lenaitch
Senior Member
The new legal concept of 'ultimate domain'?
The Windsor to Woodstock section would actually be both cheap and very easy to construct IF Ottawa grabs a pair and puts CN & CP in their place.
VIA already owns the entire section from Windsor to Chatham and east of Chatham there are 2 direct lines to London and both run north of the 401. One owned by CN & the other by CP. The ridiculous thing is that they run parallel to each other but are only about 3 km apart. Ottawa should step in, offer them a cool billion and tell them to hand over one of the lines to VIA using ultimate domain and make them share their tracks. The exact same thing occurs east of London where the tracks both converge at Woodstock but are about 10km apart.
I don't think Ottawa will spend untold billions on a line that is not zero emissions so that cancels out high speed diesel. I think they will probably go for catenary/battery technology. Even the Japanese Shinkansen trains have battery power. They can go only a maximum of 40km but have them as a back-up system in case of power outages {usually due to earthquakes} allowing the trains to continue to the next small station. They also have them for usage in longer tunnels where they are very inaccessible by repair vehicles often not even close to a major road. This would be very analogous to the section roughly between Peterborough and Smith Falls where some of the track is basically completely inaccessible. and hence repairs to electrical supply would be very time consuming and could shut down the system for potentially days.
Due to the relatively small length that the trains can run on battery-only, the battery system itself is quite small meaning the trains lose very little de/acceleration and top speeds due to the weight of the batteries.
why not just electrify the remaining 10% ? It would simplify train operations and rolling stock complexities since they dont need to be bimode. Its a waste of money for all the extra infrastructure and equipment just for a tiny fraction of the line.![]()
Quebec City/Toronto high-frequency rail link will be 90% electric: Via CEO
The High-Frequency Rail project is one that Via has been championing for several years, and aims to build dedicated tracks within the Quebec City-Toronto corridor.montrealgazette.com
why not just electrify the remaining 10% ? It would simplify train operations and rolling stock complexities since they dont need to be bimode. Its a waste of money for all the extra infrastructure and equipment just for a tiny fraction of the line.
why not just electrify the remaining 10% ? It would simplify train operations and rolling stock complexities since they dont need to be bimode. Its a waste of money for all the extra infrastructure and equipment just for a tiny fraction of the line.
The Siemens fleet is bimodal. I suspect any HFR service launch will simply fit catenary on top and use diesel for the last 10%. The debate of what to do with the last 10% is probably only relevant to some future Venture fleet replacement after 2060.
The only way there's a new fleet is if HFR actually substantially morphs into HSR lite with the capacity to support substantially higher sustained speeds for large portions. That's highly unlikely, to need a new fleet, given that the Venture fleet is rated till 201 kph.
Well, if the request to do 300kmh average speed is taken seriously, then there'd need to be a new fleet.
I believe there isn't enough fleet of the Ventures to service the existing corridor and the HFR routing. It really is up to the private consortium that is picked to choose the fleet.
what request? All I have ever seen is 200km/h as the top speed, which is in itself higher than the original plan for 177km/h.Well, if the request to do 300kmh average speed is taken seriously, then there'd need to be a new fleet.
I believe there isn't enough fleet of the Ventures to service the existing corridor and the HFR routing. It really is up to the private consortium that is picked to choose the fleet.
what request? All I have ever seen is 200km/h as the top speed, which is in itself higher than the original plan for 177km/h.
"The first phase will connect Quebec and Toronto, with stops in Trois-Rivières, Montreal, Ottawa and Peterborough. The second phase will connect Toronto and the city of Windsor. The Minister challenges companies to come up with a project that would allow the train to reach a cruising speed of 300 km/h."Posted today at 8am. Translated article below from here.
I agree. And I do not understand the logic of abandoning the existing routes from Quebec City / Montreal / Brockville/ Kingston/Toronto to some sort of degraded level of service from what exists now. Peterborough could easily be a regional GO Transit connection (as can be KW, and even Brantford). The more I read about this 'project' the more I agree it is set up to fail. They seem to be envisioning another HS2 concept, and no where do I see any numbers that make that concept work."The first phase will connect Quebec and Toronto, with stops in Trois-Rivières, Montreal, Ottawa and Peterborough. The second phase will connect Toronto and the city of Windsor. The Minister challenges companies to come up with a project that would allow the train to reach a cruising speed of 300 km/h."
I truly believe the feds are piling on the requests to ensure this project goes nowhere, to make it so expensive and unfeasible it gets canned.
"The first phase will connect Quebec and Toronto, with stops in Trois-Rivières, Montreal, Ottawa and Peterborough. The second phase will connect Toronto and the city of Windsor. The Minister challenges companies to come up with a project that would allow the train to reach a cruising speed of 300 km/h."
And I do not understand the logic of abandoning the existing routes from Quebec City / Montreal / Brockville/ Kingston/Toronto to some sort of degraded level of service from what exists now.




