The grandparent commenter is correct in saying 99.99% of US rail is designed entirely around moving freight. And I’d usually agree it does it well, but the system seems to be breaking down fairly publicly of late. Regardless, it’s essentially an apples to oranges comparison vs European/Asian passenger rail - a (very poor) reverse analogy would be to fault hyper regional business airports for not facilitating giant cargo planes.
Everything else you mentioned is basically correct but a large portion of the dysfunction is due to the specific need to lay new rail to get around the freight priority system that dominates essentially all of our existing rail lines. States are trying to roll out modern dedicated passenger lines but the projects keep getting derailed (pun intended) by politicians.
The Acela dedicated passenger line in the Northeast is (possibly) the only place in the country where you can make a reasonable comparison to the rest of the world.
And having ridden both Acela Express and Eurostar in the past decade, my opinion is that Eurostar is a very clear winner but not quite as obscenely as most people would expect.
Eg: The Amtrak cars are MUCH comfier but the train runs at approximately half the speed of Eurostar (Acela is supposedly capable of 135mph but it only hit 125ish when I rode - I clocked an avg ~90mph vs avg ~180mph on Eurostar iirc). No freight priority issues, etc. Still extremely last gen feeling, but more in a “this can be fixed” way and less in the “well this is utterly hopeless” like the rest of the country.
No, but also yes.
The grandparent commenter is correct in saying 99.99% of US rail is designed entirely around moving freight. And I’d usually agree it does it well, but the system seems to be breaking down fairly publicly of late. Regardless, it’s essentially an apples to oranges comparison vs European/Asian passenger rail - a (very poor) reverse analogy would be to fault hyper regional business airports for not facilitating giant cargo planes.
Everything else you mentioned is basically correct but a large portion of the dysfunction is due to the specific need to lay new rail to get around the freight priority system that dominates essentially all of our existing rail lines. States are trying to roll out modern dedicated passenger lines but the projects keep getting derailed (pun intended) by politicians.
The Acela dedicated passenger line in the Northeast is (possibly) the only place in the country where you can make a reasonable comparison to the rest of the world.
And having ridden both Acela Express and Eurostar in the past decade, my opinion is that Eurostar is a very clear winner but not quite as obscenely as most people would expect.
Eg: The Amtrak cars are MUCH comfier but the train runs at approximately half the speed of Eurostar (Acela is supposedly capable of 135mph but it only hit 125ish when I rode - I clocked an avg ~90mph vs avg ~180mph on Eurostar iirc). No freight priority issues, etc. Still extremely last gen feeling, but more in a “this can be fixed” way and less in the “well this is utterly hopeless” like the rest of the country.