Nobody forces you to anything. Nevertheless, you might one day realize that people are much more willing to do what you want them to do if you at least pretend that you recognize, respect and value the efforts and contributions they make. Psychopaths could never be so successful in manipulating others, if they didn't exploit this nature of human feelings...
That was my point from the get go. I would love to see the tangible gains from HFR in the current corridor as it has not been explicitely explained yet.
Let's try an example which you mind more tangible, in which we compare two different timetable scenarios [
Note: all timings I mention below refer to the last pre-covid schedules, which you can find here]:
1) A schedule where trains stopping en-route in Alexandria arrive Montreal at 12:15 (#24), 13:16 (#34), 16:15 (#26), 18:15 (#28) and 20:57 (#38)
2) A schedule where trains stopping en-route in Aexandria arrive Montreal at 08:31 (#22), 13:16 (#34) and 20:57 (#38)
Which schedule has more departures in Alexandria?
Which schedule suits your personal needs better?
Now consider that the first train leaving Kingston and Cornwall arrives in Montreal at 11:57 (#60). Or that in order to get from Brockville to Montreal in the morning, you have to leave with #41 at 06:51 and wait 1:40h in Kingston before transferring onto #60, which still arrives only at 11:57 in Montreal (i.e. after more than 5 hours for a distance of just 204 km). Or that there is no train which allows you to travel from Cobourg and Belleville between 14:26 (#644) 18:48 (#54). Or that the earliest you can arrive in Belleville or Cobourg from Montreal on a Sunday is at 14:27 or 15:04, respectively (#65). Or that the latest you get from Cobourg to Montreal on a Saturday is by leaving at 14:26 and then waiting 1h50 in Kingston for #66 (total travel time: more than 5.5 hours for 426 km distance). Let alone that the only train from Kingston to Napanee or Port Hope leaves already at 05:32, whereas the earliest train from Port Hope, Trenton Junction and Napanee arrives in Kingston at 20:09. And can you believe that there is a two hour gap in the PM peak (from #46@15:40 to #54@17:40) for trains leaving from Toronto to Kingston (!)?
At the same time, three pairs of trains leave Kingston for Toronto less than 20 minutes apart:
- #43@09:13 and #61@09:26 (i.e. 13 minutes apart)
- #53@13:39 and #65@13:45 (i.e. 6 minutes apart - with both stopping in Belleville and Oshawa)
- #69@19:02 and #647@19:20 (i.e. 18 minutes apart - with both stopping in Oshawa only)
In the opposite direction, three pairs of trains leave Toronto less than 30 minutes apart:
- #66@15:15 and #46@15:40 (i.e. 25 minutes apart - with both stopping at Oshawa and Kingston)
- #646@16:35 and #68@17:00 (i.e. 25 minutes apart - with both stopping in Oshawa, but neither stopping in Kingston)
- #54@17:40 and #668@18:07 (i.e. 27 minutes apart - with both trains stopping in Guildwood, Oshawa and Kingston)
Note that together with trains #50/60 and #52/62 (which both operate as one single train from Toronto to just west of Brockville, where they split and continue separately to Ottawa and Montreal, respectively), there are thus five pairs of trains which operate less than 30 minutes apart, which means that if you merge all trains which are less than 30 minutes apart from another train, your eastbound train count would decrease from currently (nominally) 17 to (effectively) 12 trains - which might ring a bell:
Given that reducing the end-to-end travel time is the key driver of retaining competitiveness in the primary markets (Toronto-Ottawa, Toronto-Montreal and Ottawa-Montreal - i.e. where competition from other modes like the coach and plane are the fiercest), there is a pressure to make as few intermediary stops as possible, thus squeezing the number of stops each of these intermediary stations receives. At the same time, the fact all these three primary markets are served by separate routes leads to a very high number of Express trains (causing the duplication of services I've just highlighted above), which is the main reason that there are essentially only three trains focused around the intermediary markets along the Lakeshore (and their local needs):
- #651: leaving Kingston at 05:32 and making all intermediary stops before reaching Toronto at 08:25
- #54: leaving Toronto at 17:40 and making all intermediary stops until Kingston, before running non-stop to Fallowfield, followed by a final stop in Ottawa (arr. 22:07)
- #48: leaving Toronto at 18:40 and making all intermediary stops before reaching Ottawa at 23:16
In conclusion, the current (i.e. pre-covid - see the note in bold and italics further up) schedule fails to serve any of these intermediary communities well, so that most have somewhat useful service only to/from Toronto, if at all (Gananoque anyone?).
In contrast, the main contribution of HFR would be to consolidate the primary markets onto one single trunk route (Toronto-Ottawa-Montreal), thus increasing the number of frequencies offered in any of these three primary markets, without actually increasing the overall train mileage of trains serving primary markets. This allows the reorganization of the remaining Lakeshore services, by focusing on local needs without the pressure to keep end-to-end travel times (which matter little for someone living in Kingston, Belleville or Brockville) low. The result will be less overall trains travelling on the Lakeshore, but collectively they will be making many more stops, thus fostering local connectivity.
So, just to highlight what additional stops do for local connectivity: Trains 40 and 45 each make only 4 stops (Toronto-Kingston-Fallowfield-Ottawa - or v.v.), meaning that they only serve 6 (4 stops times the 3 other stops divided by two) different origin-destination pairs. Conversely, train #48 with its 14 stops at every station from Toronto to Ottawa serves 91 (14 stops times the other 13 stops divided by 2) origin-destination pairs. This means that local train #48 provides 15 times the connectivity which express trains #40 and #45 provide.
I know this was quite an extensive post, so maybe let that just sink for a moment...
PS: these are two posts with the configurations of the Siemens Trainsets which you were looking for today (I just happened to stumble over them again yesterday):
The bigger question is when the feds intend to declare their commitment to the project The HFR booster community is about to get a taste of what seemed to make pro-pipeline people so mad. As the regulator you have to play coy. Even if you really want to say yes. Perhaps even more so. The...
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The train follows a predictable route. They lay over at stations. You can charge at the end of the line during layovers. It's not that hard. I agree, though I still think charging at most if not all stations would help. Also solar panels should help with charging, I think only thin film...
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