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OK wins three grants for high speed rail

Started by PonderInc, October 28, 2010, 10:46:15 PM

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Hoss

Quote from: Red Arrow on November 10, 2010, 10:42:58 PM
Straight line (or at least great circle) distance from Tulsa Int'l to Chicago O'hare is 508 nm (584 statue miles).  The farther the distance, the easier it is for a 500+ knot airliner  to make up for delays at the airport compared to hopping on a train.  I believe about 250 miles (Tulsa to Dallas) is about as far as a train could be competitive with an airliner for time. It would depend on connections at either end too.

Straight line or great circle is almost never the traveled distance on any airline flight, as they don't typically fly in a straight line (being a pilot I'm sure you've heard of Victor Airways or J routes...then that doesn't take into account flying a STAR into Chicago, which is absolutely necessary).

And while I'm a huge proponent of flying, some of the crappy practices most have been starting here lately (charging for checked bags and other sketchy fees) have started to put me off.  I'll still fly Southwest, but if you need to fly to ORD and not MDW, you need to fly something other than SWA.

TheTed

Quote from: heironymouspasparagus on November 10, 2010, 10:23:01 PM
In today's world, you don't ride the train for speed - at least not in this country - but for the 'experience'.  It can be a fun way to get there if you are more concerned about the trip rather than the destination.

And there is an incredible amount of leg room!  Used to an airplane??  Well, think first class plus an extra two feet of leg room!

Sit back and enjoy the ride!

Exactly. Sit back, have a beer, take a nap, surf the internet, whatever. Beats driving or flying by a wide margin, in my view. There's not much more relaxing than kicking back on a train, whereas flying and driving can be stressful.

When comparing driving to taking the train, it's apples and oranges.

X hours at full attention, where the slightest lapse can equal death to you and yours is not equal to X hours where you're not required to do anything.
 

TheTed

Quote from: Oil Capital on November 10, 2010, 10:06:12 PM
6 hours to downtown Chicago sounds good to you?  Really?  Even wildly making all of the assumptions that are necessary to make a 6-hour train trip from Tulsa to Chicago possible, I am thinking a 2 hour flight still beats the pants off of a 6 hour train trip, even when you add the 1/2 hour train ride from O'Hare to downtown Chicago.  

Why the attraction to an inferior, outdated mode of transportation?  ;-)  

There are currently at least 10 flights a day that can get you from Tulsa to downtown Chicago in well under 6 hours.  (And any realistic rail service from Tulsa to Chicago more likely be a 10+ hour trip and is not likely to be offered 10 or 12 times per day)  For an example of the frequency of service offered in the much-vaunted European rail service:  Seville Spain (larger than Tulsa) to Barcelona (larger than St. Louis) service is offered twice per day (three times if you count the train that takes 12 1/2 hours to travel the 620 miles.

We will run out of cheap oil at some point. At that point, flying for cheap is not happening. All we need is early 1900s technology to travel cross country by electrified trains.

The outdated modes of transportation will soon be flying short distances and driving large, wasteful gas-powered vehicles for every trip.

If we had held onto our early 1900s transportation grid and improved it over time, we wouldn't be so completely and totally dependent on oil and all its attendant problems right now (wars, pollution, obesity, etc, etc, etc)
 

TheTed

Quote from: heironymouspasparagus on November 10, 2010, 09:57:10 PM
There is rail service to Texas.  It just starts in OKC.  Very cool, too.  Rode to Ft Worth a few weeks ago and had a blast. 
Short notice costs $74 round trip.

There are even a couple of tolerable restaurants in the stockyards area! 

Dallas still sucks.

Still haven't taken that trip yet. Dallas/Fort Worth just seems like the wrong place to attempt to take a trip without a car. Even when I drive to Dallas, stay in a downtown hotel and try to take the light rail around town, I always end up walking block after block through parking lots and across scary 40mph six or eight lane roads to get somewhere.

That whole city is sprawl and just impossible transit-wise. And the TRE (Dallas-Fort Worth train) doesn't even run on Sundays. One of many reasons why Dallas-Fort Worth is one of my least favorite metro areas.

It's a city for people who don't actually like cities.
 

custosnox

Quote from: Red Arrow on November 10, 2010, 10:42:58 PM
Straight line (or at least great circle) distance from Tulsa Int'l to Chicago O'hare is 508 nm (584 statue miles).  The farther the distance, the easier it is for a 500+ knot airliner  to make up for delays at the airport compared to hopping on a train.  I believe about 250 miles (Tulsa to Dallas) is about as far as a train could be competitive with an airliner for time. It would depend on connections at either end too.
it's not always about the time.

Red Arrow

Quote from: Hoss on November 10, 2010, 11:38:03 PM
Straight line or great circle is almost never the traveled distance on any airline flight, as they don't typically fly in a straight line (being a pilot I'm sure you've heard of Victor Airways or J routes...then that doesn't take into account flying a STAR into Chicago, which is absolutely necessary).

And while I'm a huge proponent of flying, some of the crappy practices most have been starting here lately (charging for checked bags and other sketchy fees) have started to put me off.  I'll still fly Southwest, but if you need to fly to ORD and not MDW, you need to fly something other than SWA.

I am well aware of Victor and J routes and SIDs and STARs. I am also aware of filing Direct and getting a decent portion of it. Works well with GPS and a P-Baron.  In my former job, we could usually beat the airlines if where we were going was within range of one load of fuel.  If we had to make a fuel stop the airlines could beat us depending on our final destination. That was only going about 195 kt true.


I bring up the straight line distance since that is the MINIMUM that either a train or airplane could go and because its easy to look up on AirNav.
 

Red Arrow

Quote from: TheTed on November 11, 2010, 12:47:25 AM
Still haven't taken that trip yet. Dallas/Fort Worth just seems like the wrong place to attempt to take a trip without a car. Even when I drive to Dallas, stay in a downtown hotel and try to take the light rail around town, I always end up walking block after block through parking lots and across scary 40mph six or eight lane roads to get somewhere.

That whole city is sprawl and just impossible transit-wise. And the TRE (Dallas-Fort Worth train) doesn't even run on Sundays. One of many reasons why Dallas-Fort Worth is one of my least favorite metro areas.

It's a city for people who don't actually like cities.

DART is evidently making some improvement in that regard.  I haven't been there to use it myself.
 

Red Arrow

Quote from: custosnox on November 11, 2010, 02:59:21 AM
it's not always about the time.

I understand that.  MOST of the time, I am destination oriented and "it's" not about the trip.

I get motion sickness if I try to read in a moving vehicle. Surfing the internet would give me the same problem, assuming I had a suitable laptop or phone, which I don't.  I don't sleep/nap well in public places.  One beer doesn't kill much time and then there is the restroom issue.

Having said all that, I think a train trip through the Rockies where there is something to look at would be nice.

I am in favor of a train for shorter (250 ? miles).  I have nothing against a train for a longer distance for those that are trip oriented. I grew up almost next to a (real) trolley line that could get me to Philadelphia.  I didn't go to Philly much but when I did it was almost always on the trolley/subway system.
 

DTowner

There's a reason passenger rail is economically viable in the northeast corridor and not the south, midwest or west – distance and population density.  Rail fans can extol the virtues of a leisurely 10-hour trip from Tulsa to Chicago, but how often would they really take that trip and how many such rail devotes are there in Tulsa?  I might take the trip once, just to see what it was like, but there's no way I could take it for business and after one trip, I don't want to see Rolla, Missouri pass by my window over and over again.  And how many of you have actually traveled on Amtrak – while it's better than being crammed into coach on an airplane, it's not the luxurious setting of a Cary Grant movie (although I might change my mind if there is the promise of meeting Eva Marie Saint).

Jet engines will be using biofuel long before passenger rail becomes a viable mode of transportation in this part of the country.

heironymouspasparagus

Big part of the problem is that we still use 1951 technology in trains.  And lousy track system.  OKC to Ft Worth works because it is very cheap and the 4 hours it takes is only about an hour longer than it would take to fly there.  And rent a car!  It is absolutely correct that DFW area is non-viable without one.

TRE - looking out the window at it from the Hyatt Downtown looked like it was running on Sunday morning, but I know nothing about the schedules - I was driving.  And won't go to Dallas next time - stay in Ft. Worth/Arlington, etc.

There is a Christmas train through December that is kind of fun, but usually full.  Specifically designed with kids in mind; there is a Santa and candy.  Little noisy if you don't have the kid thing going on, but not that bad.  And the kids love it!  Also, get to see the lights in every little town across TX and OK on the return.  Good cheap adventure to build some memories with the munchkins!



"So he brandished a gun, never shot anyone or anything right?"  --TeeDub, 17 Feb 2018.

I don't share my thoughts because I think it will change the minds of people who think differently.  I share my thoughts to show the people who already think like me that they are not alone.

TheArtist

  People, this is absurd.  We are not getting high speed rail in or near Tulsa anytime in the next 20-30 years... likely longer. 
"When you only have two pennies left in the world, buy a loaf of bread with one, and a lily with the other."-Chinese proverb. "Arts a staple. Like bread or wine or a warm coat in winter. Those who think it is a luxury have only a fragment of a mind. Mans spirit grows hungry for art in the same way h

Townsend

Quote from: TheArtist on November 11, 2010, 01:25:41 PM
  People, this is absurd.  We are not getting high speed rail in or near Tulsa anytime in the next 20-30 years... likely longer. 

Well we can plan its development along with the Tulsa Olympics.

swake

Quote from: TheArtist on November 11, 2010, 01:25:41 PM
  People, this is absurd.  We are not getting high speed rail in or near Tulsa anytime in the next 20-30 years... likely longer. 

We aren't getting any rail service at all if the state is to be part of it. The State of Oklahoma has zero intentions of expanding rail to Tulsa at all. We will get studies as OKC gets studies. After the studies Oklahoma City will get expanded service and we will again get the shaft.

TheTed

Quote from: DTowner on November 11, 2010, 10:16:28 AM
There's a reason passenger rail is economically viable in the northeast corridor and not the south, midwest or west – distance and population density.  Rail fans can extol the virtues of a leisurely 10-hour trip from Tulsa to Chicago, but how often would they really take that trip and how many such rail devotes are there in Tulsa?  I might take the trip once, just to see what it was like, but there's no way I could take it for business and after one trip, I don't want to see Rolla, Missouri pass by my window over and over again.  And how many of you have actually traveled on Amtrak – while it's better than being crammed into coach on an airplane, it's not the luxurious setting of a Cary Grant movie (although I might change my mind if there is the promise of meeting Eva Marie Saint).

Jet engines will be using biofuel long before passenger rail becomes a viable mode of transportation in this part of the country.

People drive to Chicago all the time. So if taking the train was a reasonable alternative, time-wise, I don't see why people wouldn't consider that option. It certainly beats driving. You can board the train after a long day and sleep along the way.

And rail is not only viable in the northeast. Look at Illinois and North Carolina. Rail would definitely be viable here at least in connecting major cities (DFW-OKC-Tulsa-Wichita-KC).





All those Illinois routes have service at least twice a day in each direction. You can roll your bike on board. The tickets cost about the same as you'd pay for a tank of gas ($30 for a 300-mile trip).
 

Red Arrow