tk421 wrote:
Al Bundy wrote:
LJ wrote:
Al Bundy wrote:
LJ wrote:
Al Bundy wrote:
sjmvsfscs08 wrote:
2- The United States needs to get on the ball with high speed rail. Push the boundaries of current technology. There is no reason, with the center of our country being so gigantic and for the most part flat, we don't have trains cruising at 200mph+ across the plains! It's the god damn plane and car industries killing it though. In Texas, Southwest Airlines' lobbyists put a law into effect that barred a high-speed rail to cover the triangle, well it needs it. So does Florida. It's about damn time.
I am not against high speed rail if it could be useful. Even if we had trains going 200mph+ (I haven't seen estimates even close to that high), it is still much slower than flying. How much cheaper would it be than flying? As stated by someone earlier, most people would still need a car to get to and from the stations.
If the free market can find a way to do it, go for it. I just hate to see tax money used on a train project if people would rather drive or use planes.
180mph high speed rail would be great for regional travel, not cross country. Imagine hopping on a train in Columbus and going to the Indians game in Cleveland, you don't have to drive, it costs $30 each, and it takes just over and hour.
It might be worth it in that case if you have 1 person going to the game. If you have 4 people going to the game, it would cost $120 for the train. If you drove, the cost for gas and parking would be under $40.
Yeah but if it's a late game you don't have to worry about a hotel or driving home tired. The cost wouldn't be the big draw, it would be the convenience. I would use it for sure.
It would be great if it could be used. I just have my doubts if it would be used enough to justify the cost. I think the cost would be a big disadvantage unless they gave some type of deal (such as monthly pass or group package). I don't see too many families of 4 shelling out $120 when they could drive it and park for less than a 1/3 of the cost.
I agree. Outside the NE, which already has a pretty good rail system, I don't know of any part of the country where "high speed" rail would be used enough to justify the massive costs to the taxpayers. Unless it can be guaranteed to sustain itself, I don't think any should be built. The last thing the taxpayers need is to build these massive infrastructures and have to subsidize high speed rail just like Amtrak.
It would be used plenty. Do you know how many people who travel back and forth between dayton, columbus, cincy, and cleveland multiple times on a weekly basis?
If we had regional rail high speed rail, my gf and I would take more weekend trips to see her family in Buffalo NY.
I would travel to more Pittsburgh games
Having used the NE rail system to go from Trenton NJ to NYC multiple times, I feel like it is the way to go for ~300 mile trips.