Why can't light rail go faster, I don't understand that. If maglev tech can really go that fast, that's friggin awesome
Why can't light rail go faster, I don't understand that. If maglev tech can really go that fast, that's friggin awesome
Rail will NEVER reduce traffic. It never has and study after study shows that it doesn't. In fact, I am not aware of a study anywhere that concludes rail removes congestion and in fact, park and ride lots increase traffic on the road leading to the train station while latent demand back-fills the empty spots on the interstate from the cars now going to the park and ride lot so we actually end up with more congestion, not less. People will always chose to voluntarily spend hours in traffic for any number of reasons.
Exactly. If anything rail is going to open it up to allow to avoid having to build new lanes of interstate every so often to keep up with traffic. It also gives more opportunities to people that don't travel by car right now.
The trick to a rail network work we almost have to ensure we have a very good network from the state. Thankfully most of the lines are done and we can do that with commuter rail.
You quoted a price for a system that is only designed to go 50 mph, but only reached 17 mph in testing, and gets free right of way access. How much would a maglev that speeds along at 300 mph and has to acquire right of way cost per mile?
Also, OKC is not trying to implement light rail. I have not heard a single point in any position of authority in the entire state of Oklahoma utter the word light rail, let alone actually propose it.
JTF ...you will appreciate this: 391,000 Customers ride this each day. 143 Mil. people ride each year.
High Volume | Central Japan Railway Company
Just think, those 391,000 people are not on the highways sitting in traffic. Risking their lives in the ODOT Highway Death Traps.
This is how "ideas" get sidelined. Ex. ACOG here two options of Rail ..1. Light Rail estimate $3 Billion , when they hear that they freeze on site. Now the next alternative is only $30 / $50 mil... Then all of sudden, that idea is the BEST idea. It is called sticker shock. This is a great tool to use when you represent AMTRAK.
You aren't helping your case. You are among people who want rail for the most case, but you aren't being realistic.
Here is my idea for a regional rail/transit solution: Weather Spotlight | OKC Commuter Rail
The vast majority of that network is on existing lines - at least for the commuter rail lines (all the colored lines). Brown/Tan are BRT or street car lines. My idea is also for the full build out. I would imagine a system that doesn't include the various extensions (Mustang-Lawton, Noble-Pauls Valley, Downtown-Shawnee) would be what we need very close to launch to make it viable for people.
Venture... JTF had said that ALL studies show that congestion / traffic will Never lessen because of rail. I demonstrated how a country ( Japan ) uses rail. Now, this is not a study, but a company that makes billions every year on ridership.
Yes, i am very realistic. I see that "gap" that exists from today, to tomorrow. But I also know, that if start on this path of "commuter rail", just because someone says "we already have a few pieces of the puzzle in place", that doesn't mean we should put all our eggs in that basket.
This reminds me of Torea but with a constantly blowing whistle (train horn)...
I have to admit, this whole Amtrak reference has me confused. Other than the Heartland Flyer to Ft Worth and a possible extension to Wichita or maybe Tulsa, I don't know how Amtrak factors in to OKC rail. Also, did I get accused of working for Amtrak?
Maybe because Amtrak ran a commuter line or two around Chicago years ago? Amtrak was the operator for VRE until Veolia won the contract. I don't understand it otherwise.
Can it interact with normal rail? I doubt the rail companies that own the track will want to give up there existing lines, may not be thrilled about selling land near the line with the chance inperpetuity to have a parallel track they can not use and rule out expansion if demand picks up and if it can not switching downtown will be a nightmare.
The 10+ in this case is more political and budgetary. If we had the political will, were flush enough with cash and none of the railroads or government agencies had any objection you could probably have a line up less than a year, mostly delayed by getting the paperwork approved. Granted the more amenities at the stops probably would add some time, but when the Heartland Flyer started some only had a temporary platform that looked like you could put up in less than a week.
When you build w/ LIght Rail , it provides far more flexiblity in location(s) ( use existing ODOT Highway R.O.W. ). In OKC's location, we have a built in advantage that other may not be able to take advantage of. We already have a somewhat ( straight line from Norman to OKC. OKC to Edmond. ) and the area is realatively flat.
We don't have to go over large hills / winding roads / ...or a city that has been here since 1785 ( like a Boston or Philadelphia) and has a lot a special considerations in layout. This drives the cost up a great deal. Our layout is clean. Design is simple. 95% of the runs are straight. This will make our ( unit cost per mile, much less).
Can you provide a picture of what you mean by 'Heavy Diesel Engine' because I picture this when you say that. This is something a freight railroad would use.
But most new non-electric commuter rail systems use these MPXpress Commuter Locomotives made by MotivePower.
Yes, they both burn diesel but comparing them is like comparing a dump truck to a BMW 535d.
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