Apr 13 13:25:20 2015

    From: ahk@chinet.com

    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:
    On 12-Apr-15 22:14, jimmygeldburg@gmail.com wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk wrote:

    Yet many FRA systems manage to run trains just as long with crews
    of 2, and the second crewmember is only "required" by FRA and union >>>rules;

    Which railroads?

    Nearly all of them outside the Rust Belt, at least 14.

    Amtrak LD is the main exception; they don't have traps on trains with
    low floors, but they still have a crewman to place a step box at every
    door (even where not needed), so it's roughly the same problem.

    Since when does Amtrak open every door, except at a terminal? The step
    boxes seem to be helpful, might be nice for some passengers not to stretch
    for the first step even on commuter rail.

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  • From Hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com@1:2320/100 to Stephen Sprunk on Mon Apr 13 13:49:08 2015

    On Monday, April 13, 2015 at 12:26:28 PM UTC-4, Stephen Sprunk wrote:

    Amtrak doesn't seem to have any trouble keeping their rolling stock in
    good condition; it's new equipment, overhauls and collision repair that
    they have problems with due to lack of capital funding.

    FWIW, the April 2015 Railpace says Amtrak is doing a terrible job on maintenance (see seprate posting).

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  • From Stephen Sprunk@1:2320/100 to Marc Van Dyck on Mon Apr 13 14:10:48 2015

    From: stephen@sprunk.org

    On 13-Apr-15 13:23, Marc Van Dyck wrote:
    jimmygeldburg@gmail.com used his keyboard to write :
    Stephen Sprunk wrote:
    I traveled overnight from Paris to Amsterdam in a couchette, and
    I really liked that concept. There was absolutely no privacy (5
    other strangers in the same room), but it was a _lot_ cheaper
    than having a room to myself and more comfortable than a coach
    seat; I probably wouldn't have made the trip at all if that
    option weren't available

    The Thalys makes that trip in 3:18. Why do you need an overnight
    train?

    As far as I remember, the Thalys and the overnight train never
    coexisted. As usual with SNCF, when TGVs came in, all other trains
    on the same journey disappeared. So Stephen did not have the choice.
    There were daytime trains that took approximately 6 hours for that
    journey.

    At the time, there were both CoRail night trains and Thalys day trains
    on that route; perhaps the former hadn't been discontinued yet because
    SNCF itself didn't (and AFAICT still doesn't) operate TGVs there.

    S

    --
    Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein
    CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the
    K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking

    --- SoupGate/W32 v1.03
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  • From Stephen Sprunk@1:2320/100 to Stephen Sprunk on Mon Apr 13 14:40:54 2015

    From: stephen@sprunk.org

    On 13-Apr-15 14:10, Stephen Sprunk wrote:
    On 13-Apr-15 13:23, Marc Van Dyck wrote:
    jimmygeldburg@gmail.com used his keyboard to write :
    Stephen Sprunk wrote:
    I traveled overnight from Paris to Amsterdam in a couchette,
    and I really liked that concept. There was absolutely no
    privacy (5 other strangers in the same room), but it was a
    _lot_ cheaper than having a room to myself and more comfortable
    than a coach seat; I probably wouldn't have made the trip at
    all if that option weren't available

    The Thalys makes that trip in 3:18. Why do you need an
    overnight train?

    It wasn't 3:18 then. When Thalys first started in 1996, that trip took 4:47--about 50% longer than today, not much faster than conventional
    trains. That went down ~40mins with HSL-1 (1997) and another ~50mins
    with HSL-4 and HSL-Zuid (2009).

    (Compare to US intercity rail, which gets _slower_ every year.)

    As far as I remember, the Thalys and the overnight train never
    coexisted. As usual with SNCF, when TGVs came in, all other trains
    on the same journey disappeared. So Stephen did not have the
    choice. There were daytime trains that took approximately 6 hours
    for that journey.

    At the time, there were both CoRail night trains and Thalys day
    trains on that route; perhaps the former hadn't been discontinued yet
    because SNCF itself didn't (and AFAICT still doesn't) operate TGVs
    there.

    FWIW, that should have been in late 1999; I remember the millennium
    countdown clock on the Eiffel Tower. None of my (film) pictures from
    Amsterdam have dates, and my passport doesn't have any Belgian or Dutch stamps--I assume due to Schengen, so I can't be more exact.

    S

    --
    Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein
    CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the
    K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking

    --- SoupGate/W32 v1.03
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  • From Adam H. Kerman@1:2320/100 to Stephen Sprunk on Mon Apr 13 15:07:56 2015

    From: ahk@chinet.com

    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:

    BBD bilevel cars (i.e. nearly all commuter trains outside the Rust Belt)
    have a built-in, full-width step below the door at half the height >difference; no step boxes are required. Why Amtrak LD trains don't have
    such (which would remove the need for those step boxes--and a dozen or
    so crew members per train) is mystifying.

    This was an innovation from streetcars. The reason folding stepwells are impractical is what you just wrote: Rust. You could have them in California.

    Now, I'd just put up with the maintenance tasks, but you know that
    maintenance is anathema to passenger service.

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  • From Stephen Sprunk@1:2320/100 to Adam H. Kerman on Mon Apr 13 15:55:16 2015

    From: stephen@sprunk.org

    On 13-Apr-15 14:31, Adam H. Kerman wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:
    On 11-Apr-15 15:19, Adam H. Kerman wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:
    It was just the stations that were closed, to give the crews
    longer periods for heavy work on the platforms. Trains still
    ran through every few minutes, and there were shuttle buses
    to/from the next stations in both directions so folks could
    still get where they needed to go.

    They didn't rebuild platforms as passengers were standing on
    them.

    Thank you, Captain Obvious.

    So why close the station?

    Most DART stations consist of nothing more than platforms and a few bus
    bays; there is no building or full-time staff, so "closing the station"
    means blocking off the platforms--and trains not stopping. Obviously,
    one needs to keep the public off the platforms while replacing them.

    Some stations are adjacent to P&R lots and/or bus transfer centers;
    those wouldn't be closed just because the train platforms were.

    S

    --
    Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein
    CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the
    K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking

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  • From Stephen Sprunk@1:2320/100 to Adam H. Kerman on Mon Apr 13 17:53:22 2015

    From: stephen@sprunk.org

    On 13-Apr-15 14:28, Adam H. Kerman wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:
    The steps are fixed, and none of the ones I've seen exhibit any
    signs of rust; the coloring makes them look anodized (virtually
    rust-proof), and there are plenty of alloys that don't rust
    anyway--such the the one used for the _bodies_ of those same cars.

    I don't know what the dimensions are for how for something can hang
    down from below the car above the platform.

    The BBD BiLevel is narrower than a Superliner, so even with the steps
    sticking out a few inches, there's no horizontal clearance issues on any
    tracks where a Superliner fits--and even the Superliner doesn't fill the
    full size allowed with Plate F (but it's bigger than Plate B/C/E), so
    you could probably add them to a Superliner as well.

    Worst case, you could make the steps retractable; that'd drive up the maintenance cost a bit, but it'd still be cheaper than paying
    round-the-clock wages for step box operators on every car.

    S

    --
    Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein
    CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the
    K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking

    --- SoupGate/W32 v1.03
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  • From Adam H. Kerman@1:2320/100 to Stephen Sprunk on Mon Apr 13 19:28:20 2015

    From: ahk@chinet.com

    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:
    On 13-Apr-15 10:07, Adam H. Kerman wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:

    BBD bilevel cars (i.e. nearly all commuter trains outside the Rust
    Belt) have a built-in, full-width step below the door at half the
    height difference; no step boxes are required. Why Amtrak LD
    trains don't have such (which would remove the need for those step >>>boxes--and a dozen or so crew members per train) is mystifying.

    This was an innovation from streetcars. The reason folding stepwells
    are impractical is what you just wrote: Rust. You could have them in >>California.

    The steps are fixed, and none of the ones I've seen exhibit any signs of >rust; the coloring makes them look anodized (virtually rust-proof), and
    there are plenty of alloys that don't rust anyway--such the the one used
    for the _bodies_ of those same cars.

    I don't know what the dimensions are for how for something can hang
    down from below the car above the platform. There's a big step up onto
    Metra diesel-electric-hauled trailers. That's not to say that the
    first step couldn't be a lot lower.

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  • From Adam H. Kerman@1:2320/100 to Stephen Sprunk on Mon Apr 13 19:31:20 2015

    From: ahk@chinet.com

    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:
    On 11-Apr-15 15:19, Adam H. Kerman wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:
    On 11-Apr-15 14:28, Adam H. Kerman wrote:

    We don't close freight railroads for weekends.

    Neither do we; that'd be silly.

    It was just the stations that were closed, to give the crews
    longer periods for heavy work on the platforms. Trains still ran
    through every few minutes, and there were shuttle buses to/from the
    next stations in both directions so folks could still get where
    they needed to go.

    They didn't rebuild platforms as passengers were standing on them.

    Thank you, Captain Obvious.

    So why close the station?

    They replaced half of one side at a time; took an absurdly long time.

    But ... why?

    No one has given me a good answer. The time and expense of this work
    was outrageous.

    DART used a week of nights to prepare, then a weekend to demolish the
    old platform and build a temporary wooden one, then a week of nights for
    more prep work, then a weekend to remove the wooden platform and build a
    new concrete and tile/brick one, and then a week of nights to clean up.
    Then the gang moved on to the next station and repeated the process; it
    took most of a year in total, but each station went _very_ quickly.

    That's better.

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  • From Stephen Sprunk@1:2320/100 to Adam H. Kerman on Mon Apr 13 19:51:34 2015

    From: stephen@sprunk.org

    On 13-Apr-15 18:40, Adam H. Kerman wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:
    On 13-Apr-15 14:28, Adam H. Kerman wrote:
    I don't know what the dimensions are for how for something can
    hang down from below the car above the platform.

    The BBD BiLevel is narrower than a Superliner, so even with the
    steps sticking out a few inches, there's no horizontal clearance
    issues on any tracks where a Superliner fits--and even the
    Superliner doesn't fill the full size allowed with Plate F (but
    it's bigger than Plate B/C/E), so you could probably add them to a
    Superliner as well.

    The below floor level dimensions are all the same on all Plate
    sizes, aren't they?

    Plates B/C/E/F are the same below 13ft 9in. Plate H is much narrower
    but barely tapers at the bottom (think well cars). I don't have Plate
    A/D/G/K outlines, so I'm not sure how those compare.

    The "Standard Passenger" plate is slightly wider than Plate H but tapers
    _more_ than Plates B/C/E/F at the bottom.

    S

    --
    Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein
    CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the
    K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking

    --- SoupGate/W32 v1.03
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  • From Marc Van Dyck@1:2320/100 to Used His Keyboard To on Mon Apr 13 20:23:16 2015

    From: marc.gr.vandyck@invalid.skynet.be

    jimmygeldburg@gmail.com used his keyboard to write :
    Stephen Sprunk wrote:
    I traveled overnight from Paris to Amsterdam in a couchette, and I
    really liked that concept. There was absolutely no privacy (5 other
    strangers in the same room), but it was a _lot_ cheaper than having a
    room to myself and more comfortable than a coach seat; I probably
    wouldn't have made the trip at all if that option weren't available

    The Thalys makes that trip in 3:18. Why do you need an overnight train?

    Jimmy

    As far as I remember, the Thalys and the overnight train never
    coexisted. As usual with SNCF, when TGVs came in, all other trains on
    the same journey disappeared. So Stephen did not have the choice. There
    were daytime trains that took approximately 6 hours for that journey.

    --
    Marc Van Dyck

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  • From Marc Van Dyck@1:2320/100 to Stephen Sprunk on Mon Apr 13 21:26:54 2015

    From: marc.gr.vandyck@invalid.skynet.be

    Stephen Sprunk wrote :
    On 13-Apr-15 13:23, Marc Van Dyck wrote:
    jimmygeldburg@gmail.com used his keyboard to write :
    Stephen Sprunk wrote:
    I traveled overnight from Paris to Amsterdam in a couchette, and
    I really liked that concept. There was absolutely no privacy (5
    other strangers in the same room), but it was a _lot_ cheaper
    than having a room to myself and more comfortable than a coach
    seat; I probably wouldn't have made the trip at all if that
    option weren't available

    The Thalys makes that trip in 3:18. Why do you need an overnight
    train?

    As far as I remember, the Thalys and the overnight train never
    coexisted. As usual with SNCF, when TGVs came in, all other trains
    on the same journey disappeared. So Stephen did not have the choice.
    There were daytime trains that took approximately 6 hours for that
    journey.

    At the time, there were both CoRail night trains and Thalys day trains
    on that route; perhaps the former hadn't been discontinued yet because
    SNCF itself didn't (and AFAICT still doesn't) operate TGVs there.

    S

    Do you remember which year it was, even approximately ?

    Thalys, at that time, was just a commercial brand, and behind it were
    SNCF, SNCB, NS and DB.

    --
    Marc Van Dyck

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  • From Marc Van Dyck@1:2320/100 to All on Mon Apr 13 22:27:56 2015

    From: marc.gr.vandyck@invalid.skynet.be

    Stephen Sprunk presented the following explanation :

    FWIW, that should have been in late 1999; I remember the millennium
    countdown clock on the Eiffel Tower. None of my (film) pictures from Amsterdam have dates, and my passport doesn't have any Belgian or Dutch stamps--I assume due to Schengen, so I can't be more exact.

    S

    OK, got my facts right, this train (288/289) was cancelled on december
    15th, 2002.

    --
    Marc Van Dyck

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  • From Adam H. Kerman@1:2320/100 to Stephen Sprunk on Mon Apr 13 23:40:22 2015

    From: ahk@chinet.com

    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:
    On 13-Apr-15 14:28, Adam H. Kerman wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:

    The steps are fixed, and none of the ones I've seen exhibit any
    signs of rust; the coloring makes them look anodized (virtually >>>rust-proof), and there are plenty of alloys that don't rust
    anyway--such the the one used for the _bodies_ of those same cars.

    I don't know what the dimensions are for how for something can hang
    down from below the car above the platform.

    The BBD BiLevel is narrower than a Superliner, so even with the steps >sticking out a few inches, there's no horizontal clearance issues on any >tracks where a Superliner fits--and even the Superliner doesn't fill the
    full size allowed with Plate F (but it's bigger than Plate B/C/E), so
    you could probably add them to a Superliner as well.

    The below floor level dimensions are all the same on all Plate sizes,
    aren't they?

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  • From Hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com@1:2320/100 to Stephen Sprunk on Tue Apr 14 00:20:06 2015

    On Monday, April 13, 2015 at 6:54:32 PM UTC-4, Stephen Sprunk wrote:

    Worst case, you could make the steps retractable; that'd drive up the maintenance cost a bit, but it'd still be cheaper than paying
    round-the-clock wages for step box operators on every car.

    You do realize that your so-called "step box operators" have many other duties;

    indeed, placing a step-box is probably the least of them.

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  • From Jimmygeldburg@gmail.com@1:2320/100 to Stephen Sprunk on Tue Apr 14 11:20:28 2015

    Stephen Sprunk wrote:
    jimmygeldburg@gmail.com wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk wrote:
    Yet many FRA systems manage to run trains just as long with crews
    of 2, and the second crewmember is only "required" by FRA and union
    rules;

    Which railroads?

    Nearly all of them outside the Rust Belt, at least 14.

    Could you name a few, so I can look up pictures of their boarding operation?

    Do they not have traps? Or are there automatic traps that can be centrally controlled?

    Jimmy

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  • From Jimmygeldburg@gmail.com@1:2320/100 to Stephen Sprunk on Tue Apr 14 11:25:04 2015

    Stephen Sprunk wrote:
    jimmygeldburg@gmail.com wrote:
    If the vast majority of trains are passenger trains (or freight
    trains that clear high platforms), and a wide freight is a rarity,
    they can leave the flip-down high platform edges deployed most of the
    time, and only retract them before a freight comes through.

    A bridge plate needs support at both ends; it doesn't just hang out in
    space by itself. What you're describing is more like a retractable gap filler, which would extend on arrival and retract before departure; you wouldn't want to leave it extended between passenger trains and count on
    it being retracting remotely before the next freight passed through.

    No, I was referring to a flip-down platform edge. They have to be flipped manually, which is why they only make sense where the vast majority of traffic is passenger trains and narrow freights.

    http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/78/Reading_MBTA_station_mini-high_platform.JPG

    Now that the old South Ferry is closed, I'm not sure there are any
    remaining examples of such gap fillers in the US.

    Union Square on the Lexington Avenue IRT.

    http://www.citytransport.info/NotMine/NYCS_IRT_LexAve_14Sta.jpg

    Jimmy

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  • From Jimmygeldburg@gmail.com@1:2320/100 to Adam H. Kerman on Tue Apr 14 11:34:20 2015

    Adam H. Kerman wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:
    BBD bilevel cars (i.e. nearly all commuter trains outside the Rust Belt) >have a built-in, full-width step below the door at half the height >difference; no step boxes are required. Why Amtrak LD trains don't have >such (which would remove the need for those step boxes--and a dozen or
    so crew members per train) is mystifying.

    This was an innovation from streetcars. The reason folding stepwells are impractical is what you just wrote: Rust. You could have them in California.

    IIRC, Amfleet cars have an automatic retractable bottom step.

    Jimmy

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  • From Hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com@1:2320/100 to Stephen Sprunk on Tue Apr 14 12:10:36 2015

    On Tuesday, April 14, 2015 at 1:28:40 PM UTC-4, Stephen Sprunk wrote:

    I'm sure the union has invented other "duties" to justify their
    existence, as with any featherbed job, but it's clear from watching that Amtrak LD is grossly overstaffed, which undoubtedly contributes to them losing so much money.

    Would you provide specifics on the union-invented other duties?


    You clearly need staff for the snack bar/dining car, but they don't
    operate step boxes; they're serving customers even during stops (which
    can last an hour or more each, thanks to schedule padding).

    My own experience is that people do not board a snack or dining car unless it is the type that does have revenue seats, and some do.


    You clearly need attendants for the sleepers, but a maximum of one per
    car, and probably less than that.

    AFAIK, there is only one attendant per sleeping car. The private railroads operated with one person per car.



    You clearly need at least one person to collect tickets in the coaches,
    but less than one per car, and they can do other things after that task
    is completed following each stop.
    What else do you need? Why is there at least one crewman standing at
    _every_ door, in addition to the dozen inside--for a six-car train?
    (And that's just the staff on duty, i.e. not counting those sacked out
    in the dorm car.)

    My own experience on Amtrak LD trains is that there are much less crew than you

    suggest.

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  • From Stephen Sprunk@1:2320/100 to Hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com on Tue Apr 14 12:27:28 2015

    From: stephen@sprunk.org

    On 14-Apr-15 02:20, hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote:
    On Monday, April 13, 2015 at 6:54:32 PM UTC-4, Stephen Sprunk wrote:
    Worst case, you could make the steps retractable; that'd drive up
    the maintenance cost a bit, but it'd still be cheaper than paying
    round-the-clock wages for step box operators on every car.

    You do realize that your so-called "step box operators" have many
    other duties; indeed, placing a step-box is probably the least of
    them.

    I'm sure the union has invented other "duties" to justify their
    existence, as with any featherbed job, but it's clear from watching that
    Amtrak LD is grossly overstaffed, which undoubtedly contributes to them
    losing so much money.

    You clearly need staff for the snack bar/dining car, but they don't
    operate step boxes; they're serving customers even during stops (which
    can last an hour or more each, thanks to schedule padding).

    You clearly need attendants for the sleepers, but a maximum of one per
    car, and probably less than that.

    You clearly need at least one person to collect tickets in the coaches,
    but less than one per car, and they can do other things after that task
    is completed following each stop.

    What else do you need? Why is there at least one crewman standing at
    _every_ door, in addition to the dozen inside--for a six-car train?
    (And that's just the staff on duty, i.e. not counting those sacked out
    in the dorm car.)

    S

    --
    Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein
    CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the
    K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking

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  • From Stephen Sprunk@1:2320/100 to Hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com on Tue Apr 14 15:23:56 2015

    From: stephen@sprunk.org

    On 14-Apr-15 14:10, hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk wrote:
    I'm sure the union has invented other "duties" to justify their
    existence, as with any featherbed job, but it's clear from watching
    that Amtrak LD is grossly overstaffed, which undoubtedly
    contributes to them losing so much money.

    Would you provide specifics on the union-invented other duties?

    You're the one that claimed they existed.

    You clearly need staff for the snack bar/dining car, but they
    don't operate step boxes; they're serving customers even during
    stops (which can last an hour or more each, thanks to schedule
    padding).

    My own experience is that people do not board a snack or dining car
    unless it is the type that does have revenue seats, and some do.

    Doesn't matter; the door is still open, and there's a step box at it,
    along with a crew member to operate that step box--and refuse to let
    anyone board, even if they have valid tickets.

    You clearly need at least one person to collect tickets in the
    coaches, but less than one per car, and they can do other things
    after that task is completed following each stop. What else do you
    need? Why is there at least one crewman standing at _every_ door,
    in addition to the dozen inside--for a six-car train? (And that's
    just the staff on duty, i.e. not counting those sacked out in the
    dorm car.)

    My own experience on Amtrak LD trains is that there are much less
    crew than you suggest.

    I've been on three Amtrak LD trains in completely different parts of the country and separated by many years, and that was the case on all three
    of them.

    S

    --
    Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein
    CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the
    K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking

    --- SoupGate/W32 v1.03
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  • From Stephen Sprunk@1:2320/100 to Jimmygeldburg@gmail.com on Tue Apr 14 15:39:04 2015

    From: stephen@sprunk.org

    On 14-Apr-15 13:20, jimmygeldburg@gmail.com wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk wrote:
    jimmygeldburg@gmail.com wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk wrote:
    Yet many FRA systems manage to run trains just as long with crews
    of 2, and the second crewmember is only "required" by FRA and union
    rules;

    Which railroads?

    Nearly all of them outside the Rust Belt, at least 14.

    Could you name a few, so I can look up pictures of their boarding
    operation?

    Agence m|-tropolitaine de transport Montreal, Quebec
    Altamont Commuter Express San Jose, California
    A-Train Denton, Texas
    Caltrain San Francisco Bay Area, California
    Capital Metro Austin, Texas
    Coaster San Diego, California
    FrontRunner Salt Lake City, Utah
    GO Transit Greater Toronto Area, Ontario
    Metrolink Greater Los Angeles Area, California
    Northstar Line Minneapolis, Minnesota
    Rail Runner Express Albuquerque, New Mexico
    River Line Trenton/Camden, New Jersey
    Sounder Seattle, Washington
    SunRail Orlando, Florida
    Tri-Rail Miami/Fort Lauderdale/West Palm Beach, Florida
    Trinity Railway Express Dallas/Fort Worth, Texas
    West Coast Express Vancouver, British Columbia

    That's 17 so far; there are probably others I've forgotten.

    Do they not have traps? Or are there automatic traps that can be
    centrally controlled?

    No traps, thanks to low-floor equipment. Three of the above list have
    level boarding with 55cm platforms; the rest have a short step up from
    8in platforms, which mean they require a bridge plate for wheelchairs.

    S

    --
    Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein
    CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the
    K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking

    --- SoupGate/W32 v1.03
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  • From Stephen Sprunk@1:2320/100 to All on Wed Apr 15 10:25:28 2015

    From: stephen@sprunk.org

    On 15-Apr-15 08:30, 866013149e wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> writes:
    That's one of the many reasons why the FRA needs to start accepting
    standard UIC passenger cars. Not only would it give our operators
    access to stable suppliers, but it would also reduce the cost of
    equipment due to economy of scale. And it might even help get some
    US manufacturers back in the business, once they could compete on
    an even playing field with foreign makers.

    Amen to that. I've always suspected the FRA's requirements are
    driven by an anti-passenger rail agenda.

    "Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by stupidity." --Hanlon's Razor

    S

    --
    Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein
    CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the
    K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking

    --- SoupGate/W32 v1.03
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  • From 866013149e@1:2320/100 to Stephen Sprunk on Wed Apr 15 13:02:12 2015

    From: 866013149e@interpring.com

    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> writes:

    Notably, the sorts of improvements necessary to make passenger service
    viable are the same as what the railroads _already_ need to keep up with
    the existing demand for freight service. And helping them with the
    latter would cost taxpayers _less_ than expanding and repairing highways >every year for trucks. It's only the anti-rail bigots in Congress (and,
    to be fair, the Teamsters' lobbyists lining their pockets) that prevent
    this win-win-win scenario from happening.

    Don't locomotive engineers and conductors belong to the Teamsters these
    days?


    umar

    --- news://freenews.netfront.net/ - complaints: news@netfront.net ---

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  • From Adam H. Kerman@1:2320/100 to 866013149e@interpring.com on Wed Apr 15 13:09:48 2015

    From: ahk@chinet.com

    866013149e <866013149e@interpring.com> wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> writes:

    Notably, the sorts of improvements necessary to make passenger service >>viable are the same as what the railroads _already_ need to keep up with >>the existing demand for freight service. And helping them with the
    latter would cost taxpayers _less_ than expanding and repairing highways >>every year for trucks. It's only the anti-rail bigots in Congress (and,
    to be fair, the Teamsters' lobbyists lining their pockets) that prevent >>this win-win-win scenario from happening.

    Don't locomotive engineers and conductors belong to the Teamsters these
    days?

    No. Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers merged with International
    Brotherhood of Teamsters in 2004, but United Transportation Union is
    separate. Conductors are UTU.

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  • From 866013149e@1:2320/100 to Stephen Sprunk on Wed Apr 15 13:30:08 2015

    From: 866013149e@interpring.com

    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> writes:

    That's one of the many reasons why the FRA needs to start accepting
    standard UIC passenger cars. Not only would it give our operators
    access to stable suppliers, but it would also reduce the cost of
    equipment due to economy of scale. And it might even help get some US >manufacturers back in the business, once they could compete on an even >playing field with foreign makers.

    Amen to that. I've always suspected the FRA's requirements are driven by
    an anti-passenger rail agenda.


    umar

    --- news://freenews.netfront.net/ - complaints: news@netfront.net ---

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  • From Adam H. Kerman@1:2320/100 to 866013149e@interpring.com on Wed Apr 15 13:49:30 2015

    From: ahk@chinet.com

    866013149e <866013149e@interpring.com> wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> writes:

    That's one of the many reasons why the FRA needs to start accepting >>standard UIC passenger cars. Not only would it give our operators
    access to stable suppliers, but it would also reduce the cost of
    equipment due to economy of scale. And it might even help get some US >>manufacturers back in the business, once they could compete on an even >>playing field with foreign makers.

    Amen to that. I've always suspected the FRA's requirements are driven by
    an anti-passenger rail agenda.

    I don't think that's the whole story. It's more like, If we can prevent
    one death on board railroad, we will enforce this standard, even if it
    means lots and lots of deaths on modes of transportation we don't regulate.

    But lack of good sense in regulation has been federal and state policy
    forever, long predating FRA's existence. Naperville was April 25, 1946,
    the aftermath of which was severe speed restriction in dark territory regardless of whether safe operating rules are in place.

    --- SoupGate/W32 v1.03
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  • From Stephen Sprunk@1:2320/100 to Adam H. Kerman on Wed Apr 15 14:54:20 2015

    From: stephen@sprunk.org

    On 15-Apr-15 11:18, Adam H. Kerman wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:
    On 15-Apr-15 08:30, 866013149e wrote:
    Amen to that. I've always suspected the FRA's requirements are
    driven by an anti-passenger rail agenda.

    "Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained
    by stupidity." --Hanlon's Razor

    Ok, you can't keep repeating that.

    Repetition doesn't make it untrue.

    Anyway, stupidity isn't the explanation. If I had to go with a
    one-word simplistic explanation, I'd say cowardice: Fear of
    Washington in fighting and criticism if a signal death occurs that
    wouldn't have if FRA had stuck with American buff-strength standards
    instead of implementing European standards.

    Still, it's wrong to point the finger at FRA (and ICC before that).
    It's never really the administration's fault. It's Congress.

    I'd point the stupidity label at Congress; they're the ones that set up
    the regulatory framework to consider each mode separately, and they're
    the ones taking bribes^W"campaign contributions" from the freight
    railroads and airlines in return for killing off passenger rail.

    S

    --
    Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein
    CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the
    K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking

    --- SoupGate/W32 v1.03
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  • From Adam H. Kerman@1:2320/100 to Stephen Sprunk on Wed Apr 15 16:18:44 2015

    From: ahk@chinet.com

    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:
    On 15-Apr-15 08:30, 866013149e wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> writes:

    That's one of the many reasons why the FRA needs to start accepting >>>standard UIC passenger cars. Not only would it give our operators
    access to stable suppliers, but it would also reduce the cost of >>>equipment due to economy of scale. And it might even help get some
    US manufacturers back in the business, once they could compete on
    an even playing field with foreign makers.

    Amen to that. I've always suspected the FRA's requirements are
    driven by an anti-passenger rail agenda.

    "Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by >stupidity." --Hanlon's Razor

    Ok, you can't keep repeating that. Anyway, stupidity isn't the explanation.
    If I had to go with a one-word simplistic explanation, I'd say cowardice:
    Fear of Washington in fighting and criticism if a signal death occurs
    that wouldn't have if FRA had stuck with American buff-strength standards instead of implementing European standards.

    Still, it's wrong to point the finger at FRA (and ICC before that).
    It's never really the administration's fault. It's Congress. The law authorizing the federal railroad safety regime fails to order that
    economics and safety with respect to transportation as a whole and not
    just on railroads to be considered. That's why the standards will
    always be counterproductive.

    FRA and ICC before that are doing what Congress demands.

    --- SoupGate/W32 v1.03
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  • From Adam H. Kerman@1:2320/100 to Stephen Sprunk on Wed Apr 15 20:03:28 2015

    From: ahk@chinet.com

    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:
    On 15-Apr-15 11:18, Adam H. Kerman wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:
    On 15-Apr-15 08:30, 866013149e wrote:

    Amen to that. I've always suspected the FRA's requirements are
    driven by an anti-passenger rail agenda.

    "Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained
    by stupidity." --Hanlon's Razor

    Ok, you can't keep repeating that.

    Repetition doesn't make it untrue.

    It's an aphorism. It's just not applicable in every situation to
    explain undesirable consequences.

    Anyway, stupidity isn't the explanation. If I had to go with a
    one-word simplistic explanation, I'd say cowardice: Fear of
    Washington in fighting and criticism if a signal death occurs that
    wouldn't have if FRA had stuck with American buff-strength standards >>instead of implementing European standards.

    Still, it's wrong to point the finger at FRA (and ICC before that).
    It's never really the administration's fault. It's Congress.

    I'd point the stupidity label at Congress; they're the ones that set up
    the regulatory framework to consider each mode separately, and they're
    the ones taking bribes^W"campaign contributions" from the freight
    railroads and airlines in return for killing off passenger rail.

    I'm going to agree with the stupidity of Congress. However, it's pretty
    clear that heavy handed regulation with heavily subsidized non-rail modes
    made both passenger and freight service uneconomical. Today's freight
    service little resembles the service railroads used to provide, with
    the exception of bulk commodities.

    --- SoupGate/W32 v1.03
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  • From Hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com@1:2320/100 to Adam H. Kerman on Wed Apr 15 20:44:14 2015

    On Wednesday, April 15, 2015 at 12:18:43 PM UTC-4, Adam H. Kerman wrote:

    Ok, you can't keep repeating that. Anyway, stupidity isn't the explanation. If I had to go with a one-word simplistic explanation, I'd say cowardice: Fear of Washington in fighting and criticism if a signal death occurs
    that wouldn't have if FRA had stuck with American buff-strength standards instead of implementing European standards.

    This is true.

    If there is any tragedy, the government officials will be blamed and punished.

    So, it is there motivation to avoid tragedy, and thus we have cover-your-butt attitudes and onerous regulation. This applies to any industry or service that

    is regulated.
    If, for example, some kid dies in foster care, then they'll issue lots of new expensive and likely bad rules for foster care, which, in the end, will make things worse.

    At the same time, if there was sensible regulation and the industry was economically healthy, there are no rewards for the bureaucrats for doing a good

    job.


    Still, it's wrong to point the finger at FRA (and ICC before that).
    It's never really the administration's fault. It's Congress. The law authorizing the federal railroad safety regime fails to order that
    economics and safety with respect to transportation as a whole and not
    just on railroads to be considered. That's why the standards will
    always be counterproductive.
    FRA and ICC before that are doing what Congress demands.

    Also true.

    Further, after a tragedy, Congressmen like to jump into the fray and demand additional regulations, regardless if those new rules make any sense or not.

    --- SoupGate/W32 v1.03
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  • From Hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com@1:2320/100 to Adam H. Kerman on Wed Apr 15 20:47:06 2015

    On Wednesday, April 15, 2015 at 12:18:43 PM UTC-4, Adam H. Kerman wrote:
    If I had to go with a one-word simplistic explanation, I'd say cowardice:

    P.S. Also, interference by the courts is a big cause of waste.

    --- SoupGate/W32 v1.03
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  • From Hal@1:2320/100 to Jimmygeldburg@gmail.com on Wed Apr 15 22:45:56 2015

    From: HAL@hal.invalid

    In article <06fd9207-8403-4ddc-9562-04ad4459bf7d@googlegroups.com>, <jimmygeldburg@gmail.com> wrote:

    IIRC, Amfleet cars have an automatic retractable bottom step.

    No.

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  • From Piotr Waszkielewicz@1:2320/100 to All on Fri Apr 17 09:37:40 2015

    From: wynocha@spamerze.com

    W dniu 2015-04-14 o 20:34, jimmygeldburg@gmail.com pisze:

    IIRC, Amfleet cars have an automatic retractable bottom step.

    I don't think so.

    http://tinyurl.com/ld49ov8
    Williamsburg, VA
    --
    Piotr Waszkielewicz
    piotrwasz (ma+epa) o2 (kropka) pl
    ====> http://psoras.wordpress.com <====
    Quidqiud latine dictum sur, altum videtur.

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  • From Michael Finfer@1:2320/100 to Hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com on Fri Apr 17 22:02:26 2015

    From: finfer@optonline.net

    On 4/8/2015 11:49 PM, hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote:
    On Tuesday, April 7, 2015 at 11:07:38 PM UTC-4, Stephen Sprunk wrote:

    Unfortunately, railroads are an incredibly capital-intensive business,
    so you need a pretty significant investment in track to make _any_
    difference in speed or capacity, though it should be pointed out that
    the freight RRs _already_ need major track investments for their own
    traffic, and a fairly small contribution by Amtrak would likely sway
    them toward investing in the particular routes Amtrak uses, thus getting
    Amtrak a lot more bang for their buck than you'd expect.

    Unfortunately, it seems most modern railroad managements are pre-conditioned
    to hate passenger trains and will have nothing to do with it, even if reasonable negotiations could result in Amtrak picking up much of the tab for track improvements.

    On a section of busy bi-directional double track that CSX shares with SEPTA,
    CSX is spending money to build a third track dedicated for its trains. I think

    this is foolish. CSX will go from a very fluid two-track line to a single track line that will
    hurt, not help its freight trains. The two-track line was busy, but not over-crowded, and the bi-directional signalling made it flexible.

    But this attitude is nothing new. Back in the 1950s, some railroad managers
    were convinced their passenger trains lost money, even when in fact they were profitable, including with overhead. (Ref "Twilight of the Psgr Train" by Fraily).

    Not helping the situation was the ICC, forcing the railroads to carry
    extremely expensive trains no one rode, for years.



    Adding rolling stock is much simpler, at least until you need to add
    more crew (or especially locos) to a particular run. But many Amtrak
    trains are sold out due to being far too short, and profitability would
    be increased (or losses reduced, for LD routes) by adding a few cars to
    each train--or by adding a few new trainsets and consolidating the
    remaining ones. However, fare revenue will never match expenses when
    Amtrak's trains are competing with bicycles, not cars or buses, on
    speed--and that's where track improvements come in.

    Amtrak has new rolling stock on order, but the order is delayed.

    One problem is the "feast or famine" nature of building passenger cars.
    There isn't enough standardization and on-going orders to keep carbuilders in business and healthy. So, too many orders go to start-ups and thre are long delays.

    (However, I don't understand the screwup with the PATCO rebuild order, which
    is YEARS late, by an experienced builder. And it's a rebuild of a rapid transit car of 45 y/o technology, not even a new design, though I think they're

    doing it all with
    computers.)




    One of the issues here is that SEPTA chose a PTC system that is
    incompatible with the one CSX will be using. I am still shaking my head
    over that. Interoperability was supposed to be one of the key features
    of operating a national system.

    At least separating the freights onto their own single track railroad
    will benefit the passenger operation.

    Michael Finfer
    Bridgewater, NJ

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  • From Jishnu Mukerji@1:2320/100 to Michael Finfer on Sat Apr 18 09:43:50 2015

    From: jishnu@nospam.verizon.net

    On 4/17/2015 10:02 PM, Michael Finfer wrote:

    One of the issues here is that SEPTA chose a PTC system that is
    incompatible with the one CSX will be using. I am still shaking my head
    over that. Interoperability was supposed to be one of the key features
    of operating a national system.

    The PTC technology chosen by the freight railroads is incompatible with
    high speed operations by their own admission. SEPTA, which operates
    significant service on the NEC and the Main Line had no choice on the
    matter of whether they will use Amtrak's ACSES or not, unless they
    wanted to fund the parallel installation of freight PTC system on the
    entire length of the NEC, all four tracks through PA, which did not make
    much sense.

    Amtrak simply installs multiple PTC systems in the locomotives that have
    to operate on multiple system equipped tracks, as do Europeans, with
    their plethora of legacy train control systems.

    CSAO is having such parallel installation put in place between Baltimore (Bayview) and Newark DE for through freaights coming down through
    Perryville to get to the two yards that they access.

    In any case, expect all high speed passenger operations to use a PTC
    system that is more compatible with the European ERTMS than with the
    freight PTC. The PTC being installed in the US is a case of NIH which is
    at the end of the day somewhat less expensive, and not as precise in
    most installations as ERTMS level 2.

    --- SoupGate/W32 v1.03
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  • From Clark F Morris@1:2320/100 to Finfer@optonline.net on Sat Apr 18 09:59:12 2015

    From: cfmpublic@ns.sympatico.ca

    On Fri, 17 Apr 2015 22:02:25 -0400, Michael Finfer
    <finfer@optonline.net> wrote:

    On 4/8/2015 11:49 PM, hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote:
    On Tuesday, April 7, 2015 at 11:07:38 PM UTC-4, Stephen Sprunk wrote:

    Unfortunately, railroads are an incredibly capital-intensive business,
    so you need a pretty significant investment in track to make _any_
    difference in speed or capacity, though it should be pointed out that
    the freight RRs _already_ need major track investments for their own
    traffic, and a fairly small contribution by Amtrak would likely sway
    them toward investing in the particular routes Amtrak uses, thus getting >>> Amtrak a lot more bang for their buck than you'd expect.

    Unfortunately, it seems most modern railroad managements are pre-conditioned

    to hate passenger trains and will have nothing to do with it, even if reasonable negotiations could result in Amtrak picking up much of the tab for track improvements.

    On a section of busy bi-directional double track that CSX shares with SEPTA,

    CSX is spending money to build a third track dedicated for its trains. I think

    this is foolish. CSX will go from a very fluid two-track line to a single track line that
    will hurt, not help its freight trains. The two-track line was busy, but not over-crowded, and the bi-directional signalling made it flexible.

    But this attitude is nothing new. Back in the 1950s, some railroad managers

    were convinced their passenger trains lost money, even when in fact they were profitable, including with overhead. (Ref "Twilight of the Psgr Train" by Fraily).

    Not helping the situation was the ICC, forcing the railroads to carry extremely expensive trains no one rode, for years.



    Adding rolling stock is much simpler, at least until you need to add
    more crew (or especially locos) to a particular run. But many Amtrak
    trains are sold out due to being far too short, and profitability would
    be increased (or losses reduced, for LD routes) by adding a few cars to
    each train--or by adding a few new trainsets and consolidating the
    remaining ones. However, fare revenue will never match expenses when
    Amtrak's trains are competing with bicycles, not cars or buses, on
    speed--and that's where track improvements come in.

    Amtrak has new rolling stock on order, but the order is delayed.

    One problem is the "feast or famine" nature of building passenger cars. There isn't enough standardization and on-going orders to keep carbuilders in business and healthy. So, too many orders go to start-ups and thre are long delays.

    (However, I don't understand the screwup with the PATCO rebuild order, which

    is YEARS late, by an experienced builder. And it's a rebuild of a rapid transit car of 45 y/o technology, not even a new design, though I think they're

    doing it all with
    computers.)




    One of the issues here is that SEPTA chose a PTC system that is
    incompatible with the one CSX will be using. I am still shaking my head
    over that. Interoperability was supposed to be one of the key features
    of operating a national system.

    The PTC system is probably the one that Amtrak uses so SEPTA didn't
    have much choice. Also SEPTA long term probably will go high level
    platform which is incompatible with wide freight.

    Clark Morris

    At least separating the freights onto their own single track railroad
    will benefit the passenger operation.

    Michael Finfer
    Bridgewater, NJ

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  • From Hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com@1:2320/100 to Michael Finfer on Sat Apr 18 10:08:12 2015

    On Friday, April 17, 2015 at 10:02:22 PM UTC-4, Michael Finfer wrote:


    [CSX/SEPTA West Trenton line separation]
    At least separating the freights onto their own single track railroad
    will benefit the passenger operation.

    I doubt it.

    First, I heard gossip that the freights will run on the north side (on the new track now being built), even though the freight track comes up from the south side. _If_ this is true, there will be contention as the freights cross over the psgr tracks.
    Hopefully, they'll keep freights on the south side, though this will mean the extra cost of adding catenary for the new third track.

    Secondly, I think the third track will end short (west) of the Yardley station.

    The bridges over Main St, River Road and the Delaware River in Yardley will not be widened for a third track. So, freights will still share the trackage between Yardley and
    West Trenton, including the two stations, and that presents opportunities for contention.

    In any event, there will remain contention with movements in and out of the SEPTA yard at West Trenton.

    I also heard gossip--and I really hope this is false--that from Yardley to West

    Trenton the two tracks will be split--one for SEPTA, one for CSX. This will adversely impact operations in the rush hour, especially when trains run late.

    In addition, if
    true, it will reduce scheduling flexibility. Right now, many weekday trains pass each other near Yardley.

    SEPTA communications* do not lead to passenger confidence. There are plenty of

    times that passengers are directed by loudspeaker to cross to the other platform, only to discover the train arrives on its regular track, and they must go back. Other times
    there is no announcement and the train arrives on the wrong track, forcing passengers to rush hour. In both cases the train is delayed and passengers are

    unnecessarily inconvenienced and stressed.

    Would anyone know if actual plans have been published anywhere? AFAIK, they never bothered to hold public hearings on this project and no plans have been released.


    * NJ Transit communications aren't any more reliable. At Princeton Jct, they announce trains are delayed when they are on-time, and fail to announce delayed

    trains or the degree of delay. Sometimes an inbound train will fail to wait for passengers
    coming up the steps from the Dinky shuttle (the Dinky apparently is not operationally coordinated with the maineline; I guess radios are beyond them).

    In Penn Central days, the ticket agent could telephone someone and find out train status, today,
    ticket agents refuse to do so.

    --- SoupGate/W32 v1.03
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  • From Clark F Morris@1:2320/100 to Jishnu@nospam.verizon.net on Sat Apr 18 18:52:14 2015

    From: cfmpublic@ns.sympatico.ca

    On Sat, 18 Apr 2015 09:43:48 -0400, Jishnu Mukerji
    <jishnu@nospam.verizon.net> wrote:

    On 4/17/2015 10:02 PM, Michael Finfer wrote:

    One of the issues here is that SEPTA chose a PTC system that is
    incompatible with the one CSX will be using. I am still shaking my head
    over that. Interoperability was supposed to be one of the key features
    of operating a national system.

    The PTC technology chosen by the freight railroads is incompatible with
    high speed operations by their own admission. SEPTA, which operates >significant service on the NEC and the Main Line had no choice on the
    matter of whether they will use Amtrak's ACSES or not, unless they
    wanted to fund the parallel installation of freight PTC system on the
    entire length of the NEC, all four tracks through PA, which did not make
    much sense.

    Amtrak simply installs multiple PTC systems in the locomotives that have
    to operate on multiple system equipped tracks, as do Europeans, with
    their plethora of legacy train control systems.

    CSAO is having such parallel installation put in place between Baltimore >(Bayview) and Newark DE for through freaights coming down through
    Perryville to get to the two yards that they access.

    In any case, expect all high speed passenger operations to use a PTC
    system that is more compatible with the European ERTMS than with the
    freight PTC. The PTC being installed in the US is a case of NIH which is
    at the end of the day somewhat less expensive, and not as precise in
    most installations as ERTMS level 2.

    How well is ERTMS level 2 working. I'm getting mixed reports on the
    state of ERTMS in Modern Railways and Today's Rail Europe.

    Clark Morris

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  • From Michael Finfer@1:2320/100 to Clark F Morris on Sun Apr 19 21:53:48 2015

    From: finfer@optonline.net

    On 4/18/2015 8:59 AM, Clark F Morris wrote:

    The PTC system is probably the one that Amtrak uses so SEPTA didn't
    have much choice. Also SEPTA long term probably will go high level
    platform which is incompatible with wide freight.

    Clark Morris

    NJT installs one high platform in each station with a retractable edge,
    which the freight railroad can request be retracted for a wide load by appointment. It must be done by hand, but it is a ready solution for
    wide loads.

    Michael Finfer
    Bridgewater, NJ

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  • From Stephen Sprunk@1:2320/100 to Michael Finfer on Mon Apr 20 09:50:32 2015

    From: stephen@sprunk.org

    On 17-Apr-15 21:02, Michael Finfer wrote:
    One of the issues here is that SEPTA chose a PTC system that is
    incompatible with the one CSX will be using. I am still shaking my
    head over that. Interoperability was supposed to be one of the key
    features of operating a national system.

    There is no "national" PTC system; every railroad is developing their
    own, and while at least some of them are supposed to be interoperable,
    in practice that never turns out as well as promised. We also won't get
    the benefits of economy of scale that way.

    S

    --
    Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein
    CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the
    K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking

    --- SoupGate/W32 v1.03
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  • From Clark F Morris@1:2320/100 to Stephen@sprunk.org on Mon Apr 20 14:45:32 2015

    From: cfmpublic@ns.sympatico.ca

    On Mon, 20 Apr 2015 09:50:31 -0500, Stephen Sprunk
    <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:

    On 17-Apr-15 21:02, Michael Finfer wrote:
    One of the issues here is that SEPTA chose a PTC system that is
    incompatible with the one CSX will be using. I am still shaking my
    head over that. Interoperability was supposed to be one of the key
    features of operating a national system.

    There is no "national" PTC system; every railroad is developing their
    own, and while at least some of them are supposed to be interoperable,
    in practice that never turns out as well as promised. We also won't get
    the benefits of economy of scale that way.

    Guess what, they are having the same problem with ETCS and its various
    levels in Europe. Read Modern Railways (Ian Allen in Britain) and
    Today's Rail Europe.

    CLark Morris

    S

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  • From Mickey@1:2320/100 to Adam H. Kerman on Mon Apr 20 15:39:26 2015

    From: mickey@manningfire.dyndns.org.remove-slw-this

    To: Adam H. Kerman
    Re: Re: Hoosier State crisis averted
    By: Adam H. Kerman to misc.transport.rail.americas on Mon Apr 20 2015 05:55 pm

    What the hell does economy of scale have to do with anything? There are huge, expensive problems to overcome, like lack of radio spectrum
    capacity particularly in Chicago and that FCC is way way behind on
    issuing licenses for all the new transmitters and relay stations,
    and the complete idiocy of the design that the entire railroad infrastructur
    e
    plan must be downloaded into the locomotive each and every time the
    fucking consist changes direction because, you know, somebody installed
    a brand-new turnout in the last hour.

    It's one massively stupid fuckup. Economy of scale is mostly irrelevant.
    --- Synchronet 3.15b-Win32 NewsLink 1.92

    This made ME laugh. I agree most definitely, but I still laughed. :-)


    Mickey
    SynchroNET 3.15
    Oxford Mills Remote @ telnet://manningfire.dyndns.org:23
    Living the Past - Living the Dream - Keeping the Blues Alive



    --- Synchronet 3.15b-Win32 NewsLink 1.92
    Oxford Mills Remote BBS - telnet://manningfire.dyndns.org

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  • From Adam H. Kerman@1:2320/100 to Stephen Sprunk on Mon Apr 20 17:55:12 2015

    From: ahk@chinet.com

    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:
    On 17-Apr-15 21:02, Michael Finfer wrote:

    One of the issues here is that SEPTA chose a PTC system that is >>incompatible with the one CSX will be using. I am still shaking my
    head over that. Interoperability was supposed to be one of the key >>features of operating a national system.

    There is no "national" PTC system; every railroad is developing their
    own, and while at least some of them are supposed to be interoperable,
    in practice that never turns out as well as promised. We also won't get
    the benefits of economy of scale that way.

    What the hell does economy of scale have to do with anything? There are
    huge, expensive problems to overcome, like lack of radio spectrum
    capacity particularly in Chicago and that FCC is way way behind on
    issuing licenses for all the new transmitters and relay stations,
    and the complete idiocy of the design that the entire railroad infrastructure plan must be downloaded into the locomotive each and every time the
    fucking consist changes direction because, you know, somebody installed
    a brand-new turnout in the last hour.

    It's one massively stupid fuckup. Economy of scale is mostly irrelevant.

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  • From Jimmygeldburg@gmail.com@1:2320/100 to Piotr Waszkielewicz on Tue Apr 21 12:39:18 2015

    Piotr Waszkielewicz wrote:
    W dniu 2015-04-14 o 20:34, jimmygeldburg@gmail.com pisze:
    IIRC, Amfleet cars have an automatic retractable bottom step.

    I don't think so.

    http://tinyurl.com/ld49ov8

    Ok.

    But where are the steps on the Coachclass car in that picture? Do they fold down as part of the trap mechanism?

    Jimmy

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  • From Hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com@1:2320/100 to Jimmyg...@gmail.com on Tue Apr 21 18:37:58 2015

    On Tuesday, April 21, 2015 at 3:39:16 PM UTC-4, jimmyg...@gmail.com wrote:

    IIRC, Amfleet cars have an automatic retractable bottom step.

    But where are the steps on the Coachclass car in that picture? Do they fold
    down as part of the trap mechanism?

    I believe the steps fold down manually, not automatically.

    Note that on SEPTA's Silverliver V cars, the trap automatically recedes if necessary.

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  • From Stephen Sprunk@1:2320/100 to Adam H. Kerman on Tue Apr 21 22:44:02 2015

    From: stephen@sprunk.org

    On 20-Apr-15 12:55, Adam H. Kerman wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:
    On 17-Apr-15 21:02, Michael Finfer wrote:
    One of the issues here is that SEPTA chose a PTC system that is
    incompatible with the one CSX will be using. I am still shaking
    my head over that. Interoperability was supposed to be one of
    the key features of operating a national system.

    There is no "national" PTC system; every railroad is developing
    their own, and while at least some of them are supposed to be
    interoperable, in practice that never turns out as well as
    promised. We also won't get the benefits of economy of scale that
    way.

    What the hell does economy of scale have to do with anything?

    Scale directly influences the marginal cost to produce equipment.

    Reusing existing technologies, e.g. GSM-R, also reduces the time to
    design and test said equipment, which indirectly influences cost and
    leverages that other technology's economy of scale.

    Developing a dozen different systems in parallel, none leveraging _any_ existing technologies, means a dozen times the development costs and
    higher marginal cost of production. That's just plain stupid.

    There are huge, expensive problems to overcome, like lack of radio
    spectrum capacity particularly in Chicago

    Gosh, it's too bad there's not _already_ a widely-used, off-the-shelf
    system developed to solve exactly that problem. Oh wait, there is!

    and that FCC is way way behind on issuing licenses for all the new transmitters and relay stations,

    Not surprising. And that wouldn't be a problem if they had gone with
    GSM-R, which (thanks to clever design) is capable of falling back to
    using existing GSM networks if the GSM-R network isn't available.

    and the complete idiocy of the design that the entire railroad
    infrastructure plan must be downloaded into the locomotive
    each and every time the fucking consist changes direction because,
    you know, somebody installed a brand-new turnout in the last hour.

    I've previously pointed out the idiocy of that decision, as well as
    their decision to use GPS in general.

    It's one massively stupid fuckup. Economy of scale is mostly
    irrelevant.

    It's one (of many) components of the fuckup, and it certainly won't be irrelevant once they actually get to the deployment phase--and drag
    their feet because it's too damn expensive to actually use.

    ETCS isn't perfect, but the Europeans have been working out the issues,
    and it would have cost a _lot_ less (both now and in the future) to join
    in that effort than it'll cost us to repeat their mistakes--several
    times--plus invent many new mistakes they avoided.

    It's just like the stupidity of our CDMA/TDMA/iDEN war while the world standardized on GSM. Despite its flaws, GSM is far superior to all of
    the US-developed systems _and_ costs less due to economy of scale, which
    is why all US carriers are finally moving that way.

    S

    --
    Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein
    CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the
    K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking

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  • From Stephen Sprunk@1:2320/100 to Adam H. Kerman on Wed Apr 22 10:22:20 2015

    From: stephen@sprunk.org

    On 22-Apr-15 07:53, Adam H. Kerman wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:

    It's just like the stupidity of our CDMA/TDMA/iDEN war while the world
    standardized on GSM. Despite its flaws, GSM is far superior to all of
    the US-developed systems _and_ costs less due to economy of scale, which
    is why all US carriers are finally moving that way.

    Oh, c'mon, GSM came later.

    GSM development started in 1982, the standard was published in 1987, and
    the first network went live in 1991.

    iDEN development started in 1991, and the first handsets weren't
    available until 1994--after GSM.

    cdmaOne (IS-95) was published and first deployed in 1995--after GSM.

    D-AMPS aka TDMA (IS-54) was first deployed in 1990--only a year before
    GSM. I can't find a date for when the spec was published.

    I have no idea why you would state it's superior. As it happens, I'm a T-Mobile subscriber (using an AT&T cell phone), but sound quality isn't
    all that brilliant and I lose coverage plenty of times when indoors.

    That's mostly a coverage issue, not a technology one.

    However, because carriers use different technologies, phones can't roam
    between networks to fill in dead spots. Using the same technology
    doesn't guarantee roaming agreements will exist, of course, but using
    different technologies completely precludes them.

    In many areas, particularly rural ones, the GSM network is actually
    provided by a single party (often a wholesaler you've never heard of)
    because that's the only way to make coverage commercially viable in such places. That isn't possible in the US because each carrier has to
    deploy a different technology on every tower or, worse, deploy their own
    towers next to existing ones.

    S

    --
    Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein
    CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the
    K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking

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  • From Adam H. Kerman@1:2320/100 to Stephen Sprunk on Wed Apr 22 12:53:18 2015

    From: ahk@chinet.com

    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:

    It's just like the stupidity of our CDMA/TDMA/iDEN war while the world >standardized on GSM. Despite its flaws, GSM is far superior to all of
    the US-developed systems _and_ costs less due to economy of scale, which
    is why all US carriers are finally moving that way.

    Oh, c'mon, GSM came later. And it was mostly Europe that decided to use an international standards-making process because of the relatively small countries; I don't recall any other part of the world being involved.

    I have no idea why you would state it's superior. As it happens, I'm a
    T-Mobile subscriber (using an AT&T cell phone), but sound quality isn't
    all that brilliant and I lose coverage plenty of times when indoors.

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  • From Adam H. Kerman@1:2320/100 to Stephen Sprunk on Wed Apr 22 17:29:38 2015

    From: ahk@chinet.com

    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:
    On 22-Apr-15 07:53, Adam H. Kerman wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:

    It's just like the stupidity of our CDMA/TDMA/iDEN war while the world >>>standardized on GSM. Despite its flaws, GSM is far superior to all of >>>the US-developed systems _and_ costs less due to economy of scale, which >>>is why all US carriers are finally moving that way.

    Oh, c'mon, GSM came later.

    GSM development started in 1982, the standard was published in 1987, and
    the first network went live in 1991.

    iDEN development started in 1991, and the first handsets weren't
    available until 1994--after GSM.

    cdmaOne (IS-95) was published and first deployed in 1995--after GSM.

    D-AMPS aka TDMA (IS-54) was first deployed in 1990--only a year before
    GSM. I can't find a date for when the spec was published.

    Ok, thanks for the dates.

    I have no idea why you would state it's superior. As it happens, I'm a >>T-Mobile subscriber (using an AT&T cell phone), but sound quality isn't
    all that brilliant and I lose coverage plenty of times when indoors.

    That's mostly a coverage issue, not a technology one.

    However, because carriers use different technologies, phones can't roam >between networks to fill in dead spots. Using the same technology
    doesn't guarantee roaming agreements will exist, of course, but using >different technologies completely precludes them.

    My previous GSM phone could work within four frequency bands, so I
    think it would have worked on any GSM carrier in the world (once I
    obtained a local SIM card). But I washed it, feh.

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  • From Stephen Sprunk@1:2320/100 to Adam H. Kerman on Wed Apr 22 19:01:30 2015

    From: stephen@sprunk.org

    On 22-Apr-15 12:29, Adam H. Kerman wrote:
    Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> wrote:
    However, because carriers use different technologies, phones can't
    roam between networks to fill in dead spots. Using the same
    technology doesn't guarantee roaming agreements will exist, of
    course, but using different technologies completely precludes
    them.

    My previous GSM phone could work within four frequency bands,

    Yes, 800/1900 in ITU Region 1 (Americas) and 900/1800 in ITU Regions 2
    and 3 (everywhere else). Tri- and quad-band GSM phones are the norm
    these days because vendors can get better economy of scale with one chip
    for all markets than different chips for different markets, which means
    cheaper GSM phones for everyone. That's my entire point!

    so I think it would have worked on any GSM carrier in the world

    ... but not on non-GSM US carriers. Ironically, your GSM phone would
    likely have better coverage overseas than it does at home.

    S

    --
    Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein
    CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the
    K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking

    --- SoupGate/W32 v1.03
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