F-Line to Dudley
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In North America, yes. See post above. A fleet of 500 or so FRA compliant DMUs would absolutely be a niche product, if you could even convince anyone to build them.
And considering that EMU orders in the U.S. can number as many as 200+ when NJT, SEPTA, or Metra is doing an order and 600+ whenever the MTA is doing cycled replacement of LIRR/MNRR electric stock...procurements of 6-12 units apiece is a pittance. It also doesn't help that the incumbent FRA-compliant stock (CRC & N-S) are morbidly overweight and don't do the supposed acceleration benefits of a DMU any favors.
Blame "Buy America", too. It's just not profitable to do an assembly factory for this stuff. And that's why Nippon-Sharyo's shocking Amtrak bellyflop hurts their seemingly unrelated DMU business: the AMTK coach order is what would've provided the scale at a pop-up factory to rip out a few quick orders of DMU's. The non-compliant Stadlers (which are top-notch product) are able to proliferate a smidge more because those waivered systems can usually get a BA waiver as part of their exemptions, and be able to buy an off-shelf import faster. It's why a handful more of those systems are moving forward while the FRA market is--for the moment--actively declining.
It won't stay like this forever. N-S's big fall and SMART being such a corruption dumpster fire threw a big chill over the vehicle market and over other FRA-compliant system proposals. That'll probably last a couple more years then abate. The thing to look out for is what Euro models can get re-certified as FRA-compliant under the new U.S. crashworthiness regs recently passed. It might be wishful thinking to hope something as super-lightweight as a Stadler GTW can get re-badged unmodified for mixed U.S. traffic, but even a lightly modified Stadler or competitors could ultimately blow the door wide open. We'll just have to wait and see. Right this second, unfortunately, is not a good time to be making grand plans around that vehicle type.