Don’t you just love that “new car smell”? Well, that’s coming… slowly… to Amtrak, as the nation’s passenger railroad replaces its old fleet of cars.
GOODBYE AMFLEET: Amtrak’s remaining fleet of almost 600
Amfleet cars date back to the 1970s and was modeled after the Budd Company’s
successful Metroliner
cars, which ran from 1969 to 2006. Some
of those Amtfleet cars have traveled over four million miles by now so, despite
maintenance and the $17 million “refresh” of their interiors in 2017, they are
ripe for replacement.Amfleet
The round-sided stainless
steel cars, mimicking an airplane, have smaller windows than what’s planned to
replace them. Connecticut’s own Cesar Vergara, who designed
the interior of Metro-North’s M8 cars, criticized the Amfleet design for
trying to look like a jetliner.
“The vision for the future of the railroad should be based on
defining its own dreams, not appropriating them solely from someone else's
experience,” he wrote
in 1992.
HELLO AIRO: The new cars Amtrak has
ordered will be built by Siemens, which has an order for 83 trainsets which
should be in service by 2026 if all goes well.
The first prototype debuted in October 2023. The total contract is worth more than $3
billion.New Airo Cars
The new cars will have the
same two-by-two seating with AC and USB plugs for each row. Their tray tables will be bigger and stronger
than Amfleet’s clunky models and will feature a cup holder so your java doesn’t
hit your lap if the train should lurch during the ride. And yes, they’ll also have 5G Wi-Fi (Metro-North
take note!).
Pulling the trains will be
electric locomotives, also built by Siemens.
Outside of the electrified Northeast Corridor these Charger locos will
be diesel. There’s also a hybrid engine
in design that will run electric “under the wire” and use batteries on
non-electrified lines.
When delivered, the first Airo
trains will run in the Pacific Northwest then come to Washington to Boston
trains in the Northeast. There will be
traditional coaches, first class and café cars.
The new cars are based on
Siemens’ Venture cars already running on Florida’s Brightline and Canada’s VIA
Rail. Those cars are similar to the
company’s Viaggio Comfort electric
trainsets running in Austria.
TESTING: The
new cars have over 4000 electrical connections, so extensive testing will be
required before they go into service. As
Metro-North learned when it took delivery of its new M8 cars from Kawasaki
in 2010, it takes a while to work the bugs out.
BUFF
TESTING: One of the most interesting tests that all
new trains in the US must pass is called “buff testing”, to see how they’d
survive a crash. The cars’ under-frames must
sustain 40 tons of stress without deforming, a much
higher standard than European or Japanese requirements.
That
means US trains are heavier and less fuel efficient but, as
we’ve seen in European high speed train crashes, will be much more
survivable in the event of a collision.
It
will be a while before the new Airo fleet passes muster and joins the
Acela-replacement Avelia Liberty trains that, after extensive delays, will go
into service on the Northeast Corridor later this year.
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