Jordan or Plymouth Mad
Mid-Western Thunderer
Distance & all that, it counts in the USA. Plus the fact it's mostly a freight-oriented system that passenger traffic has to fit in with - apart from the commuter systems, mainly in the NorthEast States as far as I'm aware - whereas the UK network is passenger oriented & crowded, & freight has to fit in as best it can.Wow, that's impressive, I guess it's a huge country and all that. It makes sense unlike the UK and it's measly 8% or rail freight.
Tony
I was in road haulage for years, the food & drink supply chain for a lot of that time, and whilst there is some use of rail especially by Tesco, the size of the UK & 50 years of road development just doesn't make rail economic for much of that particular traffic. An article about it in an industry paper, by Tesco decision makers, basically said that if they could transport their stock by rail profitably, they would. I believe they now run 10 rail routes, so it is something they are trying to do.
The UK loading gauge also restricts rail freight - special low-riding wagons had to be built to accomodate 'hi cube' ISO containers in the UK. Photos of double-stacked American container trains always make me smile! Admittedly, there are loading gauge restrictions for those in some US States, again, more in the East where infrastructure is older, there are more tunnels and they're lower.






























































































