Having traveled quite a bit I can tell you that Canada has the worst transit system I have ever seen. We are so behind that it would take trillions to catch up.
That's what I thought. Thanks. It was funny when I first heard the concept. Kind of like the dog that ran away 3 days ago being still visible.OK, let's see...Well, many parts of the country except for the much of the far north have trees. Quite a few trees. And, parts of southern Saskatchewan don't have very many trees. Therefore, having "the tree" on the north side of Hwy1 east of Regina is quite a thing to behold.
I think it's within sight of the current rail line thus making it a possible "point of interest" if a passenger train went by. Mind you, it must be in sight because I recall if you step up on a tuna can in roughly the same location, you can see Winnipeg!
(I know, that's old but still sorta' funny)...
Like what?Do you think Canada should start to consider establishing a service like
Nifty, but I hope if it gets built for use it was built by people who use good parts rather than crap and who are careful they don't use "shortcuts" like North American labor usually does.East bound about 10km from Regina you see plenty of trees all the way to Halifax. West bound is a different story. We complain about Yanks not knowing Cdn geography....
Back on track to original post.
I like traveling by rail as much as possible. Just not in Canada.
We can easily add High Speed Rail using good old existing lines and existing Cdn technology and equipment. The Jet Train
Bombardier makes a jet turbine train that is very efficient, needs no wires and can run on existing tracks.
Believe it or not VIA gets up to 160km/h on the prairie which is about all the diesel electrics can handle. The track isn't the limiting factor.
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The JetTrain is an experimental high-speed passenger train built by Bombardier Transportation in an attempt to make European-style high-speed service more financially appealing to passenger railways in North America. It uses the same LRC-derived tilting carriages as the Acela Express trains that Bombardier sold to Amtrak in the 1990s and a similar locomotive, but instead of being powered by overhead lines as is the Acela and most other high-speed trains, it is powered by a combination of small diesel engine for low speed and turboshaft engines for high speeds.
We don't have enough people to justify the cost. As an R & D project that could eventually be sold to places like India and China it has more possibilities. Heavy lifters or small high volume systems?From where to where? They are expensive.
There is a line between Revelstoke and Calgary that I know of. Another from Vancouver to MacKenzie. and lots of short ones in other places of BC.We just travelled from Halifax to Prince Rupert by rail.
We stopped for short stays a few times, to break up the
trip and see some sites.
The train trip is awsome. I loved every minute of it.
Slows life down, you can see everything, and I loved
everything I saw, including the prairies and the boreal
forests. A bullet train would be good for those needing
to save the time that a train usually allows. Probably
never will happen in the west, unless it was just in the
fraser valley/vancouver area.
Maybe in the east 'corridors', can't imagine anywhere else.
Having traveled quite a bit I can tell you that Canada has the worst transit system I have ever seen. We are so behind that it would take trillions to catch up.
Based on the number of people riding railways or driving on highways, Canada should have a decent coast-to-coast highway system.
I drove about half of it. The western half of it seemed fine to me.We do,it's called the trans Canada highway.
We don't have enough people to justify the cost. As an R & D project that could eventually be sold to places like India and China it has more possibilities. Heavy lifters or small high volume systems?
Why stop there, use the same system basics that are used in ski-hill lifts to develope inner city mass transit systems. Single and double seaters, gps driven to your specified destination. Light standards already in place could serve as the masts.
"We do,it's called the trans Canada highway."
Have you driven on it coast-to coast?
"I drove about half of it. The western half of it seemed fine to me."
Have you driven in Ontario?
If we can not drive from Halifax to Vancouver without a traffic light to impinge on your progress like you could drive from Seattle to Miami, or from Boston to San Diago, our high-falluted Trans-Canada Highway is nothing but Major Mickey Mouse, third world highway.
Do you think Canada should start to consider establishing a service like
Darn, I've been trying to complete that thought...
"Do you think Canada should start to consider establishing a service-like attitude in their approach to customer service in general?" was one possibility. Answer? Yes!
"Do you think Canada should start to consider establishing a service-like approach to rail travel?" was another. Answer: Yes!
"Do you think Canada should start to consider establishing a service like China has in place?" Answer: Yes!
Am I getting close to the truth here?