Ideas for Additional "Night Owl" Train Service

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Jul 25, 2015
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Philadelphia Area
"Fantasy Thread" (so I don't get any "we can't do that" complaints)

I have on various occasions expressed my desire for overnight trains where I can board late at night and wake up at my destination as opposed to spending all day on a train. The NEC currently has a route between Boston and Washington DC/Virginia (66-65/67) that serves that purpose. There are also parts of LD trains where this trip is possible. Assuming we had the equipment and host railroad cooperation to do so, what other routes would this work well? I consider the graveyard shift to be midnight-6am so trains should not leave either endpoint after midnight nor arrive at the other before 6am. So the route has to be a minimum of 6 hours. Ideally it would be more so the endpoints can be stretched to 11am-7pm. Also, if there is a big city as an intermediate point close to an endpoint, effort would be to keep that city out of the graveyard shift. These schedules are in addition to the current trains and not reschedules.

The two I wish for the most are...

Pittsburgh to Philadelphia/New York: (Using Pennsylvanian schedule)

West NYP 9:52pm, PHL 11:42pm, PGH 7:05am

East PGH midnight, PHL 7:25am, NYP 9:20am

Ideally the eastbound would leave Pittsburgh earlier but you want Philly after 6am and don't want to hit the New York/New Jersey tunnels during the graveyard shift (also the later for Harrisburg the better).

Bay Area to Los Angeles (Using Coast Starlight schedule)

South SAC 7:35pm, Oakland 9:50pm, SJC 11:07pm, Santa Barbara 7:02am, LAX 10:00am

North LAX 9:10pm, Santa Barbara 11:40pm, SJC 7:11am, Oakland 8:24am, SAC 10:59am

Other possibilities:

Dallas to Austin/San Antonio (Texas Eagle)

South DAL 11:50pm, FTW 2:10am, AUS 6:30am, SAS 9:55am

North SAS 10:00pm, AUS 12:31am, FTW 4:58am, DAL 6:20am

I'd rather Austin be outside the graveyard shift than Ft. Worth because they can go to Dallas easier than Austin area passengers can go to another station.

New York to Buffalo/Niagara Falls/Toronto (Maple Leaf)

West NYP 10:15pm, ALB 1:00am, SYR 3:43am, ROC 4:57am, Buffalo Exchange St 6:14am, Niagara Falls, NY 7:26am, TOR 10:41am

East TOR 6:20pm, Niagara Falls 10:27am, Buffalo Exchange St. 11:05pm, ROC 12:13am, SYR 1:28am, ALB 4:55am, NYP 7:50am

New York to Montreal (Adirondack)

South: Montreal: 11:20pm, ALB 6:55am, NYP 9:50am

North: NYP 8:15pm, ALB 11:10pm, Montreal 7:11am

Chicago to Minneapolis/St. Paul (Empire Builder)

West: CHI 10:15pm, Milwaukee 11:52pm, MSP 6:03am

East: MSP midnight, Milwaukee 6:07am, CHI 7:55am

Chicago to Kansas City (Southwest Chief)

West: CHI midnight, KCY 7:11am

East: KCY 11:43pm, CHI 7:15am

New Orleans to Houston/San Antonio (Sunset Limited)

West: Use current 1 schedule

East: SAS 4:25pm, HOS 10:10pm, NOL 7:40am

Feel free to suggest other routes.
 
For me personally night trains could run slower then the day trains on the same route so leaving earlier in the evening and arriving later - this might also appease the freight companies as if they ran at freight train speeds would cause less issues for them perhaps,

One issue I'd see with your train arriving at 9:20 at NYP would be that this is prime commuter times and the lines are more likely to be congested- but of course this is just fantasy
 
The Pittsburgh to New York overnight might work. I can vaguely recollect reading an article about such service in the days before Amtrak. An evening departure and morning arrival followed by the ability to have a full work day at the destination might appeal to business travelers. It would spread out some of the cost of operating service between Harrisburg and Pittsburgh.

Slotting it into the morning arrivals in New York might present a challenge (one that should be partially alleviated by completing the Hudson River Tunnel project portion of Gateway), at least it is not traveling against the current. As far as equipment goes, it would only require two trainsets. I would guess each one would include a viewliner or sleeper or two (if/when the Vii order is finished I think that could be done), an amfleet cafe as a lounge (and possibly a BC section), a coach or two, and maybe a baggage car.

I would guess that it would require the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania to support it though....
 
If I remember right our New York Nightmare long distance train we had here a long time ago would have connected New York with a plethora of thru cars going to Montreal, Toronto, Cincinnati, and maybe even Detroit. But the switching enroute would be a major pain but not terrible.

Albany cut and add the Montreal cars.

Buffalo cut and add Toronto and potentially a Buffalo Cut away.

Cleveland cut and add Cincinnatti

Toledo cut and add Detroit and let it terminate in Chicago.

Equipment needs one sleeper and two coaches per section. So your looking at five sleepers per train and ten coaches. Without counting a cafe.

Which would end up being too long for some platforms causing a headache on operations. The required five locomotives one for each section. You would end up with a total of ten sleepers being required to run daily without a protect car and twenty coaches. And seven locomotives minimum but even those wouldn't be at home terminal which would create issues.

All in all that train is a pipe dream because of operations being a large problem before the class ones get involved.
 
In the past there were two major airline night hubs that carried many connecting passengers and might again do the same with trains/. That is CHI and ATL. Leave it to others to determine possible destinations.
 
The Pittsburgh to New York overnight might work. I can vaguely recollect reading an article about such service in the days before Amtrak. An evening departure and morning arrival followed by the ability to have a full work day at the destination might appeal to business travelers. It would spread out some of the cost of operating service between Harrisburg and Pittsburgh.

Slotting it into the morning arrivals in New York might present a challenge (one that should be partially alleviated by completing the Hudson River Tunnel project portion of Gateway), at least it is not traveling against the current. As far as equipment goes, it would only require two trainsets. I would guess each one would include a viewliner or sleeper or two (if/when the Vii order is finished I think that could be done), an amfleet cafe as a lounge (and possibly a BC section), a coach or two, and maybe a baggage car.

I would guess that it would require the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania to support it though....
The Pennsylvania Railroad's PITTSBURGHER from New York to Pittsburgh was one of the last all Sleeping Car trains that ran up until early to mid 1960s. It carried Sleeping Cars including a 6 BR lounge car that served snacks and cocktails out of New York and Pittsburgh at night and light breakfasts the following morning. I believe it operated through 30th Street Philadelphia instead of the direct route. At that time business travelers were still familiar with overnight train travel. Today most business travelers outside certain corridors have no clue about train travel for business. I remember being on a drive with 2 business associates from my company. One of them grew up in Providence, RI and was very familiar with business train travel in the NEC and in Southern California where he was located then. The other associate, from Milwaukee, was very surprised that anyone would take a train for business travel.
 
The Pennsylvania Railroad's PITTSBURGHER from New York to Pittsburgh was one of the last all Sleeping Car trains that ran up until early to mid 1960s. It carried Sleeping Cars including a 6 BR lounge car that served snacks and cocktails out of New York and Pittsburgh at night and light breakfasts the following morning. I believe it operated through 30th Street Philadelphia instead of the direct route. At that time business travelers were still familiar with overnight train travel. Today most business travelers outside certain corridors have no clue about train travel for business. I remember being on a drive with 2 business associates from my company. One of them grew up in Providence, RI and was very familiar with business train travel in the NEC and in Southern California where he was located then. The other associate, from Milwaukee, was very surprised that anyone would take a train for business travel.
Thanks. I should have remembered the name, it is that obvious. The fact that many business travelers in New York today are very familiar with using the train would be a positive for this as a potential route. I don't think a modern incarnation would skip Philly though...
 
The Pennsylvania Railroad's PITTSBURGHER from New York to Pittsburgh was one of the last all Sleeping Car trains that ran up until early to mid 1960s. It carried Sleeping Cars including a 6 BR lounge car that served snacks and cocktails out of New York and Pittsburgh at night and light breakfasts the following morning. I believe it operated through 30th Street Philadelphia instead of the direct route. At that time business travelers were still familiar with overnight train travel. Today most business travelers outside certain corridors have no clue about train travel for business. I remember being on a drive with 2 business associates from my company. One of them grew up in Providence, RI and was very familiar with business train travel in the NEC and in Southern California where he was located then. The other associate, from Milwaukee, was very surprised that anyone would take a train for business travel.
Thanks. I should have remembered the name, it is that obvious. The fact that many business travelers in New York today are very familiar with using the train would be a positive for this as a potential route. I don't think a modern incarnation would skip Philly though...
As I said, the PITTSBURGHER did operate through 30th Street Station Philadelphia and did not skip Philadelphia.
 
It would be great if the Spirit of California were resurrected. It would create great overnight service from LA to Bay Area and Sacramento.

I modified the schedule a bit, and added a segment to San Diego.

SAN 4:50pm

LAX 7:40pm/8:05pm

SBA 10:28pm/10:35pm

SLO 1:17am/1:30am

SNS 4:23am

*Detraining only SJC to SAC weekdays*

SJC 6:06am/6:18am

OKJ 7:19am/7:29am

EMY 7:39am/8:04am (let #710 (7:45am), #723 (7:50am), #524 (7:55am), and #525 (8:00am) pass by here) I did this to let it connect with leeway to #6

MTZ 8:46am

SAC 9:59am

These stations have sophisticated announcement technologies, so with good forewarning, mass confusion should be avoided between it and the other 3 trains (2 on weekends), unless the passengers are stupid or deaf.

Emeryville has 2 tracks with platforms. This one can sit on one track, while the others pass by on the other one.

*Receiving only SAC-OKJ*

SAC 5:15pm

EMY 6:50pm/7:00pm

OKJ 7:10pm/7:20pm

SJC 8:25pm/8:37pm

SNS 10:18pm

SLO 1:37am/1:50am

SBA 4:25am/4:32am

*Detraining only LAX to SAN*

LAX 7:30am/7:50am

SAN 10:40am

I think getting into LAX earlier is good, at the cost of leaving Santa Barbara at 4:30am.
 
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Would it then have 2 engines from SAN to SJC? Also, a fast split would be needed at SJC to let it go ahead of #524. How many minutes would it take?

What about a dedicated connection train with a cross platform transfer?

How fast would it go? As fast as a Baby Bullet, or an Express, or Local?
 
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I have proposed my favorite schedule before.

TWO A DAY

Chicago-Toledo-Cleveland-Buffalo-Syracuse-New York City

(Eastbound)
Chicago 10:00 AM
Toledo 3:50 PM
Cleveland 6:20 PM
Buffalo 9:21 PM
Syracuse 11:48 PM
Albany 4:15 AM
New York 6:53 AM
(schedules are approximate and indicative only)

(Westbound)
New York 11:40 PM
Albany 3:05 AM
Syracuse 5:49 AM
Buffalo 7:59 AM
Cleveland 11:45 AM
Toledo 2:15 PM
Chicago 5:45 PM

This provides overnight service between NYC and anywhere from Syracuse to Cleveland. Which I think is pretty good.

It also provides daytime service from Chicago through the Midwest as far as Buffalo (Syracuse going eastbound). Also pretty good.

I strongly believe that the synergies from having TWO A DAY will give great results. I don't know how to do the financial modelling in a form acceptable to Amtrak, or what input data to use, and I wonder if someone else does know -- if they do I can construct the model myself (I know more than enough math and CS). I strongly suspect that this would be financially positive or neutral on operating costs, though equipment costs are another matter.

Oh. Also, I never came up with a name for the train for marketing purposes, apart from TWO A DAY. Anything which might help pitch it would be welcome.
 
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A couple of times I have reported another member's solid explanation of why some Amtrak trains closely track each other, notably the Lake Shore and Capitol Limited, and the Star and Meteor thru Florida.

The Class 1 freight hosts complain that the Amtrak trains ruin their schedules, not just in each train's slot, but for a couple of hours on either side of the slot. The Lake Shore disturbs the host for four hours, two before this Amtrak slot and two hours after the Lake Shore is scheduled to pass thru. Two trains a day Cleveland-CHI means eight hours of disruption. When the Lake Shore runs only two hours different from the Cap Ltd, two of the Lake Shore's hours of disruption overlap and ruin the same two hours of freight time as the Capitol Ltd. Say the Lake Shore disrupts two hours behind its slot. Then the Cap Ltd disrupts two hours ahead of its slot. Overlapping, they are the same two hours from the host's point of view. That way the host's freight trains are disrupted 'only' six hours a day instead of eight hours. So the 2-hours apart schedules for the two Amtrak trains are set to minimize inconvenience to the hosts.

Tell me what sweet things we gonna say to NS to get a third train out of CHI to the East Coast, with a morning departure, disrupting the freight schedule twice a day?

Simple solution: Build South of the Lake, CHI-Porter, IN, and then build another dedicated 110-mph track for passenger trains on this corridor to Toledo and Cleveland, and beyond to Pittsburgh-Philly-NYC/DC and to Buffalo-Albany-NYC. Simple solution if Congress would pay for it.
 
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The Water Level Route is an all-double-track mainline which primarily carries high-speed intermodal freight. Passenger operations are, bluntly, not disruptive at all.; they're averaging the same speed. Complaints to the contrary are best described as "****". We all know the freight railroads aren't scheduling their freight trains properly anyway (some precision railroading would help a lot here). The LSL and CL follow similar schedules largely due to their need to run overnight out of Chicago and in the daytime at the east end; nothing more.

As I stated in my flyer, NS and CSX would probably both ask for passenger sidings so that trains stopped at stations do not block the mainline; this is actually a reasonable request and we should be doing it anyway. It also allows for making ADA-accessible platforms without obstructing high-and-wide freights, so it's desirable for that reason anyway.

On the whole, NS has been very cooperative, allowing additional Amtrak trains on single-track lines which carry slow freight (such as Virginia and North Carolina and Michigan), where the passenger trains are *much* more disruptive.

However, if they did decide to be obnoxious: Norfolk Southern is under an over-100-year-old legal obligation to provide passenger service, which is currently enforced by requiring them to provide access to Amtrak on reasonable terms. If they don't want to comply with their legal obligations, NS can have their license to operate a railroad revoked. The STB has shown that they are willing to enforce these obligations.

Frankly, I think the problem of finding rolling stock is much more serious than the problem of getting a slot.
 
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[quote name="neroden" post="701236"

As I stated in my flyer, NS and CSX would probably both ask for passenger sidings so that trains stopped at stations do not block the mainline; this is actually a reasonable request and we should be doing it anyway. It also allows for making ADA-accessible platforms without obstructing high-and-wide freights, so it's desirable for that reason anyway.

Frankly, I think the problem of finding rolling stock is much more serious than the problem of getting a slot.Station tracks and platforms really are the best for any location needing high level platforms or has a large passenger turn over. those stations with just occasional ADA passengers a lift would seem best choice.

Rolling stock is a very serious problem . As of now more rolling stock seems problematic ?
 
Frankly, I think the problem of finding rolling stock is much more serious than the problem of getting a slot.Station tracks and platforms really are the best for any location needing high level platforms or has a large passenger turn over. those stations with just occasional ADA passengers a lift would seem best choice.

Rolling stock is a very serious problem . As of now more rolling stock seems problematic ?
If west point's statement is true then hopefully now you see why I suggest killing one train to resurrect another (or cannibalism as it has been called) or the fact that I claim Byrd killed the Broadway/Three Rivers. We're competing for equipment. The fact that both LD trains killed in 2005 (Silver Palm downgraded and terminated in Savannah) were both Viewliners doesn't seem coincidental to me (to this day Viewliners are still in short supply). You can now say we can't get the slots back but if we still had them we wouldn't have to get them back now.
 
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Frankly, I think the problem of finding rolling stock is much more serious than the problem of getting a slot.Station tracks and platforms really are the best for any location needing high level platforms or has a large passenger turn over. those stations with just occasional ADA passengers a lift would seem best choice.

Rolling stock is a very serious problem . As of now more rolling stock seems problematic ?
If west point's statement is true then hopefully now you see why I suggest killing one train to resurrect another (or cannibalism as it has been called) or the fact that I claim Byrd killed the Broadway/Three Rivers. We're competing for equipment. The fact that both LD trains killed in 2005 (Silver Palm downgraded and terminated in Savannah) were both Viewliners doesn't seem coincidental to me (to this day Viewliners are still in short supply). You can now say we can't get the slots back but if we still had them we wouldn't have to get them back now.
The withdrawal of the last of the heritage sleepers is what caused the three rivers to loose its sleeper service, and the loss of mail and express traffic led to there being not enough of a need for four trains NEC to Chicago at that time. The three rivers was effectively killed off by David Gunn and the FRA requirements that a retention tank be installed on the passenger cars.
 
Frankly, I think the problem of finding rolling stock is much more serious than the problem of getting a slot.Station tracks and platforms really are the best for any location needing high level platforms or has a large passenger turn over. those stations with just occasional ADA passengers a lift would seem best choice.

Rolling stock is a very serious problem . As of now more rolling stock seems problematic ?
If west point's statement is true then hopefully now you see why I suggest killing one train to resurrect another (or cannibalism as it has been called) or the fact that I claim Byrd killed the Broadway/Three Rivers. We're competing for equipment. The fact that both LD trains killed in 2005 (Silver Palm downgraded and terminated in Savannah) were both Viewliners doesn't seem coincidental to me (to this day Viewliners are still in short supply). You can now say we can't get the slots back but if we still had them we wouldn't have to get them back now.
The Sliver Palm was coach and business class coach when it was cut back to Savannah. It had not had a Sleeping car for several years. I rode it in both directions from Jacksonville in the early 2000s
 
Frankly, I think the problem of finding rolling stock is much more serious than the problem of getting a slot.Station tracks and platforms really are the best for any location needing high level platforms or has a large passenger turn over. those stations with just occasional ADA passengers a lift would seem best choice.

Rolling stock is a very serious problem . As of now more rolling stock seems problematic ?
If west point's statement is true then hopefully now you see why I suggest killing one train to resurrect another (or cannibalism as it has been called) or the fact that I claim Byrd killed the Broadway/Three Rivers. We're competing for equipment. The fact that both LD trains killed in 2005 (Silver Palm downgraded and terminated in Savannah) were both Viewliners doesn't seem coincidental to me (to this day Viewliners are still in short supply). You can now say we can't get the slots back but if we still had them we wouldn't have to get them back now.
You don't think an equipment shortage could have been solved in twelve years? Actually, had plans went as intended, it already would have been. Amtrak should have had the Viewliner II order by now; That includes no more coaches or lounges, but the Midwest states should have also been receiving their (apparently stillborn) bi-levels, releasing Horizon cars for other service.

But neither the Cardinal nor a potential Three Rivers really requires that many cars or equipment sets anyway; There is simply no reason to pit one train against another in a completely self-defeating strategy. Who needs the John Mica's and Ernest Istook's of the political scene when rail advocates suggest similar dead end and discredited policies. Lack of equipment is indeed a longstanding and significant problem, but its not what has stymied new service.

Frankly, I think the problem of finding rolling stock is much more serious than the problem of getting a slot.Station tracks and platforms really are the best for any location needing high level platforms or has a large passenger turn over. those stations with just occasional ADA passengers a lift would seem best choice.

Rolling stock is a very serious problem . As of now more rolling stock seems problematic ?
If west point's statement is true then hopefully now you see why I suggest killing one train to resurrect another (or cannibalism as it has been called) or the fact that I claim Byrd killed the Broadway/Three Rivers. We're competing for equipment. The fact that both LD trains killed in 2005 (Silver Palm downgraded and terminated in Savannah) were both Viewliners doesn't seem coincidental to me (to this day Viewliners are still in short supply). You can now say we can't get the slots back but if we still had them we wouldn't have to get them back now.
The withdrawal of the last of the heritage sleepers is what caused the three rivers to loose its sleeper service, and the loss of mail and express traffic led to there being not enough of a need for four trains NEC to Chicago at that time. The three rivers was effectively killed off by David Gunn and the FRA requirements that a retention tank be installed on the passenger cars.
Amtrak had a waiver on the retention toilet issue, though eventually failed to renew it and the Heritage sleepers were, indeed, withdrawn (the Three Rivers switched to a Viewliner, but car supply was tight).
 
I know the OP offered the caveat that this is fantasy, but I still think the OP is over-estimating the demand for overnight short/medium haul services. What business traveler is going to spend the night on a train when there is a plethora of short, non-stop flights between the most of the city pairs suggested?

Likewise, what leisure traveler is going to travel overnight between NYP-Montreal or LAX-Bay Area (for example) when doing so means they'd miss the scenery that the route is known for? And while the scenery isn't perhaps as noted on some of the other routes, there is still something about "the view" that makes train travel appealing, and overnight trains erase that appeal.

The reason the NEC "night owl" service works is due to the incredible population density along the corridor, along with the relative lack of scenery. In fact I think with some re-jiggering you could effectively run two night owl trains each way...you almost have that northbound already with the 0315 departure from WAS supplementing train 66.
 
What business traveler is going to spend the night on a train when there is a plethora of short, non-stop flights between the most of the city pairs suggested?

Likewise, what leisure traveler is going to travel overnight between NYP-Montreal or LAX-Bay Area (for example) when doing so means they'd miss the scenery that the route is known for?
For business travelers needing to depart after the business day and arrive reasonably early the next morning, they generally have two alternatives: an evening flight with late arrival at a hotel or else get up in the middle of the night from home for an early a.m. flight. Neither option in often particularly appealing. The idea behind "overnight" trains (particularly sleeper, with good food service) is to board of the evening and get a full nights rest at normal hours while en route to your destination.

If we follow the "who is going to take the train when there are flights available" theory to its logical conclusion, then all passenger rail service nationwide - except commuter - can be discontinued tomorrow morning. Nobody asks why Chick Fil-A builds a new restaurant when there is already a burger joint next door. Nor does anyone question why Uber bothers to conduct business in a city which has public transportation. But dare to suggest a new passenger train route, and sure as trains run on rails, someone will question it by stating there is already an airport and (faster) interstate between those points.

Hence, even with leisure travelers, most aren't taking the train just for the scenery. Is the only reason people fly because its faster? Or others take the car because they all enjoy driving? People choose a given mode of transportation for widely varied reasons.
 
Hence, even with leisure travelers, most aren't taking the train just for the scenery. Is the only reason people fly because its faster? Or others take the car because they all enjoy driving? People choose a given mode of transportation for widely varied reasons.
I am afraid of flying and I don't want to drive more than about five hours at a time. So that's my reason to take a train. I see it as a form of transportation. I'm not saying I don't enjoy the scenery but do I want to be stuck in a train for 8-10 hours as opposed to an overnight train? I also take NJ Transit to New York most cases I want to go in because I don't want to drive/park in New York.
 
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