Quote:
Originally Posted by casper
It may not need it is own ROW if it can double track an existing single track ROW to become a partial owner.
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WCE will never become a partial owner because the railway owner can charge access fees for ever in addition to WCE paying for the expansion. Freight trains will use the same track with no compensation back to the entity paying for the expansion. Look at the expansion of the 3rd track on the CN Kingston sub where the government funded the construction but Via trains do not operate any faster.
Quote:
Originally Posted by casper
I have been to one or two presentation where an executive from CN makes a big deal about CN being the only scheduled railway in North America. My understanding of this is CN usually operates the same train on the same route at the same time. CP runs trains more dynamically. Not being a railway guy I don't know how accurate that assumption is. You would think the scheduled model would work better in an environment that also had passenger trains.
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Scheduled freights were not the invention of CN. The schedules are approximate and really only work when there is sufficient track capacity, yard capacity, locomotives and available crews. This means that when ever there are delays caused by weather, traffic volumes and maintenance shut downs the schedule is thrown out the window.
Quote:
Originally Posted by swimmer_spe
It is not about getting its own ROW, it is about having its own time slot.
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It is about getting your own ROW or separate set of tracks in a ROW. The entity that owns the tracks controls the use of the available capacity. Since CN sold the Lakeshore sub from Union Station to Pickering to GO Transit many eastbound Via trains are late getting to Oshawa. Via has to contend with some GO trains crossing the tracks to access the Stouffvile line and then CN freights
crossing over tracks access the York sub to reach MacMillan Yard.
There should be flyovers built for passenger trains. Another example of the is the Beachburg sub from Ottawa to Coteau where it crosses the CP mainline.
The only equitable option to individual ownership is to have all track owned by and independent entity that also provides all the dispatching. Britain's experience with Network Rail has shown that there are some troubles with that too.
[QUOTE=milomilo;8760441] The rail companies have even figured out this was more efficient where they had no other option - in the Fraser River Canyon where they use one single track for up and the other for down./QUOTE]
The use of shared tracks only works when you have willing partners and an arbitrator. The Ottawa valley route from Capreol/Sudbury to Ottawa/Smiths Falls is an example of what happens when the parties are not willing play the game. In the 1990's CN & CP made an agreement to run a joint line but CN scuttled the deal because they did not want to use unionized crews. There was enough through traffic at the time to make the line viable. CP went ahead and leased the line from Sudbury to Smith Falls to a short line railway. In 1995 CN abandoned their trackage in the Ottawa Valley. CP ultimately abandoned the line from Mattawa to Smiths Falls in the early 2000's.
CN in its wisdom ran all freights through Toronto and onto the Kingston sub to Montreal. So instead of having a shared shorter stand alone line through the Ottawa Valley we ended up with more traffic on the Kingston sub causing delays to Via trains. This is why Via trains operate a slower speeds than in the 1980's between Toronto and Montreal or Ottawa. The 3rd track on the Kingston sub is handling more Via trains, more CN freight trains and detoured CN freight trains from the Ottawa Valley resulting in congestion.