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Skeena and the 2 Northern Quebec routes were the 4 I was thinking of. The Vancouver Island,if it ever comes back is another one. The Gaspe one is likely too long for it.
You've going to cycle the skeena train sets out of TMC? That's 10k round trip for maintenance. Not to mention 8 days round trip.
 
How are you going to cycle the train set through Toronto if there is only one set? You would need two in rotation.

Even with a 3x per week service.
What other VIA route requires two coaches and a baggage car? Only Sarnia comes to mind. So 3 train sets for rotation between North Bay and Sarnia? But you can't use them elsewhere because it's too short.
You've going to cycle the skeena train sets out of TMC? That's 10k round trip for maintenance. Not to mention 8 days round trip.
Would you mind continuing this conversation in private messages rather than here, as I recall at least a dozen times where the very same points were explained to the very same commenter?
 
I have not been following this thread closely, but does anyone have any idea how much adding "shunt enhancers" will cost per consist, and whether that would definitively resolve the issue with CN?
 
I have not been following this thread closely, but does anyone have any idea how much adding "shunt enhancers" will cost per consist, and whether that would definitively resolve the issue with CN?
American figures: The FRA’s Consolidated Rail Infrastructure and Safety Improvements (CRISI) granted $58.8 million to Amtrak to install Onboard Shunt Enhancement devices on 443 locomotives and 192 cab cars to prevent trains from losing shunt, which can cause problems with signal and crossing-gate activation, part of a $2.4B announcement. By my math, $93,000 US per installation.
 
American figures: The FRA’s Consolidated Rail Infrastructure and Safety Improvements (CRISI) granted $58.8 million to Amtrak to install Onboard Shunt Enhancement devices on 443 locomotives and 192 cab cars to prevent trains from losing shunt, which can cause problems with signal and crossing-gate activation, part of a $2.4B announcement. By my math, $93,000 US per installation.
it seems that grant may have fallen victim (at least a delay) thanks to the change in administration (see last post from May)
There was also a labour objection to a waiver request
 
American figures: The FRA’s Consolidated Rail Infrastructure and Safety Improvements (CRISI) granted $58.8 million to Amtrak to install Onboard Shunt Enhancement devices on 443 locomotives and 192 cab cars to prevent trains from losing shunt, which can cause problems with signal and crossing-gate activation, part of a $2.4B announcement. By my math, $93,000 US per installation.
So $93,000 per venture set? Multiplied by 32 and converted to CAD that's about $4 millions. That seems like a small amount of money in the grand scheme of things. I wish the federal government just gave this to VIA.
 
So $93,000 per venture set? Multiplied by 32 and converted to CAD that's about $4 millions. That seems like a small amount of money in the grand scheme of things. I wish the federal government just gave this to VIA.

How much would adding more train cars to the Ventures cost in comparison? Anyone know a ballpark figure? One comes with the advantage of more seating and the other does not.
 
How much would adding more train cars to the Ventures cost in comparison? Anyone know a ballpark figure? One comes with the advantage of more seating and the other does not.
Considering the contract for the trains back in 2018 was a $1B, it would prob be a few million each.
 
How much would adding more train cars to the Ventures cost in comparison? Anyone know a ballpark figure? One comes with the advantage of more seating and the other does not.
Dividing the total price tag of $989 million by 32 trainsets and then 7 units (assuming that a locomotive is twice as expensive as a car) suggests $4.5 million a car, so maybe a ballpark figure of $5 million is plausible?
 
Dividing the total price tag of $989 million by 32 trainsets and then 7 units (assuming that a locomotive is twice as expensive as a car) suggests $4.5 million a car, so maybe a ballpark figure of $5 million is plausible?
So one car would cost more than adding shunt enhancers to all the Venture sets by my calculation.
 
So one car would cost more than adding shunt enhancers to all the Venture sets by my calculation.
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So $93,000 per venture set? Multiplied by 32 and converted to CAD that's about $4 millions. That seems like a small amount of money in the grand scheme of things. I wish the federal government just gave this to VIA.
No - $93k USD x2 per set. One each on the cab car and loco.

And then there's the whole issue that they need to be certified in Canada. It took the US 4 years to certify them there, expect that it will take a similarly ridiculous amount of time here.

Dan
 
Totally untested technology in Canada and US railway unions are actually against the exemption allowing for the shunt-enhancers? This is not off the shelf technology in either country, and with possible similar union opposition (?) and government red tape (as in the current Ministerial Order) here in Canada, it would be a horserace to see whether more Venture cars could be ordered, built and paid for, or whether shunt-enhancers could be designed, tested and implemented. Perhaps more like a tortoise race now that I think of it!
 

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