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They just hired Eugene Skoropowski out of retirement who ran the Capital Corridor in California to run the operation.
In any event - this proposal is mostly born out of the state republicans desire to privatize Tri-rail and Sunrail. My understanding is they are going for MotivePower locomotives and Bombardier Bi-Level coaches. Top speed 111mph. |
That bodes well. The Capital Corridor is extremely well-run by American standards.
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More "local" stations would be good, I agree. That kind of service should have an "Express" level service (only the big cities) and a "Local" level service (mid-sized cities also served)
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Here's a refresher course for elementary school math: 240 miles / 3 hours = 90 miles/hour average. 240 miles / 4 hours = 60 miles/hour average. 240 miles / 5 hours = 48 miles/hour average. Note: Amtrak - per their pdf train schedules - takes 5 hours and 3 minutes to traverse 265 rail miles between Orlando and Miami, averaging 53 miles/hour. Some of that is probably schedule padding. Never-the-less, the FEC route is 15 miles shorter, and possibly two hours faster. Much of the time savings will come by having fewer stops along the way, along with going faster. Amtrak's trains at least stop at *Orlando*, Kissimmee, Winter Haven, Sebring, *West Palm Beach*, Delray Beach, Deerfield Beach, *Fort Lauderdale*, Hollywood, and *Miami*. Four stops vs ten, which do you think will be faster? With ten stops Amtrak averages 26 miles between stations, while with 4 stops FEC would average 60 miles between stations. How far are people willing to drive to catch a train, 30 miles on average or 13 miles? I suggest having many more stops will just slow the train down. FEC is probably correct limiting station stops to as few as possible to increase average speeds of the trains. Personally, I would like to see another station added near Melbourne for capturing cruise line passengers at Port Canaveral, but that's about it for the "Express" service. Combining "Express" and "Local" services on the same tracks would require far more passing sidings, more signals, and therefore far more money. I don't think FEC desires to get into the "Local" train business. Having two types of services automatically requires having two train sets. A single train set capable of transversing the route in 3 hours, could make two, possibly three round trips in a day, and still have 6 hours layup time for daily maintenance. |
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I would have preferred if they electrified the line though. Diesel trains are so yesterday. If they electrified the rail they could have run tilting trains at 125-150 mph. |
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Anyway, if it really averages 90 with a top speed of 110mph, that is impressive for a diesel service! The tracks must be straight as an arrow if it can do this with few curves to slow it down. 3 hours is a decent time to compete with a plane. I assume the flight would be around 40mins or so. They need to bring the train into downtown Miami though to make it convenient. |
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Are you OK? World's fastest train in Florida? HAHAHAHA NO, it requires MAGLEV for that. This is America, where they can't even get a regular High Speed rail line that France had in the 60's. |
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Don't forget that this is a freight rail company. The goal isn't making a HSR line. It's providing efficient reliable intercity rail service at an affordable cost.
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You could also use a third-rail system, but that's not a good idea in flood-prone areas for obvious reasons. |
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There has got to be more to this than meets the eye.
Then again it is a Florida only service and I doubt the freight companies would take on extra duties if they didn't think they could make some money off of it. I don't know how much of an effect this will have on influencing companies and governments nationwide though. On the one hand it could show that rail IS viable in America today. On the other it could set up the prerequisite of "100% private or bust". And then what of places that have extensive commuter services that constantly have to haggle with the freight companies. Sure Japan and the UK do have private service, but they are remnants of an even LARGER public service before, in many cases passenger service would be brand new to the public (as few people take Amtrak outside the Northeast regularly). Again VERY INTERESTING, but I wanna see some more info.. |
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In 2006 I was on the Flying Scotsman (the name historically given to the 10am departure from King's Cross to Edinburgh on the East Coast Mainline) - only stopped at Peterborough, York and Newcastle before Edinburgh. If memory serves me correctly it was 4h and 20 minutes. The ECML is 632km / 393m long, so the average speed would have been roughly 160kph/100mph |
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Wait, they're not asking for government money? This is amazing.
I don't get how the FEC is a "much larger market" than the Capital Corridor, though. SF Bay + Sacramento have more people than South Florida + Orlando. |
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