bigeman312
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Great feedback! Thanks!
I disagree. I think serving Providence - Montreal is motivation enough, especially when it's just added on top of serving the already agreed upon demand that exists for Boston - Montreal (and all other points in between that are too many to list).
Providence anchors an urban area of 1.2 million people. Montreal anchors an urban area of 3.5 million people. Their train stations are 275 miles apart as the crow flies. Those figures alone justify connecting them with a one-seat ride. Comparably sized and distanced cities throughout the highly developed world anchor inter-city rail lines. When there is an even larger urban area in between, it becomes even more of a justified idea.
The response you gave is one I'd expect if the proposal was for a train from Poughkeepsie to Bangor or some other pairs of small cities that don't have any demand to be linked. Providing the best one-seat ride between two major (1m+ person urban area) cities (and obviously all points in between) is the point of this proposal.
I think you are wrong about this and there are many counterexamples to demonstrate. On the Acela, there is only one track mile between South Station and Back Bay, yet, there are 69 miles between Wilmington and Baltimore. Do you think this demonstrates that South Station passengers would be too annoyed with that extra travel time to use Acela? No, of course not. If you don't think Attleboro would attract enough demand on this line to justify the extra stop, that would be a valid criticism, but it should not be ruled on out stop spacing alone, as clearly demonstrated by the presence of a Back Bay and South Station stop on every single one of Boston's intercity rail lines.
Attleboro could be the first on the chopping block of these stops on this proposed route, but stop spacing alone doesn't show that.
70 miles from Concord to White River Junction. Significantly south of the Whites. Characterizing this 70-mile route through the Dartmouth - Lake Sunapee region as "a long windy route through the mountains" is most definitely an exaggeration. I would know having biked the length of this flat route two years ago. You are right that it is no doubt beautiful. The highest point on this route is less than 1,000 feet above sea level and there are no steep grades on any of it.
Yes, it will require significant investment to reactivate (and electrify), but that is well within the realm of a Crazy Transit Pitch. If the funding were available, it would be quite doable. Why should it be done? It will decrease travel times ...
Let's take these one at a time.
Based on the New Hampshire Capitol Corridor Rail Proposal, travel time between Concord and North Station would be 1h34m, with an extra stop. I'll make the most generous estimate for you and assume that removing that (Bedford/MHT) stop would only save one minute. So, for your incorrect assertion that it would add travel time to the more conventional proposal to be true, it would have to take more than 4 hours (5h33m - 1h33m) to cover the flat 70 miles between Concord and White River Junction.
For your claim to be true, trains would have to travel over this flat 70-mile segment, with only one stop, and average less than 17.5 mph. Yes, if I were proposing for trains to run at less than 17.5mph over this flat section then you would have made a good point. But, I think it's reasonable to expect trains to cut significant travel time off of the conventional proposals you named. In 1957, trains traversed this section in 1 hour, 41 minutes, even with three additional stops than I'm proposing. That's an average of 41.6 mph. So, why would you assume that the Provtreal proposal would only travel at a fraction of this speed? Even at 23.3 mph (taking a full three hours over this segment, and well over one hour longer than 1957), it saves an hour over the routing via Springfield. At 35 mph, it saves two hours over the routing via Springfield. At 1957 speeds (even ignoring the time savings from running express), it saves 2 hours and 19 minutes over the Springfield alternative. There is a reason why trains between Boston and Montreal always took this route when the line was active. How did you come to the conclusion that this routing would "increase your travel time?"
Valid criticism. I wanted to add a true Burlington stop as it's a city that has such a draw to have a stop right in town and was willing to accept the cost that came with that. I can definitely see an argument against it, but based on what I know it seems worth it to perform this reverse move. I'm happy to be presented with some actual data that shows otherwise.
Alrighty, I'll bite ... Neither of these statements says anything.
I disagree. I think serving Providence - Montreal is motivation enough, especially when it's just added on top of serving the already agreed upon demand that exists for Boston - Montreal (and all other points in between that are too many to list).
Providence anchors an urban area of 1.2 million people. Montreal anchors an urban area of 3.5 million people. Their train stations are 275 miles apart as the crow flies. Those figures alone justify connecting them with a one-seat ride. Comparably sized and distanced cities throughout the highly developed world anchor inter-city rail lines. When there is an even larger urban area in between, it becomes even more of a justified idea.
I don't mean to be a jerk. If your reason for proposing this idea it because it would be cool, then I'm onboard ...
The response you gave is one I'd expect if the proposal was for a train from Poughkeepsie to Bangor or some other pairs of small cities that don't have any demand to be linked. Providing the best one-seat ride between two major (1m+ person urban area) cities (and obviously all points in between) is the point of this proposal.
Let me give you some blunt feedback ...
- NSRL: the North-South Rail Link, like the tunnels that run into Manhattan, will be electric only. For your proposal to work, you'd need at least one of three things:
- A locomotive swap in Woburn. Isn't the worst idea, but will cost you time and increase operational logistics
- Electrify everything to Montreal. This would be extremely expensive and quite unlikely for any foreseeable future
- Use dual-mode locomotives. These aren't exactly rare, but they aren't super common, they are expensive, I believe less efficient, and increase operational complexity because it reduces the number of locomotives you can swap in at the last minute
Stop spacing: you have a mix of intercity stop spacing and commuter rail spacing -- 50 miles between Montpelier and Lebanon, but 6 miles between Attleboro and Mansfield. Intercity and commuter rail are different problems that call for different solutions, including potentially different locomotives, different passenger coaches, and different schedules. We know from the current MBTA commuter rail schedule that it takes at least 45 minutes to go BOS-PVD with those same stops that you're proposing, while Amtrak is able to do it in just over 30. Aren't Providence passengers going to be annoyed at that extra travel time?
I think you are wrong about this and there are many counterexamples to demonstrate. On the Acela, there is only one track mile between South Station and Back Bay, yet, there are 69 miles between Wilmington and Baltimore. Do you think this demonstrates that South Station passengers would be too annoyed with that extra travel time to use Acela? No, of course not. If you don't think Attleboro would attract enough demand on this line to justify the extra stop, that would be a valid criticism, but it should not be ruled on out stop spacing alone, as clearly demonstrated by the presence of a Back Bay and South Station stop on every single one of Boston's intercity rail lines.
Attleboro could be the first on the chopping block of these stops on this proposed route, but stop spacing alone doesn't show that.
Northern Rail: this is a long windy route through the mountains. It is no doubt beautiful, but also will increase your travel times, plus require significant investment to reactivate for passenger use
70 miles from Concord to White River Junction. Significantly south of the Whites. Characterizing this 70-mile route through the Dartmouth - Lake Sunapee region as "a long windy route through the mountains" is most definitely an exaggeration. I would know having biked the length of this flat route two years ago. You are right that it is no doubt beautiful. The highest point on this route is less than 1,000 feet above sea level and there are no steep grades on any of it.
Yes, it will require significant investment to reactivate (and electrify), but that is well within the realm of a Crazy Transit Pitch. If the funding were available, it would be quite doable. Why should it be done? It will decrease travel times ...
Comparison to existing proposals and existing service: So you have to ask yourself, "Why is this better than more conventional proposals?" Rail service to Montreal typically is proposed originating in Boston and either traveling via Springfield or Manchester. Why is your proposal better than the conventional "Boston-Manchester-Montreal + transfer to Boston-Providence service" idea? (That conventional idea, by the by, avoids the electric/diesel issue, as well as the stop spacing issue.)
Let's take these one at a time.
- Compared to routing via Springfield
Based on the New Hampshire Capitol Corridor Rail Proposal, travel time between Concord and North Station would be 1h34m, with an extra stop. I'll make the most generous estimate for you and assume that removing that (Bedford/MHT) stop would only save one minute. So, for your incorrect assertion that it would add travel time to the more conventional proposal to be true, it would have to take more than 4 hours (5h33m - 1h33m) to cover the flat 70 miles between Concord and White River Junction.
For your claim to be true, trains would have to travel over this flat 70-mile segment, with only one stop, and average less than 17.5 mph. Yes, if I were proposing for trains to run at less than 17.5mph over this flat section then you would have made a good point. But, I think it's reasonable to expect trains to cut significant travel time off of the conventional proposals you named. In 1957, trains traversed this section in 1 hour, 41 minutes, even with three additional stops than I'm proposing. That's an average of 41.6 mph. So, why would you assume that the Provtreal proposal would only travel at a fraction of this speed? Even at 23.3 mph (taking a full three hours over this segment, and well over one hour longer than 1957), it saves an hour over the routing via Springfield. At 35 mph, it saves two hours over the routing via Springfield. At 1957 speeds (even ignoring the time savings from running express), it saves 2 hours and 19 minutes over the Springfield alternative. There is a reason why trains between Boston and Montreal always took this route when the line was active. How did you come to the conclusion that this routing would "increase your travel time?"
- Boston-Manchester-Montreal + transfer to Boston-Providence service
Reverse move at Burlington: this takes a super long time (or has to be planned and carried out with extreme speed and precision every time, including having a second locomotive ready to go)
Valid criticism. I wanted to add a true Burlington stop as it's a city that has such a draw to have a stop right in town and was willing to accept the cost that came with that. I can definitely see an argument against it, but based on what I know it seems worth it to perform this reverse move. I'm happy to be presented with some actual data that shows otherwise.