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Originally Posted by Nouvellecosse
The project is not solely about the time savings but as much or more about reliability and frequency/capacity (where the name HFR comes from in the first place). VIA can't really run any more trips than it currently does on the shared tracks due to being crowded out by freight so it doesn't offer near the scheduling options that people want. If it was solely a matter of saving the quoted time with the current limited services I'd agree with you that it wasn't worth it, any more than spending 3x more just to save double that time is worth it. But the proposal estimates that there would be 3x the ridership than with the current setup.
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Hold up. 3x more ridership? I know they said they can add up to 3x more departures, but I've not heard of 3x ridership. Firstly, even if they added 3x more departures, which I doubt they would for a while, 3x more ridership would mean they assume they can sellout ALL the added capacity. Fat chance. I'd really love to see the methodology on that estimate.
HSR might cost 3x more, but it would be for far more than just incredible time savings. Once you get to sub-2hr trips between in Ottawa and Toronto, you're then directly competing with airlines. The HFR upgrade won't be so dramatically different from today's service that'll it manage to divert a significant share of airline and vehicular traffic. HSR would be able to attract a lot more riders than HFR ever could. All in all HSR would undoubtedly achieve substantially higher ridership than HFR and would provide many more intangible benefits. Added dependability and capacity over VIA's existing service would be nice, but not for $4.4B (probably more by the time a contract is signed).
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Originally Posted by Nouvellecosse
In terms of "things going wrong" VIA has been operating trains for decades, including on many single track routes. They know the frequency and potential causes of problems and the vast majority of them are down to not owning or controlling the tracks. This is not a proposal created by amateurs speculating on the internet. Obviously you're free to "bet that things will go wrong" but this is just speculation without citing actual problems. You're probably right that there may be cost overruns since that's true with most major infrastructure projects, but that is just as likely to be true with HSR, especially considering that would be mostly from scratch and with a technology Canada is less experienced with.
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I'm not saying they're amateurs, nor that their estimate of a 3h15 run time is impossible -- it probably is, theoretically -- but I don't even think they believe they'll be able to achieve that consistently. Notice the wording in how they market the purported time savings:
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For example, trains could travel at speeds of up to 177 kilometres per hour (or 110 miles per hour), reducing travel times from Ottawa to Toronto to as low as 3 hours and 15 minutes from current travel times of approximately 4 hours and 30 minutes.
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https://corpo.viarail.ca/en/projects-infrastructure/high-frequency-rail
3h15 seems like the absolute max run time they can achieve, theoretically. I think it's fair to assume that won't be the case for the average run time, and that 3h30 is probably a fair guess for what the actual average run time would be. They're obviously trying hard to sell this to both the public and the feds, so it's only natural that they market it under the best case scenario.
As for my "bet that things will go wrong"... Sure, it's not based on a full-on technical analysis, but I've seen it happen with enough projects that try to cut corners and go with the absolute minimum infrastructure, which seems to be the case here. Hence my comparison to the Trillium line project. [/QUOTE]