trains

Magazyn ze zdalnego serwera może być niekompletny. Zobacz więcej na oryginalnej instancji.

Sunshine, w New World Train Electrification in Colour
@Sunshine@lemmy.ca avatar

The purple line is surprising in Venezuela as they have abundant oil, I guess they want to export the oil at higher prices to other countries.

CarbonAlpine, w How do I learn a freight trains schedule?

I’m a freight conductor. There is no schedule, unless you notice them happening at around the same time every day, you won’t find a pattern. We pretty much get a call and hour and a half before we need to go in at any random time of day or night and that’s when the train moves.

Latuga17, w California’s new electric train makes for a shockingly better trip—we tried it

So glad that caltrain go ally has what would be considered normal in the rest of the world 🙄. But seriously this is a massive improvement and commuter rail systems should see this success and do this instead of trying to have battery powered trains and diesels that run under northeast corridor wires.

fpslem,

Agreed! I feel like Americans can’t imagine a future without seeing it somewhere in their home country. They travel to London or to Paris, enjoy the high-speed trains and the frequent metro service, and then come home and keep getting in their cars. So actually experiencing modern electric rail service (albeit not yet high-speed rail) in their own country is a big deal.

Rentlar, w I have been seeing this smaller engine a lot recently

From the manufacturer’s website, appears to be a maintenance of way (railroad and ballast maintenance) vehicle.

nokturne213,

Thanks. I was going to look it up today. I am going to try and build a LEGO version of it. I was unsure if herzog was the manufacturer or the operator. But I figured either was it was a good place to start.

beejjorgensen, w Scenic train ride from Bergen to Oslo (Norway)
@beejjorgensen@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

Had the pleasure of doing this last year. Recommended!

allen, w Abt System Train on the Oigawa Railway, Japan
@allen@rail.chat avatar

@zabadoh

This one is interesting. The Abt system is only between two stations on a steep grade and a separate locomotive shunts with the train, not shown here.

The picture is of the beautiful and unique station that is located on top of the bridge.

I've ridden this one, and I would recommend earplugs if you have sensitive ears.

Immersive_Matthew, w How much does it cost to build a shortline railroad?

Is there transit on both ends as one of the challenges with rail in NA is once you arrive at your destination, it can be hard to make that last mile or so transit. It also has to be as fast or faster overall than driving and it has to be cheaper as people will just default to cars again. That has been my experience living in cities around the world.

yessikg, w FRA (US Federal Railroad Admin) Announces $900k in New Planning and Development Grants to Support Intercity Passenger Rail Services
@yessikg@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

They could spend so much more if they stopped spending so much on roads

smitty825, w Coaster double-deck coaches unveiled

I live in San Diego and follow the local public transportation scene and this is the first I’ve heard of these new cars. It’s not even featured on their news page! gonctd.com/about-nctd/newsroom/

tonytins,
@tonytins@pawb.social avatar

Odd. It seems like Coaster did order new coaches back in 2020, according to Rail Journal.

railjournal.com/…/north-county-transit-district-o…

litchralee, w Court rejects VTA request for order to end strike for technical reasons

For reference, the letter written to the Governor of California is to invoke the provisions of Government Code 3612, which if used would cause an automatic 1 week cooling-off period so a Board of Investigation can convene and gather facts for the Governor. At that point, if the Governor concludes from those facts that significant transit disruption would occur, or there is a risk to public safety or welfare, the cooling off period can be extended by court order up to 60 days.

This proviso in law appears to have been added in 2012, as a trailer bill off the end of that year’s Budget, that reorganized some parts of the state government.

litchralee, w For Competing Railroads, What’s New Is Old

In a slight departure from the norm, the article’s title suits the article but the subheader is superfluous and unsupported. What on earth does pursuing advanced degrees have to do with railroad antitrust laws? The only color that this blurb adds to the article is the ugliest sort of “yellow”.

The subheader’s premise is wholly betrayed by the article’s final conclusion:

In doing so, the Court cited a Rule of Reason it first articulated in 1899—that large size and monopoly in themselves are not necessarily evil.

So yes, certain trust-like behavior can be worthy of “regulatory and judicial punishment”, because that’s exactly what the public policy demands. Does it depend on a lot of things? Of course! Most things do!

I bemoan articles that lean into an assumption that something is cut-and-dry, because that’s almost never the case, but here, whichever editor wrote that subheader did the author dirty. Because the article body is mostly fine, let down by bad editorship.

tonytins,
@tonytins@pawb.social avatar

If it weren’t for the fact that I “ran out of free stories,” I’d be able to quote the article’s contents and not rely on the subheader.

Zwiebel, w Steam locomotive in Cluj-Napoca train station (Romania)
litchralee, w China's HSR has served 22 billion passengers since 2009

I can see that the source for the data is written below the chart, but is there also a link to the tabular data?

lemmus, w China Plans ‘Silver Trains’ to Encourage Aging Population to Travel
@lemmus@lemmy.world avatar

They’ll have more “silver trains” than the US has… trains.

litchralee, (edited ) w California's Coast Rail Corridor: an overview

As a side note, the development of the corridor would not only improve connectivity of Central California residents to the Bay Area and SoCal, but also to the Sacramento region. Although the Capitol Corridor does reach Sacramento via the Bay Area, this section is crowded by commuters and the train must navigate the slow curves of San Pablo Bay west of Martinez. From the thumbnail above, someone in SLO might have a quicker journey to Sacramento via Paso Robles and Hanford, bypassing the Bay Area entirely.

The inland town of Hanford is presently served by the San Joaquins but is also home to a future High Speed Rail station, as part of the first operating segment from Bakersfield to Merced. It is reasonably expected that when that high speed section is complete, travelers from the Paso Robles bus can board a high speed train north to Merced, with a cross-platform guaranteed transfer to the conventional San Joaquins train waiting at the station to continue north to its existing destinations of Sacramento or Oakland.

Though as it happens, the San Joaquins itself is pursuing an expansion to the north, beyond Sacramento towards Chico, overlapping communities which are served only by the two one-way Coast Starlight trains. This expansion will use UP’s Sacramento Subdivision that runs north-south.

An odd quirk of Sacramento is that the principal train station sits only on UP’s Martinez Subdivision, which runs west to the Bay Area and east to Reno. The only junction between the Martinez and Sacramento subdivisions is Haggin Junction east of the station. But Haggin is not a complete junction, and northbound traffic on the Sacramento Subdivision must pass north of and then reverse into the junction to enter Sacramento station to the west.

This is not ideal for the San Joaquins northern expansion, and so they’ve decided to outright skip the main Sacramento station in their plans. Accordingly, for someone in SLO heading to Chico, it is indeed more advantageous to travel inland by bus and then train, to avoid the Bay Area congestion and a connection from the Capitol Corridor somewhere in Sacramento. But for a destination east of Sacramento, the Capitol Corridor route would be more advantageous.

No plans exist to upgrade Haggin Junction, nevermind the disruption it would cause to downtown Sacramento. Instead, the transfer to Sacramento station would likely happen from a new San Joaquins station linked to SacRT’s Gold LRT line in Midtown Sacramento.

As for why San Joaquins couldn’t expand operations on their already-occupied Fresno Subdivision and has to build these new stations just to head north, it is because the Fresno Subdivision is at max capacity, and because turning north would require a brief traversal west onto the Martinez Subdivision, until turning north at Haggin Junction. This is too much impact for UP to accept, in addition to wholly bypassing the communities between Lodi and Sacramento which don’t yet have passenger rail service, even though they see freight trains on the Sacramento Subdivision.

  • Wszystkie
  • Subskrybowane
  • Moderowane
  • Ulubione
  • rowery
  • fediversum
  • Technologia
  • esport
  • muzyka
  • test1
  • NomadOffgrid
  • slask
  • retro
  • Spoleczenstwo
  • krakow
  • giereczkowo
  • MiddleEast
  • trains@lemmy.ml
  • Blogi
  • sport
  • Gaming
  • Pozytywnie
  • tech
  • informasi
  • Psychologia
  • FromSilesiaToPolesia
  • niusy
  • Cyfryzacja
  • lieratura
  • ERP
  • kino
  • shophiajons
  • warnersteve
  • Wszystkie magazyny