Quote:
Originally Posted by SoCalKid
We really need a national task force commissioned by the president to study our infrastructure costs and methodologies, compare them with nations around the world, then identify issues and come up with recommendations to mitigate them. We clearly are doing something wrong... it would be amazing if we could get the same amount of train for our $$ as western Europe, which should be achievable. Achieving that level of cost effectiveness would allow us to actually build out a high speed and higher-speed rail network across the nation, which I fear is out of reach as things stand.
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Do you know how long it takes to ride on HSR between London and Berlin?
Do you know how many trains it have to take?
An interesting read.......
https://www.rome2rio.com/s/London/Berlin
Fly London Heathrow to Berlin (direct) 4 hours, 44 minutes
HSR Train via Cologne (with 2 transfers) 9 hours, 33 minutes
Slow Train (with 1 transfer) 11 hours, 3 minutes
Drive via Eurotunnel (with loading and unloading a train)10 hours, 27 minutes
Drive via Ferry (with loading and unloading a ferry) 11 hours, 40 minutes
Except for the flight, which can have delays as well, all the others modes have potential delays, with HSR with 2 transfers very likely to have a busted transfer.
Here's a YouTube video of an English blogger trying to get as far east as possible from Greenwich using public transport. Would you believe he only got as far as Warsaw, a distance of 1006 miles.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UQYCtHln9w0&t=2s
Bing suggests 15 hours and 17 minutes by car. The blogger took 25 hours (a day with an hour advantage with a time zone).
The idea that HSR trains run distances over 500 miles is false. Assuming a 500 mile HSR line is the maximum distance in the USA, to travel between NYC and Chicago would require at least one transfer. To travel between Chicago and Los Angles would require at least 3, most likely 4 transfers.
So, a cross country HSR train ride would require a minimum of 4, most likely 5 transfers. At every transfer you could loose hours if the train is on time, and if late even more hours.
Cross country HSR lines for the USA would not be practical in any sense. So instead of dreaming about a country wide HSR network, we should be looking at profitable, or near profitable city pairs. Where there will be enough trains running to use the huge captail expense of the railroad corridor.