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Still here
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Quote:
![]() https://www.mercurynews.com/2016/04/17/staggering-drop-in-vta-bus-ridership-may-signal-dramatic-changes/ |
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Join Date: May 2017
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Quote:
One is long distance travel vis high speed rail that wouldn't do much for local congestion. The second is local lower speed rail that would help with congestion. Personally, I see autonomous vehicles eventually being a big part of the local congestion solution. You type in your destination and your vehicle locates other vehicles with the same destination and they link up in a high speed bumper to bumper train. The article speaks of 350 mph trains when we have one that can manage 150 over a short stretch and it only avgs about 70 mph over it's entire run. |
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Quote:
But back to the OP. The practical limit on "high speed" seems to be somewhere below 300 kph, or about 180 mph. I used to fly from Dayton to Chicago to a place on N. Michigan Avenue a couple of times a year. Air time was less than an hour, but travel time was 4-5 hours or more depending on the time of day. I could drive there in 6 hours on a good day, 7 if traffic was bad. I don't think a train - even a high speed train - would save any time over air and maybe would take longer than driving, but it would be a lot more relaxing than driving or flying.
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That's part of the issue, absolutely.
The other part is a discussion that would take this to PARF....the reason we can't have nice things.
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Misunderstood User
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Quote:
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There is plenty of track space as well as Right of Way along interstates that could be used. The DC Metro as laid track in the center median of the Dulles Access Road. Nicely done and they are almost to the airport.
I'll take the Metro from Branch Avenue to Dulles when they finish. The beltway is a mess. A significant issue is logistics at train stations, hotels, rental cars, parking, etc...and price: The Acela isn't cheap. For example, I have to Metro to Union Station in DC to get the non-stop to NYC. I would prefer BWI but then it is a local to NYC. There is no time savings, oddly, if I go to the BWI train station and the parking at BWI is great.
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1996 FJ80. Last edited by Seahawk; 02-08-2020 at 05:58 AM.. |
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Information Junky
Join Date: Mar 2001
Location: an island, upper left coast, USA
Posts: 73,167
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Maybe someday, technology will allow us to escape the constrains of rails, perhaps even take to the skies in mass number of machines that travel along some sort of air corridors...
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Everyone you meet knows something you don't. - - - and a whole bunch of crap that is wrong. Disclaimer: the above was 2¢ worth. More information is available as my professional opinion, which is provided for an exorbitant fee. ![]() |
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AutoBahned
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Rail can be faster than flying over "medium distances" and is less susceptible to terrorist attack impacts.
I dunno if a medium distance is 500 miles - likely it is affected by travel time to an airport. In Germany, you need a real fast 930 to compete with high-speed rail... I do think we should improve & develop a few more fast inter city rail lines in the US. One biggie is to get them tracks where freight trains do NOT have priority - really! This plays havoc with rail travel times in the PNW. |
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Information Junky
Join Date: Mar 2001
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Quote:
Private charters kick ass. Because it's so easy to secure hundreds of miles of rail?
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Everyone you meet knows something you don't. - - - and a whole bunch of crap that is wrong. Disclaimer: the above was 2¢ worth. More information is available as my professional opinion, which is provided for an exorbitant fee. ![]() |
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The OP is right there. Read it and argue away.
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. Last edited by wdfifteen; 02-09-2020 at 03:02 AM.. |
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So? You want a technical argument. The OP has lots of technical statements in it - so argue with them.
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Quote:
I am not an engineer but I have managed a lot of complex programs and really enjoyed his perspective. Quote:
Which, in an odd twist, is why I take the train on the NE corridor. The BWI AMTRAK station is right on the airport. The Metro and AMTRAK mobile apps are really good and I can get a ticket at any time. I never get to the station more than 20 minutes in advance. At the airport, conversely, I need to be at parking at least an hour and a 1/2 before my flight. I am already an hour ahead. I also like the fact that AMTRAK has quiet cars and web access so I can work on the train. As well, certain weather has no impact on trains while all the weather machinations do for flight. Again, engineering aside, logistics drives transportation modes - I like trains in the NE corridor because they are logistically efficient for me.
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1996 FJ80. Last edited by Seahawk; 02-09-2020 at 05:01 AM.. |
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Last week the wife of a very good friend of mine (we worked drones in agriculture together) called and let me know Henry had died of pneumonia - he was 69.
They retired near Fort Wayne and there will be a Memorial Service the first week in March. Henry is from Australia and his kids needed time to get to the States. So, I looked at trains and planes and compared it with just driving the Tundra over the hills. AMTRAK price was good but the time to get from DC to Dayton was 14 hours! I'd still need to get a rental and drive another few hours. Not going to happen. Flight are essentially the same time as driving (9 hours) and I'd still need a rental, etc. I'll drive.
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Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: Central TX west of Houston
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not the best quality video, but still pretty cool to see.
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Get off my lawn!
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Anyone that has traveled much by airlines has horror stories. My last trip I got up at 5:00 AM to get to the airport 1.5 hours before my flight. I did my part on time. The airplane was late to arrive, and late to leave. I landed in DFW to make my connection all on the same airline. I hustled at a very fast walk and the airplane was gone from the gate. They gave me 10 bucks to eat at the airport and wait for a new connecting flight. So a bag of chips is about it at airport prices. I arrived at my hotel in DC and got to my room at 12:30 AM and of course I needed to be at a meeting at 7:00.
It was faster than driving, but mot much. To go by train would likely take a week if it is even possible from Oklahoma City to Washington DC. Trains and subways are great in high population areas. They just need to pay for themselves. Airlines pay large fees to use an airport and the ATC, likely not enough to really pay for them. Most cities and states want to make their airports better to attract more airline flights and hence more business for that city. The government is involved in every aspect of travel from walking on sidewalks to the planes, trains and automobiles. We (the tax payer) get hosed over and over on boondoggle projects and poor results form the money invested. It would be neat to see real high speed trains nationwide. It would be even neater to have transporters like in Star Trek. Both are just about as likely to happen.
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I don't think we can judge rail travel by what it is, we need to think about what it could be.
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. Last edited by wdfifteen; 02-09-2020 at 07:06 AM.. |
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Quality, high speed rail will require dedicated tracks.
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Quote:
The interesting thing about the article the OP posted are the what I consider extreme speeds not really required in the NE and parts of the Mid West. Give me 150mph, legit, with good hubs and services at those hubs, and I'm out of my car and not dealing with the vicissitudes of air travel. I would greatly prefer not to fly (and I am a former pilot) and I would enjoy being able to have productive time on a train en-route. I'll be a drooling mess before any of this happens, but lets think about the kids. ![]()
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1996 FJ80. |
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so you read my above post and saw the "can be" but just wanted to argue about something else, eh???
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Quote:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maglev |
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