Urban Sky
Senior Member
I was talking about "clues", not definitive answers: The Wikipedia article for Guildwood Station states that the rationale for opening this station was " to provide an easy connection to Toronto Transit Commission buses along Kingston Road, as well as car parking". The comparison with the article for Eglinton station shows that both stations were opened at the same time (1967, i.e. when GO Transit started operations on the Lakeshore East line) without any mention of a pre-existing historic station (unlike Scarborough or Rouge Hill). The combination of these clues suggests that the station was chosen because of its connections to the TTC and the abundance of parking spaces. Speaking of which: 1348 parking spaces for only 363,000 GO riders (the article quotes 242,000 riders, but that figure refers to April to November 2018, not the entire year) seems to be quite an overkill, as it allows for almost every rider to arrive by car (363,000 GO riders divided by 48 weeks and 5 weekdays = 1512 riders per weekday), even if we add VIA passengers...That only tells you when they did it (when GO service started). Not why they chose Guildwood GO.
Don't worry, it never really happened:Gosh, 3 trains a day from Toronto to Montreal, all running in under 4 hours.
Source: "The Railway Game" by Julius Lukasiewicz (1976, pp. 151-153)
I was considering to crop away the "Turbo Train" section when posting the April 1967 schedule, but just to make the point for how representative that schedule is: the travel time of 3:59 lasted no longer than the first deployment of the Turbo Train (one month) and was subsequently increased to 4:05 (second deployment in May 1970), 4:10 (third and final deployment in 1973) and 4:30 in 1977 (when VIA took over) before the Turbo Train was replaced with an LRC train of the same timing (oh, yes, and it never operated at more than 30-60% of the originally promised service level of 20 departures per week):
Compiled from: official CN and VIA Rail timetables
And just to make a final point about Wikipedia, you really don't need to buy an obscure forty year old book on eBay to get a pretty decent recollection of what happened:
Canadian service
[...]
The Turbo's first demonstration run in December 1968, included a large press contingent. An hour into its debut run, the Turbo collided with a truck at a highway crossing near Kingston. Despite the concerns that lightweight trains like the Turbo would be dangerous in collisions, the train remained upright and largely undamaged. Large beams just behind the nose, designed for this purpose, absorbed the impact of the collision and limited the damage to the fiberglass clamshell doors and underlying metal. The train was returned from repairs within a week. No one was killed, though this event has been cited as a main deterrent to Canada’s efforts to develop modern passenger rail.
Initial commercial service started soon after. On its first westbound run the Turbo attained 104 mph (167 km/h) 10 minutes outside of Dorval. During speed runs on April 22, 1976, it achieved 140.55 mph (226 km/h) near Gananoque, the Canadian record to this day. However, in regular passenger service the Turbotrains were limited to 95 mph (153 km/hr) in Canada because of the Canadian route's numerous grade-crossings, estimated at 240 public highway grade-crossings and 700 agricultural or private crossings between Montreal and Toronto.
Technical problems, including brake systems freezing in winter, required a suspension of service in early January 1969. Service resumed in May 1970; however, technical problems again caused the Canadian National to withdraw all Turbotrains from service again in February 1971. At this point, the CN management publicly expressed great dissatisfaction with these trainsets, with one vice-president claiming, "the trains never did measure up to the original contract and they haven't yet"; the manufacturer United Aircraft Company publicly claimed that CN suspended Turbotrain service for relatively minor technical problems. [...]
During the "downtime" CN changed their plans, and in 1971 a rebuild program began, converting the five seven-car sets to three nine-car sets. Several minor changes were added. The engine exhaust fouled the roof windows of the power car, so these were plated over, and a grill was added to the front of the engines just behind the clamshell doors. The remaining power and passenger cars were sold to Amtrak as two 4-car sets. One of those sets sideswiped a freight train on a test run in July 1973 and three of the cars were written off. The sale of the surviving Power Dome Coach car was cancelled, and it stood spare until a sister unit caught fire and burned in September 1975.
The three rebuilt 9-car sets entered service for CN in late 1973. CN ran the Turbos from Toronto-Montreal-Toronto with stops at Dorval, Kingston and Guildwoodon the Quebec City-Windsor Corridor. Original train numbers were Train 62 which left Toronto at 12:45 p.m. and arrived in Montreal at 4:44 p.m. Train 63 left Montreal at 12:45 p.m. and arrived in Toronto at 4:44 p.m. (Both were daily trains.) Train 68 left Toronto at 6:10 p.m. and arrived in Montreal at 10:14 p.m., while Train 69 left Montreal at 6:10 p.m. and arrived in Toronto at 10:14 p.m. (The evening trains did not run on Saturdays.) The trip took 3 hours and 59 minutes downtown-to-downtown on trains 62 and 63, while the evening trains were slightly slower, taking four hours and four minutes to complete the run. Turbo service was about a full hour faster than CN's previous express trains, the "Rapido". However, even the runs made by the Turbotrains in the late 1970s still fell substantially short of their intended 120 mph design speed; the fastest average speed for the Turbotrain in regular scheduled Canadian passenger service was an intermediate booking was from Kingston to Guildwood (102 minutes for the 145.2 miles between the two cities nonstop at an average speed of 85.4 mph (137.4 km/hr).[18]
By 1974, after substantial modifications of the gearbox device and pendular suspension, and reinforcement of the sound insulation, the Turbotrains finally took up untroubled service. CN operated the Turbos until 1978, when their passenger operations were taken over by Via Rail, who continued the service.
One of the three remaining trains developed an oil leak and caught fire on the afternoon run from Montréal to Toronto on May 29, 1979. It was stopped west of Morrisburg. It took some time for the fire engines to arrive as they were forced to drive on the track bed. The power car and two coaches were totally destroyed. There were no injuries, although a rapid disembarkation was needed. The train was eventually towed back to the Turcot yard in Montréal and remained there for several years, covered by tarpaulins.
The Turbo's final run was on October 31, 1982, when they were replaced by the all-Canadian LRC trainsets from Bombardier Transportation, which employed conventional diesel-electric locomotives. Although they had an early reputation for unreliability, according to CN's records, the rebuilt TurboTrains had an availability rate of over 97% for their careers with CN and Via. The LRC suffered from similar teething problems, notably with the tilt system locking the cars in a tilted position.
[...]
Indeed, the only period where 3:59 was sustained for more than a few months was one train (the 5pm departure called "Metropolis" when VIA corridor trains had names) from October 1992 to May 1999 and again from May 2000 to May 2005:The first train scheduled to operate at 4 hours or less was the Metropolis in 1992.
Compiled from: official CN and VIA Rail timetables
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