sportbiker
Lead Service Attendant
I seem to remember the Pacific Parlor Car had swivel seats...
While I prefer facing forward, having been stuck with only reverse-facing seats being available on my last Acela ride, it really wasn't that bad. I mean, people pay a lot of money to sit in the Bullet lounge of the Canadian to watch the scenery recede, why not a other trains?I think non-reversible seats on new equipment is simply cost saving. Cheaper to install and no staff required to turn them at endpoints. VIA started in this direction a few years ago and they were following European precedent.
Riding backwards can cause motion sickness for some.While I prefer facing forward, having been stuck with only reverse-facing seats being available on my last Acela ride, it really wasn't that bad. I mean, people pay a lot of money to sit in the Bullet lounge of the Canadian to watch the scenery recede, why not an other trains?
As an example of how other do it the NSWGR [whatever the latest name is] run their Sydney - Canberra trains with 3 car DMUs with just less than 200 seats. The onboard staff start reversing the empty seats south of Goulburn, even asking passengers if they would move seats to allow it. This is especially the case if the morning or midday services are running late as the Canberra layover is truncated to allow catch up with the timetable. [The evening service ex Sydney stables overnight in Canberra to form the morning service to Sydney]. This service is about 300 km, operated 3 times daily.I think non-reversible seats on new equipment is simply cost saving. Cheaper to install and no staff required to turn them at endpoints. VIA started in this direction a few years ago and they were following European precedent.
I agree, it is not a well written article. It sets up strawmen based on reading extensions to what was actually presented and then knocks them down. At least that is the way it looks to me.I think there’s plenty of alarmist nonsense in that article. First, the schematics were proof of concept for ADA compliance. I don’t even think they were to scale. Second Amtrak may not be able to release specific input from car builders. If I were Siemens, I wouldn’t want it on public record how I planned to innovate this, that, or the other before I have a contract signed. Alstom could steal my idea. Third, we have no reason to deny the possibility that the single level sets won’t be Airo-based designs.The dual levels are a challenge bet that is not an immediate issue. Fourth, current equipment (including VII) is understood to be noncompliant with the current ADA and several FRA regulations (window size comes immediately to mind). Presumably if it were being completely rebuilt it would need to become compliant. Finally, the current fleet isn’t big enough to just be rebuilt and run another 30 years. Demand is high, some cars have inevitably been scrapped due to wrecks, it seems there are only exactly enough SSL’s to equip the country if exactly every single one is in service. Every time something happens a car line number drops out of somewhere. That’s no way to run a railroad. It’s time for new equipment. There’s money for new equipment. It’s time to do it.
The article that needs to be written is one investigating why Amtrak can’t get any car orders delivered on time and what is being done to ensure this order isn’t delayed. Call me skeptical but I would add at least two years to whatever timeline Amtrak produces when this order is eventually placed.I think there’s plenty of alarmist nonsense in that article. First, the schematics were proof of concept for ADA compliance. I don’t even think they were to scale. Second Amtrak may not be able to release specific input from car builders. If I were Siemens, I wouldn’t want it on public record how I planned to innovate this, that, or the other before I have a contract signed. Alstom could steal my idea. Third, we have no reason to deny the possibility that the single level sets won’t be Airo-based designs.The dual levels are a challenge bet that is not an immediate issue. Fourth, current equipment (including VII) is understood to be noncompliant with the current ADA and several FRA regulations (window size comes immediately to mind). Presumably if it were being completely rebuilt it would need to become compliant. Finally, the current fleet isn’t big enough to just be rebuilt and run another 30 years. Demand is high, some cars have inevitably been scrapped due to wrecks, it seems there are only exactly enough SSL’s to equip the country if exactly every single one is in service. Every time something happens a car line number drops out of somewhere. That’s no way to run a railroad. It’s time for new equipment. There’s money for new equipment. It’s time to do it.
I agree, it is not a well written article. It sets up strawmen based on reading extensions to what was actually presented and then knocks them down. At least that is the way it looks to me.
Rocky Mountaineer recently gutted railcars built in the 1950s and remanufactured them at a reported cost that is 60% of that for a new car and extended the 60-plus-year-old cars’ life by 10 years. These cars are presently in service between Denver and Moab, Utah, operating over the Union Pacific and yielding premium pricing for a premium travel experience. Similarly, VIA Rail Canada has remanufactured Budd Company railcars originally built in the 1950s to support the Toronto-Vancouver Canadian.
There are no indications that this avenue is being pursued by Amtrak.
I have talked to him and several others of the same ilk. They are not rational when it comes to choosing between rebuilding this that or the other, or actually getting new stuff. The choice is always rebuild and extend life by a few years at enormous cost instead of acquiring something with a 30-50 year life. So I don't talk about it anymore. it is a waste of time.I find it interesting that he thinks this is somehow a good idea:
So...spend 60% of the cost of a new car to get 10 years of use (or, to put it another way, spend less than twice the cost of refurbishing an old car and get four times the lifespan out of it).
Normally railcars aren't moved by truck outside of metro cars.Question for those in more know - would any of these rehabbed rail cars be passing thru San Antonio AND being transported by SEMI TRUCK?
I saw something perplexing about 3 hours ago coming home off I35 by Windcrest TX - what looked like a single level amtrak colored {grey/ blue} train car being pulled by a semi. I only caught a glimpse of it as I was below the freeway waiting for a bus, but it absolutely looked like an amtrak or subway car with double door on the rear of the car.
It makes no sense to me - we get primarily double decker cars here, plus why transport it on the highway?
Definitely agree that any information they've gotten from carmakers is likely proprietary at this point and Amtrak is not at liberty to share anything beyond this ADA proposal. This is surely to be an extremely lucrative order (or orders if there are separate procurements for single and bilevel) for whoever lands it and as you mentioned the carmakers aren't going to want their competitors to see their ideas.I think there’s plenty of alarmist nonsense in that article. First, the schematics were proof of concept for ADA compliance. I don’t even think they were to scale. Second Amtrak may not be able to release specific input from car builders. If I were Siemens, I wouldn’t want it on public record how I planned to innovate this, that, or the other before I have a contract signed. Alstom could steal my idea. Third, we have no reason to deny the possibility that the single level sets won’t be Airo-based designs.The dual levels are a challenge bet that is not an immediate issue. Fourth, current equipment (including VII) is understood to be noncompliant with the current ADA and several FRA regulations (window size comes immediately to mind). Presumably if it were being completely rebuilt it would need to become compliant. Finally, the current fleet isn’t big enough to just be rebuilt and run another 30 years. Demand is high, some cars have inevitably been scrapped due to wrecks, it seems there are only exactly enough SSL’s to equip the country if exactly every single one is in service. Every time something happens a car line number drops out of somewhere. That’s no way to run a railroad. It’s time for new equipment. There’s money for new equipment. It’s time to do it.
Normally railcars aren't moved by truck outside of metro cars.
For example bart cars get trucked across the county.
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I think the problem is the size of our market. As a nation we don’t buy enough passenger stock to keep production lines open, so every time we buy equipment everybody from the custodial team to the execs is starting fresh in a certain sense. It’s not like the old days at Budd when some old head had been around 40 years in every department and saw this problem before and remembered what to do. Institutional knowledge like that is super important. The same is also true at Amtrak. Nobody who did Amfleet 1/2 or Superliner 1 is still around. I doubt many are from Superliner 2 and Viewliner 1. Maybe some from Viewliner 2 still are (and please let them have learned something). I think that’s actually the strongest reason to put the single level LD on an Airo platform. The production lines will have run for a while a lot of things will have been learned and there really isn’t the same rush to replace the singles as there is for the doubles, so let it take a while so hopefully Amtrak’s ready for Airo II by the time they finish (because they’re going to need more sets for expansion).The article that needs to be written is one investigating why Amtrak can’t get any car orders delivered on time and what is being done to ensure this order isn’t delayed.
I think that’s actually the strongest reason to put the single level LD on an Airo platform.
Uh, the Amfleet 2 coaches and cafe cars are about the same vintage as the Superliner 1s. The Superliner 2s were put into service about a decade later.there really isn’t the same rush to replace the singles as there is for the doubles,
Uh 1: The diesel Airo’s are ALC-42s and Venture cars strung together, by the time the first one is delivered “fatal flaws“ or more commonly kinks will have been worked out. Lead pipes, magnets that wreck batteries, automated announcements that don’t work, door issues, et al. I’ll grant that the electric will be a little novel, but Amtrak also isn’t going to accept the first 83 sets if they don’t work. Also waiting isn’t really an option. There’s a deadline on the obligation of funds. It’s not a totally novel platform and won’t be like this Acela mess because the mess was already made around the Midwest order.Uh, let's wait until the Airos are delivered and we can see if there are any fatal flaws.
Uh, the Amfleet 2 coaches and cafe cars are about the same vintage as the Superliner 1s. The Superliner 2s were put into service about a decade later.
Lot of speculation. Maybe it was one of the 3 Amfleet cars that was said to be going to Mexico? That whole thing is very iffy and may not be true..Question for those in more know - would any of these rehabbed rail cars be passing thru San Antonio AND being transported by SEMI TRUCK?
I saw something perplexing about 3 hours ago coming home off I35 by Windcrest TX - what looked like a single level amtrak colored {grey/ blue} train car being pulled by a semi. I only caught a glimpse of it as I was below the freeway waiting for a bus, but it absolutely looked like an amtrak or subway car with double door on the rear of the car.
It makes no sense to me - we get primarily double decker cars here, plus why transport it on the highway?
Did some image search and can say for certain that it was not an Amfleet - it was newer I believe. It was also headed north, fwiw.Lot of speculation. Maybe it was one of the 3 Amfleet cars that was said to be going to Mexico? That whole thing is very iffy and may not be true..
I think there's a dead giveaway in this article - the author's focus on premium service and capacity reads like another "give me my sleeper service exactly the way I want it at any cost" article.![]()
Amtrak LD Service: Why Integrated Trainsets Won’t Work - Railway Age
As Sept. 30, the end of its 2023 Fiscal Year, rapidly approaches, Amtrak has precious little time to firm up design specs and place an order for what appears to be awww.railwayage.com
Interesting read. Im not sure there’s really enough information and details to be sounding alarm bells yet since the plans were really just about ADA and I think some are prematurely concluding that there will be no ability to add cars but interesting take nonetheless.