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High-Speed Rail dead?
Posted by Starman35
2nd Nov 2011
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High Speed Rail dead?
Posted by c.harpster@...
17th Jan 2012
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+6
Votes
High-Speed Rail dead?
I'll probably get lynched the the readers here, but high-speed rail SHOULD die, because the costs are so astronomical and the population densities in the US are not high enough to support it outside the NE corridor. Unless you all want to tax gasoline so its cost is >$100/gal, then there won't be either money nor ridership. My betting is on electric cars fro urban transit, along with light rail and electric buses in the cities. Those developments would move more people more efficiently, & at far less cost than inter-city high-speed rail.
Posted by Starman35
2nd Nov 2011
+4
Votes
But, its the principal.
Californians, (not most of them actually, but those in control), want to be seen as progressive - at any cost. For some reason, a high speed train is seen as progress for the progressives. This just really confuses me.
Hey Andrew - is this thing supposed to be electric, the D word - Diesel, or hamster powered?
Hey Andrew - is this thing supposed to be electric, the D word - Diesel, or hamster powered?
Posted by GuntherGump
2nd Nov 2011
+2
Votes
Electric Cars??
The latest study says that California's power grid could only handle ~10% of CA cars plugged in every night
Plug ins are only viable long term if they come with some kind of co-generation capability rather than having to plug them into the existing fragile power grid
Plug ins are only viable long term if they come with some kind of co-generation capability rather than having to plug them into the existing fragile power grid
Posted by archangel9999
11th Nov 2011
+1
Vote
High Speed Rail dead?
I hope so. Steal money from me and build a train that no one will use. The proposed route is from San Bernardino to Sacramento. I am a salesman. I drive 200 miles a day on average. I am on at least two planes a month. I have never been to San bernardino or Sacramento. How about a train to the airport? Or a train between San Diego, Los Angeles and San Francisco using existing right always. Not our brain dead politicians. Let's tax the rich more ( how many have left the state in the past decade) to steal more land from farmers (doesn't matter, they shut off their water effectively destroying the largest farmer community and jobs in the nation) to build a train no one will ride.
I'm continually disgusted.
I'm continually disgusted.
Posted by c.harpster@...
17th Jan 2012
+3
Votes
Where's the $98.5 Billion coming from?
California is broke. What do the tree hugging bark eaters think about this thing? Imagine the little desert bunnies when they get hit a 250mph train.
Frankly, unless some state politician or candidate that owes a favor and gets an earmark - this thing will never see the light of day.
Frankly, unless some state politician or candidate that owes a favor and gets an earmark - this thing will never see the light of day.
Posted by GuntherGump
2nd Nov 2011
+3
Votes
What about 2050?
Population is projected to increase by 40% by 2050. If that happens, does that change the case. I've driven in Chicago, Minneapolis, Seattle, Atlanta, and LA. I can't imagine a 40% increase in the number of cars. My son-in-law, a planner for MN-DOT, says not to worry because by then cars will drive themselves more effectively than mere mortals.
Posted by Dr Duke 2000
2nd Nov 2011
+5
Votes
And high-speed rail between LA & SF isn't going to change that.
This is primarily competition with the airlines. It has nothing to do with local commuter traffic.
Posted by JohnMcGrew@...
2nd Nov 2011
+3
Votes
High Speed Rail
Having lived in Albuquerque NM, I am certain that HSR, along with wind and solar power will only survive with massive subsidies. Lack of density is the problem in each case.
Posted by cfthelin
2nd Nov 2011
+1
Vote
subsidies
So it seems you do not want to consider the trillions of dollars put into road building over the past century to be "subsidy", but railways are? How about all the major airports in the US which were and are government owned?
Posted by rhodez
2nd Nov 2011
+4
Votes
It was never going to happen...
...because it was totally dependent upon OPM. (Other People's Money) The numbers were always fishy, rationale was questionable, and independent estimates placed the actual seat-mile cost as several times greater than flying first class. The state is bankrupt, and the only hope for this project was federal dollars. Unfortunately for California, it looks like days of easy manna from Washington have passed.
Posted by JohnMcGrew@...
Updated - 2nd Nov 2011
+2
Votes
Unfortunate for Denver
It did happen in the form of light rail...all of the foibles you've mentioned have managed to fool the sheeples ... and guess what? Nearly 3X the original estimate and they're building away..with OPM.. It's seems to be the same everywhere, just on different scales...
Posted by GregGold
2nd Nov 2011
+4
Votes
What a fiasco.
As a standalone point to point run of about 190-200 miles HSR between San Francisco and Anaheim is workable. With as many as 12 stops being planned between those cities the California HSR project becomes an expensive taxpayer funded joke.
With an average 16 or 17 miles between stops the only efficiency of HSR, long distance high-speed operation, is negated. Just as the train is building up to its top speed it will be slowing down for the next stop. As seen with the Acela in the Northeast Corridor, such use of HSR is a boon dongle. Far less expensive trains can do the same job.
On its best run of the average day Acela is about 20 minutes faster on the Boston to NY City route than the diesel electric Northeast Regional train. The Northeast Regional cost 1/3 the purchase price of Acela, has a lower daily operating cost than Acela, does not require special rails to operate on and does not require the costly overhead electric wire infrastructure that Acela requires.
Everyone in the HSR community likes to point at the Northeast Corridor and Acela as a success story. The facts are the primary reason the Northeast Corridor is the only profitable region for Amtrak is a strong customer base carried by the affordable to operate Northeast Regional train. Taken as a standalone product Acela is bleeding money.
With an average 16 or 17 miles between stops the only efficiency of HSR, long distance high-speed operation, is negated. Just as the train is building up to its top speed it will be slowing down for the next stop. As seen with the Acela in the Northeast Corridor, such use of HSR is a boon dongle. Far less expensive trains can do the same job.
On its best run of the average day Acela is about 20 minutes faster on the Boston to NY City route than the diesel electric Northeast Regional train. The Northeast Regional cost 1/3 the purchase price of Acela, has a lower daily operating cost than Acela, does not require special rails to operate on and does not require the costly overhead electric wire infrastructure that Acela requires.
Everyone in the HSR community likes to point at the Northeast Corridor and Acela as a success story. The facts are the primary reason the Northeast Corridor is the only profitable region for Amtrak is a strong customer base carried by the affordable to operate Northeast Regional train. Taken as a standalone product Acela is bleeding money.
Posted by Hates Idiots
Updated - 7th Nov 2011
+5
Votes
30 years or so ago, I used to think this would be a good idea.
Having to travel between LA and SF for business, the idea of getting on a comfortable euro-style train in LA and off a few hours later in SF for a nominal price sounded great. Airport-free weekend dates to SF would have been fun too.
But the problem with politically financed projects like this is that ultimately political considerations drive the decisions over economic or practical ones. In order to get buy-in in the House of Representatives, everyone needs a station in their district, whether it makes sense to the potential travelers or not. So instead of a theoretically direct 2-3 hour trip for $50 or so, they'll get a highly subsidized 4-5 hour trip with a real cost of $400 or more; The cost of a first class seat on nearly any airline for twice the travel time.
And then President (who is actually in charge of the TSA) jokes that at least you won't have to get an anal exam each time you take his wonderful trains, but who believes that won't be in the future as well as the 2-3x cost overruns that will make taking a private jets look even cheaper by comparison?
But the problem with politically financed projects like this is that ultimately political considerations drive the decisions over economic or practical ones. In order to get buy-in in the House of Representatives, everyone needs a station in their district, whether it makes sense to the potential travelers or not. So instead of a theoretically direct 2-3 hour trip for $50 or so, they'll get a highly subsidized 4-5 hour trip with a real cost of $400 or more; The cost of a first class seat on nearly any airline for twice the travel time.
And then President (who is actually in charge of the TSA) jokes that at least you won't have to get an anal exam each time you take his wonderful trains, but who believes that won't be in the future as well as the 2-3x cost overruns that will make taking a private jets look even cheaper by comparison?
Posted by JohnMcGrew@...
Updated - 3rd Nov 2011
+5
Votes
Hello
Ever hear of the Big Dig in Boston? Costs went from $2 billion to over $15 billion and rising. Original estimates are always optimistic. it's the only way they can sell these projects.
Posted by philwhite42@...
2nd Nov 2011
+5
Votes
I Smell Solyndra - no joke, check out who runs the CHSRA
The only people the get something out of all this are those that were appointed by the Governor: the highly paid, seat warmers that pretend to run the California High-Speed Rail Authority.
Check them out: (here are senior most people) THEY ARE ALL POLITICIANS, wake up CA!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/California_High-Speed_Rail_Authority
Curt Pringle, Chairperson (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curt_Pringle)
Thomas J. Umberg, Vice Chairperson (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_Umberg)
Lynn Schenk, Vice Chairperson (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lynn_Schenk)
The governor really owed some folks - maybe it goes higher than that office too.
Excuse me - but what do any of these people know about running a high speed rail service? Ok gang - I'm waiting for the jokes to roll in!
Check them out: (here are senior most people) THEY ARE ALL POLITICIANS, wake up CA!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/California_High-Speed_Rail_Authority
Curt Pringle, Chairperson (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curt_Pringle)
Thomas J. Umberg, Vice Chairperson (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_Umberg)
Lynn Schenk, Vice Chairperson (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lynn_Schenk)
The governor really owed some folks - maybe it goes higher than that office too.
Excuse me - but what do any of these people know about running a high speed rail service? Ok gang - I'm waiting for the jokes to roll in!
Posted by GuntherGump
Updated - 2nd Nov 2011
+3
Votes
Shut it down - sue for the return of pay checks.
.
Posted by GuntherGump
2nd Nov 2011
+2
Votes
RE: I Smell Solyndra....
Is all that's necessary to determine where it's coming from is to read the bio's. You hit it on the head..
Posted by GregGold
2nd Nov 2011
+4
Votes
The historic trail
of waste and abuse. We all want to fly in are own little car/planes anyway right ?
Posted by vonrock
2nd Nov 2011
+2
Votes
That New Zealander
I hear that New Zealander finally perfected his jet pack.
Posted by GuntherGump
2nd Nov 2011
-1
Votes
Its to bad
We you and me cant agree on any thing . I watch the world go by . With high speed rail and wonder about us . Weare so busy puching buttons on our phones (text) or just BSing.Or standing standing around with a cell phone Screwed to our head. getting information wedont need. Or just talking just to hear our self talk. SO SAD.
Posted by davewsr2
2nd Nov 2011
+4
Votes
SOP!!
This is nothing new...in fact, we have a similar issue here in Northern Virginia on the western leg of the DC area subway...This 8 mile stretch of *ABOVE GROUND* metro system with 5 stations ending at Dulles Airport is climbing to over 5 billion dollars....It's already almost a year behind schedule and 2 billion dollars above estimates....People are saying that by the time this thing is built, it will have cost double the initial estimate and fulfill the needs of fewer than 30 % of the original users,. and with maintenance and decreased ridership, it is estimated that this fiasco will *NEVER* break even...Kinda wonder what's the point...
Posted by tech_ed@...
2nd Nov 2011
-1
Votes
We are who we are
Would HSR be better than the interstate system plus short haul airliners? Sure. Is it more affordable than buying more airliners & expanding the airport & freeway systems? The HSR people say it is & it's probably true, too. But those are things with financing schemes, however imperfect, in place. As a nation, we're no longer capable of coming together out of anything but fear. The rest of the time, we whine about the other party & make transparent excuses about how we're still better off than all the other countries that don't just talk about, but do, great things.
Posted by hoodedswan
2nd Nov 2011
+3
Votes
Hardly
Everyone up for massive taxpayer subsidy says their scheme is better. Duh.
That HSR is efficient is a complete myth. Advocates like to take the efficiencies of traditional rail (which is extremely efficient) and extrapolate them to HSR. Nothing could be farther from the truth. HSR is far more expensive to build, and an order of magnitude more expensive to operate and maintain. It's not even carbon efficient when compare to automobiles; it takes a remarkable amount of power to accelerate a train to over 100mph.
The fact that when in the hard light of day, an unsubsidized LA-SF HSR ticket would easily cost $500 or more should tell you all you need to know about this fraud.
BTW: I've traveled by HSR in Europe. I love it. It's great. But each time I do, it's with the knowledge that it's completely subsidized by the hapless middle-class European taxpayer who has a much lower standard of living than I do. Thanks guys!
That HSR is efficient is a complete myth. Advocates like to take the efficiencies of traditional rail (which is extremely efficient) and extrapolate them to HSR. Nothing could be farther from the truth. HSR is far more expensive to build, and an order of magnitude more expensive to operate and maintain. It's not even carbon efficient when compare to automobiles; it takes a remarkable amount of power to accelerate a train to over 100mph.
The fact that when in the hard light of day, an unsubsidized LA-SF HSR ticket would easily cost $500 or more should tell you all you need to know about this fraud.
BTW: I've traveled by HSR in Europe. I love it. It's great. But each time I do, it's with the knowledge that it's completely subsidized by the hapless middle-class European taxpayer who has a much lower standard of living than I do. Thanks guys!
Posted by JohnMcGrew@...
Updated - 3rd Nov 2011
+1
Vote
Disney Monorail
Disney had the right idea back in the 50's with the monorail system. It was a model for a mass transit system but never really got traction with the public outside of the theme parks. It still is a viable model but few people take it seriously even today. Update it with maglev and you really have a HSR system that could perform the job at a reasonable cost. Maybe it is time for the private sector to take on this project and get it out of the hands of the politicians. Even at $10M per mile, the cost to construct a 200 mile segment would be $2B and far cheaper than the current estimates. With today's technology is it too much to ask to construct something for less than $10M per mile? This country built the transcontinental railroad system and the interstate highway system, major undertakings both. We are the only country in the world to have occupied the moon, which we did in the 70's. Why can't we figure out how to make a HSR system work? Is the US out of ideas and talent?
Posted by dcr100@...
2nd Nov 2011
+3
Votes
Is America's HSR dream dead?
Let's hope so.
Posted by bb_apptix
3rd Nov 2011