Chromatix wrote:
In Europe, the UK alone has 10,261 route-miles of main-line railway, much of which is double-track or better.
That's for the entirety of the UK. Here, a single railroad, the BNSF (a merger of the Burlington-Northern and Santa Fe roads) has three times the route-miles of the UK, with the BNSF operating over 32,500 route-miles. The Union Pacific runs on 32,100 route-miles, and those are but two of the seven class I (largest) roads in the USA.
I think you still don't understand the enormity of freight rail operations in North America. I'll give you some stats to help. In the year 2000, the entire European Union (EU) moved 304 billion ton-kilometers of freight via rail. Contrast that with the approximately 2,400 billion ton-kilometers of freight moved by rail in Canada and the USA during the same period. Also during the year 2000, 38 percent of all freight within the USA traveled by rail.
Quote:
Scaling that up by population would suggest an equivalent track-mileage that's not vastly short of what you have in America. A higher population density means that the lines are more closely spaced, and serve a greater proportion of population centres with reasonably short journey times.
Except that doesn't really work out as it would seem. Again using the EU as an example, the population is around 510 million versus about 350 million total for Canada and USA. Yet, North American railroads have far more track than all of Europe (including non-members of the EU), operate trains over substantially greater distances and haul far greater tonnage.
Quote:
Stone aggregate trains of 4300 tons are regularly hauled in the UK, typically by a single Class 59 locomotive (which was derived from the SD40-2).
Yep! I'm familiar with the class 59, which came about due to Foster Yoeman's dissatisfaction with the class 56 units.
As long as a train of that weight is operated on reasonably level track a single Class 59 can handle it (although traction motor time ratings may be a problem at startup if there are any sticking brakes). Put that train in Mullan Pass in Montana, however, and it won't budge.
Quote:
One limitation of train weight and length is in coupling strength; an experiment in hauling an 11,000 ton train resulted in a broken coupling in the middle of the train (though a pair of locomotives had been able to start it). To compensate, more trains are run using lighter loads and fewer locomotives each.
That's one of the limitations of the buffer-and-link coupler technology. The Janney coupler does introduce some slack into the train, but is able to withstand enormous draft loads. Here, we think nothing of putting four GE Dash-9 (4250 HP) or EMD SD70AC (4500 HP) units at the head end and hauling 15,000 tons. The combined starting drawbar pull of such a consist is nearly a half-million pounds. No way buffer-and-link is going to withstand that much force.
Quote:
Which leaves the principal remaining problem as the provision of reliable electric power in remote areas...Where no high-tension grid power exists, an expedient solution would be to ship in a couple of big Fairbanks-Morse gensets to cover, say, a 25-mile section of line.
A Diesel-electric locomotive is in essence a self-propelled genset. Pardon me for saying it, but your idea is ridiculous. You'd spend boat-loads of money to erect a catenary and install power distribution, and then haul in a genset to energize it? I'm sure glad you aren't running my business!
Quote:
And yes, it requires some capital investment.
Some??? Again, you have no idea about the distances involved here, the terrain that has to be negotiated and the extremely hostile conditions in which our railroads operate. If our class I railroads truly felt there was long-term value in electrifying their mainlines (amounting to nearly 140,000 route-miles—don't forget that part) they would be well on their way to doing it. The economics aren't there and even if it were practical, the environmentalists would be up in arms about locating generating stations in sensitive areas of the wilderness.