The $140BN Race to Build America's First High-Speed Railway

2023 ж. 27 Жел.
2 356 514 Рет қаралды

This new plan for a US bullet train might actually work.
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Note: USD $140BN referenced in the title of this video represents the total amount of money that is being invested across all high speed railway projects across the US at the time of publication.
Full story here - theb1m.com/video/brightline-west-america-high-speed-rail
Additional footage and images courtesy of Brightline/Brightline West, California High-Speed Rail Authority, Amtrak, 8 News Now, Erik Wilhelm, Lionsgate, Scott Portier, Texas Central and The Roaming Railfan and Train Guru.
Research sources:
www.washingtonpost.com/transportation/2023/12/05/brightline-west-high-speed-rail-grant/
www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2023-07-27/florida-s-wealth-flood-spurs-high-speed-train-bonds-past-peers
uichighspeed.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/High-Speed-around-the-world_FINAL.pdf
www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2023/12/08/fact-sheet-president-biden-announces-billions-to-deliver-world-class-high-speed-rail-and-launch-new-passenger-rail-corridors-across-the-country/
web.archive.org/web/20070504173421/www.railwayage.com/dec99/passenger.html
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  • Head to brilliant.org/TheB1M/ for a 30-day free trial and the first 200 people will receive 20% off their annual subscription 🙌

    @TheB1M@TheB1M4 ай бұрын
    • Random but I find it hilarious that Fred is the opposite of the stereotypical skyscraper geek. Keep being jacked Fred, we love you that way

      @user-np4mm6zl6p@user-np4mm6zl6p4 ай бұрын
    • Where is this place in 12:31

      @farzanazahir1332@farzanazahir13324 ай бұрын
    • @@farzanazahir1332 looks like maybe Nevada?

      @user-np4mm6zl6p@user-np4mm6zl6p4 ай бұрын
    • Prety sure nobody gives a scratch about trains the us is all about cars 0to60 no one cares how fast a train can go. And the people pushing trains can stop pretending countries with trains have no traffic congestion. They just want a project to wast money on 🎉

      @primeroultimo9050@primeroultimo90504 ай бұрын
    • The U.S does not have High Speed rail, because it would interfere with the Evil Agenda of so-called "15 minute Cities". Please do a documentary on that.

      @Umbrella_TV@Umbrella_TV4 ай бұрын
  • I reckon watching a 180mph train pass you while you're stuck in traffic on I-15 might be the biggest motivator for someone to try using it

    @heyjakeay@heyjakeay4 ай бұрын
    • I agree, should convince people to at least try it the next holiday :)

      @user-ww9yw4zi8m@user-ww9yw4zi8m4 ай бұрын
    • Getting to the "LA Area" terminal in Rancho Cucamonga without a car will be slower than sitting in traffic through Cajon Pass for most households in the region. The high speeds of Brightline will be evened out by the low speeds of local transit., This video heavily underemphasizes the impact this will have, glossing over with "Metrolink to downtown in an hour". Fewer than 100k people live in downtown LA, and regional transit falls short for most of the rest. American cities are so spread out, with underfunded regional transit, that a fast train to one station in each city is fighting only half the battle. Brightline West will probably be successful, but not as the default choice over driving.

      @scottie89901@scottie899014 ай бұрын
    • It will be very funny for the people in the trains, and sad for the people traveling by car lol

      @NileGold@NileGold4 ай бұрын
    • Was about to comment that.

      @GTAVictor9128@GTAVictor91284 ай бұрын
    • 100%

      @IVWOR@IVWOR4 ай бұрын
  • The thing the USA always gets wrong with intercity train travel is that you need local transit for it to be a viable alternative to driving. If you need to hire a car at each end to reach your destination, why not just take the car? You absolutely need local busses and tramlines to actually get people from point A to point B.

    @frontrowviews@frontrowviews4 ай бұрын
    • Correct!

      @mihiec@mihiec4 ай бұрын
    • Yes in China, Japan etc the high speed rail is almost an extension of the metro system.

      @Kenttheclark@Kenttheclark4 ай бұрын
    • Or even better build a metro with grade separation in the suburbs.

      @91djdj@91djdj4 ай бұрын
    • Here in the UK, we recently cancelled the most important bit of our one attempt at HSR - the bit that connects the cities of Northern England. They have kept the London - Birmingham bit, which is already well served with connections. But... it's only going from the outskirts of London to the outskirts of Birmingham, with no dedicated shuttles. As you say, there is no point - if people have to use their cars to get to the initial station, and use a taxi at the other end, they may as well take the car all the way!

      @ZachariahJ@ZachariahJ4 ай бұрын
    • @@Kenttheclark They may have improved things recently, but all the High Speed trains I got in China were from out of town huge great stations, that looked and felt more like airports than stations. They had shuttle buses which were extremely cheap though. But in Japan, you can go to a city centre shopping mall, and take an escalator down to the Bullet Trains! Same in Taiwan, and in S Korea. The HS stations are right at the heart of the cities.

      @ZachariahJ@ZachariahJ4 ай бұрын
  • Took Amtrak from St Louis to Chicago, took 6 hours, about 90 minutes longer than driving, but the Mrs and I went up for a long weekend and only stayed around the lakefront, taking in all the museums and shops…..was great!!! NO parking fees and worries of getting into traffic jams.

    @marcussterling4954@marcussterling49544 ай бұрын
    • how long ago was this? I did Chicago to carbondale in 4 hours on the regular back when I was going to school at SIU and the lincoln service now has even higher speeds.

      @stratagama@stratagama4 ай бұрын
    • St. Louis to Chicago now takes just over 4 hours now with top speeds of 110 MpH.

      @midwestrails8317@midwestrails83174 ай бұрын
    • Yea, and how could such a technology advanced (at least in their dreams) nation was not to figure out the advantages of bullet train at the right time? No 2 hour preflight arrival, no boarding procedures, no 2 hours drive/bus/taxi from airport to the destination. And the last, but not the least - speed.

      @TroyQwert@TroyQwert4 ай бұрын
    • @@midwestrails8317I have driven from stl to chicago in 3 hours and 40 minutes from just cruising at 80-85 mph. 110 mph is too slow on Amtrak with all these track limits, it’s slower than a car cruising at 85.

      @aimxdy8680@aimxdy86804 ай бұрын
    • Still faster than driving in shitty winter weather

      @JS-jh4cy@JS-jh4cy4 ай бұрын
  • We need more trains and public transportation in america. I haven't clicked on a video so fast since I'm a big advocate for this stuff

    @mars7357@mars73574 ай бұрын
    • Yes, and we need way less people driving and those same people taking public transportation!

      @randomexploring541@randomexploring54122 күн бұрын
    • Public transportation can’t ever be safe, why do you think it’s always a failure.

      @ronl2463@ronl246313 күн бұрын
    • @@ronl2463 It is only a failure in fourth world countries like the USA, in the rest of the world it just works.

      @apveening@apveening5 күн бұрын
    • I just hope it’s really expensive so that I don’t need to sit next to bums

      @TarumpSadiki@TarumpSadiki2 күн бұрын
  • Building in the highway median is a genius move for advertising - think of all the people stuck in traffic watching a 186mph train blast past!

    @JakeHillion@JakeHillion4 ай бұрын
    • @@vedants.vispute77 The I-15 has virtually no major curves through the Mojave Desert. The only challenging part of this project will be the Cajon Pass.

      @dynasty0019@dynasty00194 ай бұрын
    • Hopefully it reduces congestion so that I can try and race the train

      @traceswann7054@traceswann70544 ай бұрын
    • haha, I've never considered it like that before

      @nevreiha@nevreiha4 ай бұрын
    • No need to be stuck, even if you are doing 80mph and train is doing 180 u will feel a bit stoopid😁

      @lukazupie7220@lukazupie72204 ай бұрын
    • Big problem with CAHSR was that Valley politicians wanted their much smaller cities to be part of the main line, causing a detour through farmers' fields that need to be bought out instead of taking advantage of all the open space along existing I-5.

      @doujinflip@doujinflip4 ай бұрын
  • The problem with America is not a lack of railways, but a lack of public transport infrastructure within the city. You may reach LA in a train quickly but after that you can't roam the city without renting a car. Most people don't take trains just to get to the station.

    @Sandeee@Sandeee4 ай бұрын
    • The sad part is that compared to other major cities, LA has decent public transportation by comparison. LA has subways, lightrail, and metro buses. The infrastructure completely sucks compared to NYC. There are other major cities that have such awful public transportation that it makes LAs look good. The bar is low in america. We cant fund stuff that might benefit poor people

      @DavidLopez-rk6em@DavidLopez-rk6em4 ай бұрын
    • LA is disgusting, especially downtown. It is a public urinal.

      @-whackd@-whackd4 ай бұрын
    • True, but trips to Las Vegas are the opposite. They have a monorail service for most of the strip and even outside of that you are often better off not driving.

      @dorkvania7212@dorkvania72124 ай бұрын
    • You're not wrong, but we need something to help spark the need, such as what Brightline is doing. If we just keep saying 'its useless because we don't have x or y' we'll never have it.

      @krazyito@krazyito4 ай бұрын
    • Same thing could be said for air travel.

      @Unmannedperson@Unmannedperson4 ай бұрын
  • Rode the bullet train from Paris to Nice to get to Monaco and it was a pleasure, decently comfortable and felt modern from my POV as an American. Really wish public transportation here in the US was good as it was in France

    @Wildwestwill185@Wildwestwill1854 ай бұрын
    • I rode that train 20 years ago so it highlights how far behind we are .

      @mizzury54@mizzury544 ай бұрын
    • That would of been a TGV train, the bullet train is in Japan, not Europe

      @mrb3673@mrb36734 ай бұрын
    • Would prefer it to be like Japan sense they got anime trains.

      @Agent-lr4ez@Agent-lr4ez3 ай бұрын
    • @@mrb3673 A bullet train per definition is a high speed train. The TGV counts as bullet train as well.

      @lexburen5932@lexburen59322 ай бұрын
    • @@mizzury54 france opened the tgv in 1981 actually

      @Yoshi-wt4lg@Yoshi-wt4lg5 күн бұрын
  • I love trains because the stress of driving a car at a high way everyday for work is insane. Also there would be more job opportunities and makes it easier to apply to jobs in another city.

    @bmona7550@bmona75504 ай бұрын
  • This should have been built 20 years ago but I really hope it gets finished one day

    @TheLiamster@TheLiamster4 ай бұрын
    • at the latest you`ll be able to ride it with your grandkids

      @maythesciencebewithyou@maythesciencebewithyou4 ай бұрын
    • The US could’ve looked to ally Japan an even France for this. But like I said in another post we haven’t built it because we can’t. We haven’t built it because you have different industries who think they’ll negatively be impacted by such a transformational transportation project.

      @jst4572@jst45724 ай бұрын
    • Patience

      @Liamshavingfun@Liamshavingfun4 ай бұрын
    • dont worry, the automobile industry will make sure it is not going to finish.

      @0_________________@0_________________4 ай бұрын
    • The government should divert thosr trillion dollars wasted on unnecessary wars for the rail and it will be done with the help of immigrant workers in record times.

      @carholic-sz3qv@carholic-sz3qv4 ай бұрын
  • The key commonality between the two Brightline projects can be summed up in one word: tourists. Brightline in Florida works because tourists can skip going back to MIA to catch a flight if you want to hit both Disney and Miami, and south Florida residents can go to the e theme parks without their cars. Linking LA and LV is also a no brainer if you think tourism instead of commuting.

    @Avg-Usr@Avg-Usr4 ай бұрын
    • yeah that is how most intercity trains work in Europe too, it's mostly tourism. Especially long distance trains. Commuter trains are different, usually not high speed, but for the distances around major centers.

      @lukasdolezal8245@lukasdolezal82454 ай бұрын
    • Us south Florida Residents have relied on either I-95 or Florida's Turnpike just to visit Orlando. The challenge here that Brightline needs to beat is having faster routes to the parks than a family could in their car on the turnpike, especially considering that it's "higher" speed rail which is one tier down from "high" speed rail.

      @InsaneBuizel@InsaneBuizel4 ай бұрын
    • @@InsaneBuizel Ironic that "higher" speed rail is slower than "high" speed rail 🤔 Brightline sounds great though. I hope their example will continue to improve and become even more successful across the country.

      @ScottyShaw@ScottyShaw4 ай бұрын
    • @@lukasdolezal8245 I think you seriously underestimate how many people are using long distance trains for business travel.

      @Hurricane2k8@Hurricane2k84 ай бұрын
    • Keep finding excuses! Locals want to get around and have options. I was in a car accident, and I don't want to have a car anymore, maybe later in life when I will have a family, but now I found myself that I have very limited options to get around. I went to a few developed and developing countries, and even small cities in developing countries where are almost no tourists, they have there similar and in some cases better trains and public transportation than New York City and Boston which are two cities with the best public transportation system in the USA. Whether you use or don't use trains and other public transportation, you are paying for it in one form or another anyway, and you're paying for this more than people in France, the UK, and people in most or all other developed countries while getting the worst service. And, to be fair, oil and car industries are subsidized by taxpayers too. I understand that not everyone wants to use public transportation even if it's the best in the world, but also not everyone wants to drive a car everywhere.

      @user-gd7dc3om2l@user-gd7dc3om2l4 ай бұрын
  • I live in DTLA and also have a home in Vegas, north of the strip. It takes slightly under 4 hours to make the trip, which Ive done over 30 times. I always avoid peak traffic times/holidays. This "5 hour" estimate is off, unless you're going 55mph.

    @johnbarry5036@johnbarry503620 күн бұрын
  • High Speed Rail can tackle extreme (by railway standards) gradients with ease, as long as they can get a straight run at them at full line speed. The Cajon Pass however is not a straight run, and is also a far longer climb than anything built so far in any high speed railway. You are effectively climbing up the side of a mountain, across a highly active geological fault line. It’s truly spectacular to drive along the roads there, and I’ve even stopped to admire the effort required by the BNSF and UP trains fighting up it towards Barstow. A very long sweeping curve from San Bernardino to Hesperia shouldn’t be a challenge. The biggest obstacle would be fitting it in amongst the two existing rail corridors and I-15. It’s probably going to require more than a few viaducts and cuttings though, and in such a seismically active area as well. However, if those obstacles could be overcome, it may be a better route for California HSR to approach LA as well. The I-5 corridor from Bakersfield being far more challenging terrain. Maybe with CHSR and Brightline together, motivation (and finance) could be found for a way from Rancho Cucamonga to DTLA?

    @badbob1982@badbob19824 ай бұрын
    • Tunnels help overcome the steep grade problems but they are costly and take time to build. That's what myself and many family members do for a living. All types of tunnels.

      @randerodr7389@randerodr73894 ай бұрын
    • There’s a high desert corridor proposal that would link brightline west and ca HSR to LA thru Palmdale and under the San Gabriel Mountains towards Burbank

      @lucaspadilla4815@lucaspadilla481514 күн бұрын
  • A correction. High Speed rail lines do not need to be built on as flat ground as possible, they can have gradients far more severe than conventional rail due to the speed the trains travel at, and their high power to weight ratio. The Frankfurt-Cologne high speed line in Germany or the Marseille-Avignon are good examples of this

    @raphgeld1271@raphgeld12714 ай бұрын
    • Yes, the proposed maximum gradient for freight is 12.5 per thousand but some high speed lines have up to 40. Both are far from what cog railways or cars can achieve but high speed trains have in fact less problems with slopes than freight trains. The radii are a bigger issue because of the much higher speeds.

      @svenherzfeld8071@svenherzfeld80714 ай бұрын
    • True , high speed rail can deal with steep grades much easier than sharp curves .

      @lassepeterson2740@lassepeterson27404 ай бұрын
    • True. The sheer power of the train sets make it much less of an issue than for heavy freight trains. Gives some rollercoaster vibes though.

      @schlollepop@schlollepop4 ай бұрын
    • Spain's existence proves the video wrong. So much wrong with these videos like all of his simplified uneducated videos are.

      @tortellinifettuccine@tortellinifettuccine4 ай бұрын
    • @@tortellinifettuccineI always laugh when people give the excuse of terrible geography as a reason why cheap and fast HSR can’t be done when examples such as South Korea, Italy, and Japan exist.

      @ac1455@ac14554 ай бұрын
  • It is a smart move to built the track along the highway, because that will make sure that over time millions of car drivers will see those trains pass them at high speed. Many Americans have no idea how fast a train can be and they will see it first hand there.

    @skyscraperfan@skyscraperfan4 ай бұрын
    • Yeah, but also it’s going to be way cheaper

      @romanrat5613@romanrat56134 ай бұрын
    • @@romanrat5613 Good way to shut up the NIMBY crowd as well.

      @jmd1743@jmd17434 ай бұрын
    • @@jmd1743 The god damn NIMBY crowd is a real source of a lot of bullshit in this country man... Spoiled brats.

      @CrossWindsPat@CrossWindsPat4 ай бұрын
    • Building the train on highway medians has its own problems. If the stops are also in the middle of the highway then the most valuable TOD land would be consumed by highway and car dominated infrastructure. Its cheap to built on highways but the designers have the make sure the stops actually take people somewhere they want to go/ can keep moving from without a car.

      @Max-vn6jv@Max-vn6jv4 ай бұрын
    • @@romanrat5613 Funny enough, as these projects start gaining steam, people realize how expensive the projects are. These railways operate off of the taxpayers back. It's a dispersed cost -> concentrated benefits scenario.

      @mrhumpty@mrhumpty4 ай бұрын
  • This has been a dream of mine since childhood. It will be amazing to see this project become reality!

    @DesertCow1000@DesertCow10004 ай бұрын
  • When I was planning a little rail tour down the NE Corridor (not on an Acela, alas), I asked some US-based colleagues about their experiences of Amtrak - not one of them had ever caught a train, which somewhat blew my mind.

    @jimhearsonwriter@jimhearsonwriter4 ай бұрын
  • Apart from new high speed lines, the US should upgrade existing low speed lines and rebuild closed lines for commuting shorter distances.

    @caesar7734@caesar77344 ай бұрын
    • I was thinking the samething

      @kazamataurus337@kazamataurus3374 ай бұрын
    • They shouldn't have to share the lines with freight operators.

      @Liamshavingfun@Liamshavingfun4 ай бұрын
    • They don’t own the railroads. They can’t update someone’s private property. They have to build it.

      @janettetorrez9218@janettetorrez92184 ай бұрын
    • @@janettetorrez9218they can always buy the track from the freight railroads. Given how much they defer maintenance they’d be happy to not have to pay to maintain the tracks. They did this in Virginia for example and rail ridership has been on the rise

      @CreatorPolar@CreatorPolar4 ай бұрын
    • @@CreatorPolarSame here in Germany. The country owns all the tracks and theyre full of freight trains. Freight companies would be happy if they dont need to spend a penny on maintenance.

      @91djdj@91djdj4 ай бұрын
  • I took the bright line in Florida and I was beyond impressed. I think if anyone can do it, they certainly can

    @imacuser101@imacuser1014 ай бұрын
    • I drive a Brightline people mover cart in Ft. Lauderdale. Free ride to & from the train station. Everybody loves the train.

      @mickmccrory8534@mickmccrory85344 ай бұрын
    • Red state vs blue state

      @tntgators@tntgators4 ай бұрын
    • @@tntgators Not that simple.

      @CockatooDude@CockatooDude4 ай бұрын
    • Nice. I've seen it roll by. Too bad it doesn't stop in county I am in. :(

      @jinkenz6459@jinkenz64594 ай бұрын
    • It exists in EU for 40 years, what a revolution 😂 but there is goes to 220mph!

      @rrsstt7767@rrsstt77674 ай бұрын
  • Watch the end of “Blue Thunder” (1983) with Roy Scheider. The movie pays off with a simulated newscast where Mario Machado says something like, “Up next, the weather, and a sneak preview of a Japanese bullet train soon to be seen in the Southland. Maybe…” That was 41 years ago. And finally now work has started on high speed rail to Las Vegas. This country can be maddening.

    @hibob418@hibob41823 күн бұрын
  • I'm American and from what I learned on this was the powers that be were more into our Auto industry and creating the interstate system also our Airline industry.

    @lawrencetravisHI@lawrencetravisHIАй бұрын
  • As a South Floridian and railfan who followed the progress of Brightline from the very beginning, I want to commend you for getting the facts right and highlighting what made their project so successful. The people who were surprised were the naysayers who said it would never get done. I watched that box jacking proceed in real time and it was breathtaking. Brightline proved that privately-funded infrastructure projects can move at lightning speed. That's why I believe 100% that LA-Vegas will happen.

    @larry4111@larry41114 ай бұрын
    • But here's the point!!!! it DOESN'T go to LA!!!!! It's 45 MINUTES EAST of LA!!!!! SO you have to FIGURE OUT a way to GET TO LA from Rancho Cucamonga!!!! And by 45 minutes, well, we're being very GENEROUS when we say 45 minutes, if there is no traffic on the freeways. And by freeways, well, good luck to you getting to LA from Rancho Cucamonga by TRAIN on TIME!!!!! LMAO It's an absolute JOKE!!!!! Please have a look at the map of the LA areas

      @ScrewyDriverTheMan@ScrewyDriverTheMan4 ай бұрын
    • @@ScrewyDriverTheMan Oh, trust me, I know. I've been following it from the start and have always thought it was ridiculous to have to transfer to/from there. I've been to Rancho Cucamonga, I know where the train goes. I've literally watched hours of videos and read dozens of pages of proposals and fact sheets about where the train will start/end and why and how to get to/from LA from there. I've posted about this many times and have vigorously argued for the line to continue closer to LA. But that's not Brightline's fault. That's the NIMBYs.

      @larry4111@larry41114 ай бұрын
    • @@larry4111 Yeah. Cali politicians are morons, and the voters are gutless

      @ScrewyDriverTheMan@ScrewyDriverTheMan4 ай бұрын
    • ​@larry4111 Yep, you will need a bus station there at RC, to make the final leg.

      @myopicchiwawa@myopicchiwawa4 ай бұрын
    • @@ScrewyDriverTheManstill beats driving to Vegas… that’s the point.

      @daneflanigan@daneflanigan4 ай бұрын
  • If you’ve ever been to japan you will understand the attraction of public trains - high speed and inner city subways. There is even a culture surrounding them of train watching and eki bento - train food. It’s such a relief, and even exciting, to catch the bullet train [shinkansen] and special trains wrapped in themes such as Anime series, local baseball teams and even children’s programmes. The stations are clean and easy to use and surrounded with shops and transport connections.

    @rayvanwayenburg998@rayvanwayenburg9984 ай бұрын
    • Not possible to have clean nice public places in the USA

      @mikkowus@mikkowus4 ай бұрын
    • I lived in DC in the 90s. Great clean metro. Now it's getting old and there's no money to upgrade it. Also, they're defunding police so it's less safe to ride. The Japanese model would fail here.

      @jeffrosati2570@jeffrosati25704 ай бұрын
    • You have to have a population density sufficient to make a public trans/train system work as in Japan, Korea, Europe etc..The USA does not have enough people, save on a narrow corridor from Boston to Wash DC. Everywhere else its simply not practical.

      @thomassenbart@thomassenbart4 ай бұрын
    • The real reason for the difference is the "public" that is using the trains. Not the hardware or money.

      @norihiro01@norihiro014 ай бұрын
    • You will never get train system like Japan. Bullet trains and every trains are awesome. They move in exact time.

      @sushanitako5054@sushanitako50544 ай бұрын
  • As a person who has grown up in Orlando, I’ve used the bright line from West Palm Beach to Orlando and it’s fast and definitely a great Moto transportation and it also connects Fort Lauderdale and Miami!

    @poke2154@poke21543 ай бұрын
  • You don't know how refreshing this is to see as someone who's going into school for transportation planning, hope i can intern here or something! 🤞🏾🤞🏾

    @JayBrown-xs9ps@JayBrown-xs9ps4 ай бұрын
  • Brightline service from Orlando-Miami has been great here in FL. They just hit 300K passengers in the 1st 3 months which is kind of crazy for here.

    @johanfalk2875@johanfalk28754 ай бұрын
    • That's awesome to hear that ridership is strong! Going to be trying Brightline in March when I go on my cruise out of Miami..Now, wishful thinking, if they would only hurry up and build that extension to Jacksonville! :) LOL

      @Pantherjonvideos@Pantherjonvideos4 ай бұрын
    • Red state vs blue state

      @tntgators@tntgators4 ай бұрын
    • Thats amazing, this is what happens when projects are held by Private companies who are dedicated to get it done rather than Government money thats usually coming with strings attached and the project almost never gets done, we can ask CA how LA-SF High Speed rail went

      @Racko.@Racko.4 ай бұрын
    • I wish it had a stop in Vero or even Ft. Pierce 😔 but all the old farts don't understand that even if they refuse a station, the train still goes through. All the cons, none of the pros...

      @htm000@htm0004 ай бұрын
    • @@htm000 Just this month Ft Pierce and Stuart put in a bid for a station. Will take a few years to build but the station is definitely going to be built.

      @johanfalk2875@johanfalk28754 ай бұрын
  • As a Californian, I heard about the HSR in middle school and was excited to use it in undergrad. Here I am 3 years out of grad school with no hope to ride it any time soon.

    @prblackhawk@prblackhawk4 ай бұрын
    • But how many $B in debt are you taking on?

      @TBoy1247@TBoy12474 ай бұрын
    • Study the economics of passenger railway service and the reason why we will never get it in the western US will become obvious. Their is a reason why it hasn't happened let's see if you can figure it out on your own. Hint, the goal is cost effective transportation. The goal is not to get passenger rail service.

      @efone3553@efone35534 ай бұрын
    • Efone, No not effective transportation, but rather one that rather consumes the most energy and is most costly. Aviation and autos filled that bill perfectly. End of WWll, most urban service rail was ripped up, intercity rail abandoned. With the failure of aviation to provide

      @frankdesantis8078@frankdesantis80784 ай бұрын
    • @@TBoy1247this is the kind of illogical dumb question automobile companies want you to question anyone who support rails and mass-transit.

      @Thekidisalright@Thekidisalright4 ай бұрын
    • As a Californian, you no doubt know that nobody wants or needs a high-speed rail here. The system is really efficient as it is.

      @RockwellAIM65@RockwellAIM654 ай бұрын
  • This is great to see. I have also been watching for updates from northeast MAGLEV. I thought they too were going to build a high speed train

    @Mars0984@Mars09842 ай бұрын
  • I'm all for it... I can't believe a video where the comments are actually FOR HSR... actually brings a tear to the eye.

    @gewglesux@gewglesux4 ай бұрын
    • For sure....agree'd! Just to see the building of it....infrastructure...the lucky engineers that get hired to run them...all that new equipment, new track wow!

      @RogerDiotte@RogerDiotte3 ай бұрын
    • Because we aren't the ones with the money and power lol

      @mediocreman2@mediocreman22 ай бұрын
  • Being a native Floridian, Brightline is at least 2 decades late, but it's finally here and makes that route SO MUCH better. It's a start.

    @tonypapas9854@tonypapas98544 ай бұрын
    • Facts I took it from Miami ti Orlando last month. I love it

      @Lele-lq3tx@Lele-lq3tx4 ай бұрын
  • Used Brightline to commute to work from boca Raton to west palm beach. Had the premium commuter pass. What an incredible train, with great service. Genuinely looked forward to hanging out in the station for a few drinks after work everyday. Such great energy, hope to see this expansion come into fruition

    @drewpinsky3365@drewpinsky33654 ай бұрын
    • WOW!! Five times a week? So ten trips then? Sounds dreamy!

      @michaelrmurphy2734@michaelrmurphy27344 ай бұрын
    • @@michaelrmurphy2734Yes, the commuter pass gives you 40 rides per month which breaks down to 10 per week/ 2 per day (5-day work week). It's a very popular service where the basic Smart monthly pass works out to less than $10 per ride.

      @Ven100@Ven1004 ай бұрын
  • My first thought on the LA-Vegas line was the Cajon Pass. Sure enough, that was briefly mentioned. Back in the 80s, Amtrak ran between LA and Vegas. Going through the Cajon Pass, we could see cars on I-15 going much faster than the train. In total, the train trip took 7 hours. 😆 But we didn't have to worry about traffic. We stayed in the club car the entire trip drinking beer and playing cards with the train crew.

    @johnnychun59@johnnychun594 ай бұрын
    • Nothing wrong with that! Yay!

      @29brendus@29brendus2 ай бұрын
    • We could just lower taxes in California so people don't commute from Riverside to Vegas every weekend! That's the only reason any of my friends are in Vegas... to evade taxation.

      @RockwellAIM65@RockwellAIM652 ай бұрын
    • @@RockwellAIM65 Only reason?

      @29brendus@29brendus2 ай бұрын
    • @@RockwellAIM65 Avoid taxation so they can spend it on AC.

      @pigjubby1@pigjubby114 сағат бұрын
  • While the US has been debating on building HSR and giving money to Elon Musk to reinvent busses but underground, Mexico has finished building this year close to 2,000 km of new railway since 2018 and about 5 completely new trains, the following year in February of 2024 the construction of the high speed rail between Mexico city and Queretaro will break ground and is expected to reach 190 mph average

    @ericktellez7632@ericktellez76324 ай бұрын
    • Please specify that in Mexico they have mediocre trains, mediocre lines, mediocre stations, everything in the hands of the army, and that they have a service that is a joke, a banana republic that will never have a superfast train compared to what the USA wants to do. Please avoid your fallacious comments, the USA is looking for something of quality worthy of first world, not the mediocrities they have done in Mexico with cheap stations and cheap trains. For example, Mexico Querétaro is just an idealistic idea, the results we can already know will be mediocrity like everything the government has done without comparing it with the other mediocrity that they did in the south areas of México with the Mayan Train with slow trains, stations worthy of the Third World, and horrible services worthy of Mexico.

      @civisjon@civisjon4 ай бұрын
    • @@civisjon If I want to see mediocrity and sick joke of a public transportation system, there is no better place to start than the US, rofl!! Mexico may not be among the world's leaders, but it is still AHEAD of the US, and it is a safe bet Mexico will have HSR first before the US. That's how bad the US is, rofl!

      @pineapplesareyummy6352@pineapplesareyummy63524 ай бұрын
    • @@civisjon someone is jelly.

      @merrychase9744@merrychase97444 ай бұрын
    • @civisjon I like how you say this while 2nd and some 3rd world countries have better transport than the usa. Take a bus or economic class and see how below mediocre we have it

      @CastleRaccon@CastleRaccon3 ай бұрын
  • When the first HSR actually finishes, the rest of the projects will go into hyperdrive after the success is proven.

    @Zm4rf@Zm4rf4 ай бұрын
    • Unless it increases overall traffic and not just replace air and automobile traffic, it will be a failure.

      @Rob_F8F@Rob_F8F4 ай бұрын
    • Success is highly questionable. A system designed by voters, politicians and bureaucrats isnt a good start. Will the customers show up? Unlikely

      @Dog.soldier1950@Dog.soldier19504 ай бұрын
    • @@Dog.soldier1950 Except BLW was not designed by voters, politicians, and bureaucrats. In fact the reason Brightline got things done is because they actively go against those aforementioned entities.

      @dynasty0019@dynasty00194 ай бұрын
    • ​@@Dog.soldier1950It needs to be easier/more convenient than what we currently have. If it isn't, you have to insentivise people to use it in other ways.

      @CardinalTreehouse@CardinalTreehouse4 ай бұрын
    • ​@@Rob_F8Fcheck Amtrak statistics as they've basically replaced all shuttle airlines on the East Coast Amtrak Northeast Corridor Fact Sheet www.amtrak.com/content/dam/projects/dotcom/english/public/documents/corporate/nec/fact-sheets/amtrak-nec-fact-sheet-ye2021.pdf

      @value_engineered@value_engineered4 ай бұрын
  • Quick note; the US still has what is generally considered the most efficient and extensive freight rail network on earth. We just suck at passenger trains.

    @michaelimbesi2314@michaelimbesi23144 ай бұрын
    • Yeah we kill it when it comes to freight rail I believe a huge issue with passenger rail is that it's the freight rail companies that own the actual lines. And Brightline in Florida may be viable because its parent company actually owns the land for the track already

      @iii-ei5cv@iii-ei5cv2 ай бұрын
    • @@FoxWolfWorldless free? ahahhahahahaha

      @icoborg@icoborg2 ай бұрын
  • Im just hoping that by when i visit california, both projects are finished and connected and it is a smooth journey all the way from SF to LV.

    @jonathanodude6660@jonathanodude66604 ай бұрын
  • I think west is good and easy but it will be hard to connect cities in densely populated states. The LA San Fran line deals with lots of land buying while LA Las Vegas is mostly between the road or desert. Would be hard to find more connections like this to make.

    @Heyitsgavinb@Heyitsgavinb4 ай бұрын
  • I love the sleeper cars on Amtrak. Hot showers, a bed, plus I'm disabled so I get my own train car. I'm in a wheelchair so they give me a ride on a large golf cart that loads me on, it's pretty awesome. The ride is soooo smooth, it's like floating it's very nice. I never felt stops if there was any, I fell asleep...lol

    @dioniciotorres4290@dioniciotorres42904 ай бұрын
    • Sounds so fucking boring 😂😂😂😂

      @onthatsiete@onthatsiete4 ай бұрын
    • ​@@onthatsietebecause driving through stop start traffic for hours is so riveting?

      @thomasthompson3861@thomasthompson38614 ай бұрын
  • A note: The Acelas can only go that fast in short bursts not because of poor engines, but because of speed restrictions and track that is unsafe to go so fast on.

    @katherinebrubaker7788@katherinebrubaker77884 ай бұрын
    • I routinely hit 125 on the NE Regional from NYC to DC. The acela only beats the regional because of less stops on the the southern leg, on the boston leg it is about 45-60min faster due to length less stops, and faster over-all average speed including the 155 section. The regional is the better option price-wise as it's often more than half price.

      @oldunion@oldunion4 ай бұрын
  • I have heard that Brightline in Florida is a real estate development with a train in the basement. I think that the associated real estate development is an aspect of Brightline Florida that needs to be discussed when describing the funding of the project.

    @forthbrdge6162@forthbrdge61624 ай бұрын
  • Eisenhower's design for the interstate highway system included space between opposing lanes for future rail inclusion. Not surprising to see it finally getting used. The problem is using it for intra-city mass transit as seen in some US cities because generally speaking interstate highways or limited access freeways travel around the location of the population ie neighborhood centers rather than among them where you can use them by walking to them. But for interstate longer distance train travel the medians were built to serve that purpose and allow for that option but America abandoned rail and fell in love with (and dramatically subsidized) oil rubber steel concrete parking lots and automobiles.

    @oldunion@oldunion4 ай бұрын
  • Note about the Cajon Pass segment -- high speed trains DONT necessarily need flat terrain to go fast. Watch videos of the TGV effortlessly flying over huge rolling hills in the French countryside.

    @buildintotrains@buildintotrains4 ай бұрын
    • And at grade level, not up on concrete pylons. What I thought would make sense for the Las Vegas to Los Angeles high speed train.

      @michaelrmurphy2734@michaelrmurphy27344 ай бұрын
    • @@michaelrmurphy2734 In areas with sandstorms and a huge „dune- moving“ it is more practicabe to build „bridge- corridors“ because of the risks of „sand- constipations“.

      @detlefmann7433@detlefmann74334 ай бұрын
    • The Cajon Pass isn't a rolling hill. There's already rail tracks going over Cajon Pass, so it can happen but it won't be traveling fast.

      @hallnall1667@hallnall16674 ай бұрын
    • @@hallnall1667 just saying

      @buildintotrains@buildintotrains4 ай бұрын
    • FYI, max ramp of LGV (TGV track lines) is 3.5%. And with TGV beeing 400m long this means one side is 14m higher than the other 🎉🎉🎉 Cajon Pass is 3.4% at max and 3% most of the time. So the only problem is not the slope but only wether the track can lean at angle to help to maintain max speed on turns... Anyway reducing there on big turns at 200km/h and then accelerating back at 350km/h does not look like a show stopper 🎉

      @testman9541@testman95414 ай бұрын
  • The best part about Brightline West is that all the people stuck on the highway will see the trains zooming by them and they'll wish they were on the train instead. Repeat this a few times in different parts of the country, and you'll change sentiment and people will start to support high speed rail. When I took the Acela it really annoyed me because the train slowed down to a crawl right by the section where there was a massive highway with tons of cars. I was watching the cars speed past us, thinking "if only this thing was going its full 150 MPH potential, it would make those drivers think hard about their driving choices".

    @darkwoodmovies@darkwoodmovies4 ай бұрын
    • The Connecticut section is the most frustrating because Amtrak can't do anything about it because the track geometry on that section is completely unworkable

      @IndustrialParrot2816@IndustrialParrot28164 ай бұрын
  • My enjoyment of the video was completely railroaded by that commercial, and my train of thought was well and truly run onto a siding😊😂

    @DavidMcCoyII@DavidMcCoyII4 ай бұрын
  • Even in the DC area, going along a highway doing over 100mph feels great. put trains near highways and make sure they move much faster than the traffic.

    @andybak7575@andybak75752 ай бұрын
  • Just took the northeast regional from Boston to DC, we hit speeds of 125 MPH. I want to travel rail even more it was so stress free.

    @despawn7663@despawn76634 ай бұрын
  • From NY to Washington and Boston and from Miami to Orlando could be a good option. I spent 5 and 6 hours to go from Miami to Orlando once and drive from NY to Washington. I think people will use it a lot. Distances between those cities are similar to those we have in Spain, Barcelona - Madrid, Madrid - Valencia, Madrid - Seville and now Madrid - Oviedo. All connected by high speed trains.

    @agushll74@agushll744 ай бұрын
    • Yes the Acela between DC and Boston via NYC is good already and new projects that have already been funded will reduce travel time by another 30 minutes between DC and NYC and another 30 between NYC and Boston. nec-commission.com/app/uploads/2021/07/C35-Executive-Summary-Only.pdf

      @wintermath3173@wintermath31734 ай бұрын
    • Have you ever tried taking the train? It’s very convenient and definitely quicker than driving

      @romanrat5613@romanrat56134 ай бұрын
    • Hahahaha. If you can afford it.

      @Zerpentsa6598@Zerpentsa65984 ай бұрын
    • ​@romanrat5613 it's not quicker than driving most of the time, hence why most people choose to drive, and also because it's ridiculously overpriced and SLOW. The only reason it sometimes beats traffick is because the slow train isn't slower than back to back car traffick which only really happens to the usa in the same degree, because everyone has to be in a car. Literally everything about that train sucks, it's just an airport ride without all the airport hassle but still the same price and annoyances.

      @tortellinifettuccine@tortellinifettuccine4 ай бұрын
    • ​@@romanrat5613literally takes 3 hours 51 minutes right now to go from Boston to NYC with acela. 3 hours 54 minutes by car, and that's taking into account driving to the parking spot. So no it's not faster haha, especially considering the car traffic is about at its worst right now

      @tortellinifettuccine@tortellinifettuccine4 ай бұрын
  • When I lived in Seattle, we would often take Amtrak down to Portland for a weekend, or up to Vancouver, B.C. it was so much easier and less stressful than driving. Having those same routes only take an hour and a half, instead of 3 and a half, would open up more opportunities regionally for business, and entertainment.

    @lordd794@lordd79417 күн бұрын
  • i would say better than nothing with my thumb up, we are used to drive cars anywhere in the US , the railway is only for 180 mph trains BUT still a great addition to the travel mode .

    @Seanvista@Seanvista4 ай бұрын
  • I live right next to Rancho Cucamonga and this Brightline project is getting everyone hyped in the San Bernardino county. Rancho is even building a new downtown scene with revovations to the local baseball team and outdoor malls. Being the beginning/final stopped is a big win for the county.

    @xxGravyBabyxx@xxGravyBabyxx4 ай бұрын
    • Going to be Interesting ! From chino

      @inflationRefugee@inflationRefugee4 ай бұрын
    • That's good for the area. I used to live in Fontana near the Rancho area and I did absolutely nothing in the city because it wasn't interesting. Hopefully it gets interesting

      @Cal3000@Cal30004 ай бұрын
    • @@Cal3000maybe in about 20 years

      @socalgolf9978@socalgolf99784 ай бұрын
  • It's worth noting that according to Brightline West themselves, the travel time between Las Vegas and Rancho Cucamonga will be 2 hours 10 minutes nonstop (2 hours 20 minutes with the stops in Hesperia and Victor Valley). That's an average speed of just over 100 mph for the 218-mile route. Metrolink's San Bernardino Line currently takes 74 minutes to travel between LA Union Station and Rancho Cucamonga, so the total travel time between LA Union Station and the Las Vegas Brightline West station, including time to transfer at RC, will be about 3 1/2 hours. Plus that doesn't include time to get to Union Station, be it from West LA, the San Fernando Valley or Orange County. The Las Vegas station is located about two miles south of the Strip, but Brightline West will offer taxi/rideshare services similar to Brightline in Florida. Brightline West's choice of Rancho Cucamonga had at least partially to do with a proposed underground people mover connecting the RC Metrolink station with Ontario Airport, at one time to be built by the Boring Company but now being done by the San Bernardino County Transportation Authority, that will use a fleet of autonomous vehicles. It'll make the Rancho Cucamonga station a big transit hub between that, Brightline West and Metrolink, as well as local transit.

    @ChrisJones-gx7fc@ChrisJones-gx7fc4 ай бұрын
    • Total time about the same as driving albeit with less stress.

      @mrxman581@mrxman5813 ай бұрын
    • @@mrxman581 oh it should definitely be a more pleasant experience on the train, at least once you reach BLW. Getting there from LA will require at least one train from Union Station, if not also a ride on Metro or Amtrak/Metrolink from north or south of LA, plus the transfers at RC and Union Station if not starting from downtown LA.

      @ChrisJones-gx7fc@ChrisJones-gx7fc3 ай бұрын
    • I like train travel because I don't have to fuel the train, drive the train, interrupt my travel when I need the restroom, or park the train. While it's not stress free, it definitely is lower stress.

      @mariegarside8830@mariegarside88303 ай бұрын
    • 🚅🚝🇺🇸

      @MusicismoreImportant@MusicismoreImportant3 ай бұрын
  • I watch these with my sons so thank you for making such excellent and informative content.

    @Glynchbrook@Glynchbrook4 ай бұрын
  • I remember hearing about proposed high speed rail from las Vegas to the Ontario convention center around the turn of the century.

    @ChrisHarding-lk3jj@ChrisHarding-lk3jj3 ай бұрын
  • I read somewhere that Brightline also has their eye on the I4 corridor for a high speed rail to connect Tampa and Orlando. This has been talked about for as long as I can remember. Maybe Brightline can finally make it happen.

    @markgallagher1376@markgallagher13764 ай бұрын
    • Not sure why SunRail hasn't done this first TBH. Seems so obvious to tie Tampa-Orlando-Daytona together with rail if possible. A whole Central Florida Mega Region

      @starrwulfe@starrwulfe4 ай бұрын
    • I think it's already in planning

      @TheCityboy708@TheCityboy7084 ай бұрын
    • ​@@karlwithak.Yes. Brighline is making lots of money off so called "Floridians". They are a profitable company.

      @bubba842@bubba8424 ай бұрын
    • They are going to do it, extend the Orlando station to Tampa

      @PrinceMauriceTV@PrinceMauriceTV4 ай бұрын
    • @@karlwithak. They claim that they will break ground on the construction early 2025

      @RedNuii@RedNuii4 ай бұрын
  • Acela will be the first HSR in the United States. They are currently upgrading the service with new trainsets and some infrastructure upgrades to achieve 160 mph. Supposed to begin service this year but still in testing.

    @danielcluley870@danielcluley8704 ай бұрын
    • That is encouraging, thanks for sharing

      @waylonk2453@waylonk24534 ай бұрын
    • It already technically is high speed rail. That global definition of 155 mph+ is for dedicated tracks, while shared tracks is 124 mph+, which Acela achieves for some of its route, and Amtrak is working to increase speeds on other segments of the NE Corridor.

      @ChrisJones-gx7fc@ChrisJones-gx7fc4 ай бұрын
    • @@ChrisJones-gx7fc Don't kid yourself

      @ssss8162@ssss81624 ай бұрын
    • @@ssss8162OK bozo 👌

      @Flinn8@Flinn84 ай бұрын
    • @@ssss8162No kidding necessary. Just facts.

      @word42069@word420694 ай бұрын
  • If Brightline can successfully introduce their LA to LV service, hopefully a precedent will be set for other cities/regions to follow. This is probably our best shot at getting HSR here in the States for the foreseeable future .

    @DK33O@DK33O4 ай бұрын
    • A rich country like US should never build high speed train. Invest money in Tesla and get more high end cars. High speed trains are not suitable for developed countries.

      @morningstararun6278@morningstararun62784 ай бұрын
    • ⁠​⁠@@morningstararun6278 Do you actually have citations in MLA or APA format to back your claim that a developed country cannot do high-speed rail?

      @whathell6t@whathell6tАй бұрын
    • @@whathell6t Not suitable in the sense, the people in rich countries would prefer luxury cars over trains. And prefer flights instead of high speed trains. So it doesn't make any sense to build high speed railway network in developed countries.

      @morningstararun6278@morningstararun6278Ай бұрын
    • @@morningstararun6278 You still haven’t answered my question. You responded anecdotally.

      @whathell6t@whathell6tАй бұрын
    • @@whathell6t I don't have any research papers to back my claim. But it is a opinion based on general observation of USA by someone from a third world country.

      @morningstararun6278@morningstararun6278Ай бұрын
  • Last week I drove from Summerlin, Las Vegas to Downtown Los Angeles. It was a wonderful drive with beautiful stops..wide landscapes and desert. Then at the LA entrance(out skirts were mountains and green grass) traffic was a bit difficult in LA but not very different compared to Seattle, San Francisco, Chicago, St.Louis..etc., I flew from seattle to vegas. Even if there were trains they would be the same price or expensive than flight tickets. I prefer driving or flying.

    @Mysterio217@Mysterio21723 күн бұрын
  • Great video! The Northeast Corridor between NYC and DC is likely the only corridor in 🇺🇸 where traveling by train is faster than driving and competitive with flying. Acela trains in the corridor generally run at 125 mph (~200 kph) in Pennsylvania and Maryland and 135 mph (217 kph) in New Jersey south of Newark. Not surprisingly this is the section of Amtrak that sees the most ridership.

    @dcapitan7@dcapitan74 ай бұрын
    • Years ago I was at a wedding in New Jersey. At the reception I heard a loud roaring sound every twenty minutes and saw something flashing through on the other side of a hedge. I asked what it was. It turned out we were next to the main rail line between NYC and DC. They were going fast enough that I noticed, anyway!

      @michaelrmurphy2734@michaelrmurphy27344 ай бұрын
    • Due to population density .

      @lassepeterson2740@lassepeterson27404 ай бұрын
    • ​@@lassepeterson2740 ​Ridership on the NEC went up noticeably after speeds were increased on the corridor. I don't believe that was solely due to population density.

      @dcapitan7@dcapitan73 ай бұрын
    • @@dcapitan7 True not "solely due " if the trains are already in good use and service gets improved then you would attract more passengers . But still only if the population density is there of course .

      @lassepeterson2740@lassepeterson27403 ай бұрын
  • As a Swiss American, I love being home in CA, but I miss the Swiss trains so much, I always want to move back but for the trains

    @milomateer6565@milomateer65654 ай бұрын
    • I totally get it. I didn’t understand until I was in Switzerland. Your train system is so incredible! I fell in love immediately.

      @zaram131@zaram1314 ай бұрын
    • Probably Switzerland has best train system in the world and also it is available almost everywhere

      @Israilii@Israilii4 ай бұрын
    • From USA I miss the trains in Japan, Delhi metro and tgv

      @PortugalZeroworldcup@PortugalZeroworldcup3 ай бұрын
    • Stop lying

      @The_king567@The_king5673 ай бұрын
    • @@The_king567 yeah i lied about being swiss american im actually from Mars #martianlivesmatter

      @milomateer6565@milomateer65653 ай бұрын
  • 9:00 "connecting all the way to Los Angeles" hold your horses there. Rancho Cucamonga is hour away from LA without traffic, it isn't even in the same MSA.

    @Skipping2HellPHX@Skipping2HellPHX4 ай бұрын
    • But the LA metro does go till Rancho so you can change over to the LA metro.

      @prabuddhaghosh7022@prabuddhaghosh702216 күн бұрын
    • @@prabuddhaghosh7022 Southwest to Vegas....less than an hour. No homeless.

      @pigjubby1@pigjubby114 сағат бұрын
  • My dad works as a railroad engineer in south Florida for a private company that mostly focus on maintenance on existing railroad. He says that the new Brighline tracks have brought a lot of new changes and challenges since most ppl here are used to working on cargo trains tracks. There’s also been many crashes with the Bright line train because ppl in Florida are just dumb, careless & very inpatient

    @arislopes1924@arislopes19243 ай бұрын
  • The engineering part of this is incredible and I'm from LA and I've heard all about this and read all about it, but the problem is that it'll go way over budget.

    @Meta_was_my_idea@Meta_was_my_idea4 ай бұрын
    • And that the LA station is literally 2 hours outside of LA lol

      @coopa2002@coopa20024 ай бұрын
    • @@coopa2002 Rancho Cucamonga is literally less than an hour away from DTLA on Metrolink's San Bernardino Line express trains.

      @dynasty0019@dynasty00194 ай бұрын
    • It has a chance of success since it would be mostly privately funded. The real question is, will there be anything left of LA once it gets there?

      @millcity9711@millcity97114 ай бұрын
    • don't worry, this is normal in Europe too.

      @vossejongk@vossejongk4 ай бұрын
    • @@dynasty0019 which defeats a good chunk of the point of a high speed train, which is that it is convenient and city center to city center, adding such distance on the other end does not make it convenient. It's actually an hour to an hour and a half, I am basing this to Union Station which is pretty central to LA

      @coopa2002@coopa20024 ай бұрын
  • I surely hope that high speed trains are successful in these United States of America! Train travels are great and scenic ways to see and explore this beautiful nation!!❤

    @ucukaoma4551@ucukaoma45514 ай бұрын
    • We're too spread out and at the moment, are not having babies to use them in 20 years. If the ladies will get offa their duffs and start raising kids then yah, commuter trains might be a good idea some places.

      @RockwellAIM65@RockwellAIM652 ай бұрын
  • Hi, nice video. US the US has indeed to catch up with train transportation. In the thumbnail of the video you put a visual of an high-speed train that I also found on google while searching for "brightline high-speed". However it really looks like the brand new french TGV-M (by Alstom) which is not out yet. Are there real plan for brighline to buy some of those train or did just someone apply a brightline colour scheme on Alstom's visuals ?

    @thibaudderieux8506@thibaudderieux85064 ай бұрын
  • I drive through the problem area they are talking about daily the cajon pass its a nightmare corridor with snow, fog,ice and fires in the summer gets shut down all the time.. good luck getting a train through there.. i always see someone crashed in there.. people drive to fast going downhill and smash into cars not realizing it jams up quickly and you cant stop if you go to fast..

    @peterbravestrong7196@peterbravestrong71964 ай бұрын
  • 'underused freight railline I can buy', is a key phrase used. Railroad is actually used probably more than ever in the United States, just not for passengers but for commercial use, which has shoved out residential use for existing lines (in addition to issues noted in this video).

    @briankelly1240@briankelly12404 ай бұрын
    • Exactly very efficient with freight

      @tntgators@tntgators4 ай бұрын
    • Wrong. We have a ridiculous freight rail system that is predicated on minimizing labor costs, not making good use of the rails. Two mile long trains that block each other, sometimes for a day or more. And of course illegally blocking passenger trains. Our railroads are a national disgrace.

      @jeffreysnyder290@jeffreysnyder2904 ай бұрын
    • Trains still more efficient and if the government gets out of the way

      @tntgators@tntgators4 ай бұрын
    • There’s lots of places where freight railroads are cutting back shipping to either focus on single good hauls (e.g. coal) or because places have de-industrialized. Another example of an underused freight rail line is the CSX A Line in Florida. The Orlando part of it has been bought out by the state for SunRail and the Jacksonville part of it has been bought out by Amtrak. If the middle part is bought out, then frequent service between Jacksonville and Orlando could also be run, with trains then going south to Miami on Brightline tracks or to Tampa on their proposed extension.

      @pizzajona@pizzajona4 ай бұрын
  • I hope they have better luck with this than the UK has with the infamous HS2 project

    @stevechapple9569@stevechapple95694 ай бұрын
    • Sounds to me like an anglosphere thing.

      @lecho0175@lecho01754 ай бұрын
    • @@lecho0175well the shared language makes US carbrain spread much easier, though HS2 probably wouldn’t have been cancelled if Sunak wasnt in power

      @corsacs3879@corsacs38794 ай бұрын
    • @@corsacs3879 HS2 would have been canceled no matter which PM in office. It was overambitious in terms of specs, which made it unaffordable, and poorly thought through in terms of connectivity, which makes it less justifiable. Plus no connection to HS1, no high speed connection to Heathrow airport, you'd think it was a project conceived by a megalomanic dictator from an oil-rich nation who wants a pet project to make him feel grand, and sod all else.

      @alexverdigris9939@alexverdigris99394 ай бұрын
  • Craziest thing is that even as recent as the early 2000s, you could drive from Orange County California to Las Vegas in less than 3 and 1/2 hours. Then Vegas became a full-fledged vacation destination and turned interstate 15 into an absolute parking lot, taking as long as 12 hours+ on certain weekends like Super Bowl and the NCAA college basketball finals. That's when flights to Vegas became very popular and plentiful relieving much of the congestion on the I-15

    @13terapyn@13terapyn12 күн бұрын
  • I did one travel by train from Los Angeles to San Diego back in 2009. Or, to be more precise, Anaheim to San Diego. The trip itself was pleasant enough, went through some nice scenic coastal bits. Can't remember how long it took. The biggest problem was the stations themselves. I'd been staying in Anaheim for Disneyland (yep, as a tourist). The Anaheim station was like a small, open-air platform within or next to a massive car park. It wasn't big or impressive. Just a platform near a car park. The only reason it was convenient was because it happened to be not far away. At San Diego, the 'platform' was literally ground level. You stepped off the train in this sort of marshalling area - directly onto the pavement. Not even a platform at door level. Literally, you stepped onto the ground.

    @AndoCommando1000@AndoCommando10004 ай бұрын
    • The Anaheim station had a massive upgrade in 2014, it's now a big modern space with LED fixtures that light up at night with rainbow colors. The Santa Fe Depot in San Diego looks nice but you're right about the platform, they could work on that.

      @colbystearns5238@colbystearns52384 ай бұрын
    • @@colbystearns5238 makes sense. I made this rail journey in 2009.

      @AndoCommando1000@AndoCommando10004 ай бұрын
  • High speed rails only make sense when they directly connect between city centers from where you can access destinations by public transits. If you have to go to the station by cars and have to park there, the stations must be located at suburban areas to accommodate many cars. In such case, there is no advantage of high speed rails compared to airlines.

    @ANONAAAAAAAAA@ANONAAAAAAAAA4 ай бұрын
    • There is still a big advantage, but it's still much worse than if there was last mile tranist

      @Gfynbcyiokbg8710@Gfynbcyiokbg87104 ай бұрын
    • This project is connecting with Metrolink to get you to Union station that has many transit options for the LA area with more going online in the coming years. As for Vegas. I don't see any changes there anytime soon but at least the station is relatively close to the strip and once there most people don't really venture out.

      @ronnyrueda5926@ronnyrueda59264 ай бұрын
    • Exactly, these train stations should not be a “park & ride” concept. No everyone wants to drive or has to get in a car.

      @mikelherrasti2697@mikelherrasti26974 ай бұрын
    • Brightline would be well connected to mass transit in the Los Angeles basin. Metrolink has just updated from commuter rail to all day service. Connections to there from other local trains and buses has been improving.

      @themoviedealers@themoviedealers4 ай бұрын
    • completely true, but one step at a time! this project (should) incentivise local public transport connections

      @robbie6905@robbie69054 ай бұрын
  • Seeing Victorville on the map for Brightline west LA to Vegas is amazing. I lived in Victorville as a kid in the mid 90s. I was miserable. I know it has changed since then, with the three areas (Victorville, Hisperia and Apple Valley) all connecting to each other, but unless you had a reliable car, you couldn't get "down the hill." This is going to change things for people in that area for sure.

    @jonahsahn@jonahsahn4 ай бұрын
    • you know its been planned since the 80s

      @lovly2cu725@lovly2cu7254 ай бұрын
    • Apple Valley dweller here - I don’t know how long this route’s been available, but I will note that VVTA does have a bus down to the San Bernardino area (which I often take down to CSUSB). Also, Amtrak’s Southwest Chief does stop in VV once a day each way (not as convenient).

      @ItsMzPhoenix@ItsMzPhoenix4 ай бұрын
  • 3:14 -- next video, it would be more interesting to know the average speed of the trains over the distances traveled. For example, what is the average speed between stops on Acela on the NE Corridor vs the TGV?

    @ooglek@ooglek4 ай бұрын
  • LET'S GO BRIGHTLINE

    @b-slap@b-slap2 ай бұрын
    • No

      @Gfynbcyiokbg8710@Gfynbcyiokbg8710Ай бұрын
  • Ey, B1M finally covered Brightline! Frankly, I'd say the Orlando-Miami route is practically worth a video by itself.

    @BandanRRChannel@BandanRRChannel4 ай бұрын
  • Im from India and gladly Ahemdabad-mumbai will start soon in 2026 will having high speed trains running at 320 kmph(200mph) 😊

    @SecondAccount-jd3oo@SecondAccount-jd3oo2 ай бұрын
  • i love the Brightline train in South Florida, one hour from Palm Beach to miami, and you can order a glass of wine, super clean, offers first-class traveling, the station are also marvelous, the bathrooms have all fixtures from Tysom Dyson, no need to touch anything,

    @MrGuerrillero69@MrGuerrillero693 ай бұрын
  • Didn't think we'd be getting a video today! Great work B1M team. Looking forward to seeing what content you have planned for 2024 🍹

    @GeekyMedia@GeekyMedia4 ай бұрын
  • I was flying through the US on Google maps and saw that many if not most Interstate Highways have a decent amount of space between the lanes. A big part of the highways are just straight lines and building between them shouldnt be really expensive compared to space where tracks are running through someones property. The way i see it is that somebody somehow needs to assemble a large quantity of investors in the sector of housing, entertainment and retail etc and explain to them how high speed rail can dramatically create a mobile mass of people around CBDs, ready to spend money on shopping, food and drink, leisure, entertainment, holidays etc. It mostly depends on how such a project of CBD transformation would be sold.

    @91djdj@91djdj4 ай бұрын
    • Highways can have tighter turns than rail though, so just because there's a gap doesn't mean it's suitable for a train.

      @Yay295@Yay2954 ай бұрын
    • @@Yay295 Absolutely. In some sections, HSR still needs to run outside of the Interstate. The potential is nonetheless massive. A lot of countries would literally "kill" for this option. I am highly involved into building new infrastructure in Germany. And we're crazy desperate to find place to say the least 😂

      @91djdj@91djdj4 ай бұрын
    • Yes, curve gradients for high-speed trains are way different from those of highway roads. Sweden's tilting train, the X 2000, or the German ICE-4M equivalent I think is it's name, for Central Europe, doesn't run alongside in that manner, in any case are not the highest speed versions and I think, although not done before doesn't mean they can't pull it off, it is better if they can just stick to the traditional way of doing high-speed rail and then later experiment with some more "creative" ideas.

      @Ometecuhtli@Ometecuhtli4 ай бұрын
  • I do find some of the the concept art amusing, like a 186+ mph train is going to rely on diesel traction. Though they seem to be unsure since other concept art does have OHL.

    @Croz89@Croz894 ай бұрын
  • @9:33 that was the funniest thing I've heard all day! I actually started laughing like J Jonah Jameson from that spiderman clip.

    @dirtyvinyl8817@dirtyvinyl8817Ай бұрын
  • The Cajun pass is greatly underestimated. The 15 goes straight up and reaches higher elevation than the 2 railways. The railways have serpentine route AND found the lower pass route that reduces need for elevation gain. Sticking to the 15 median will mean grades that are not likely to be acceptable for any type of rail, except for cog railways in switzerland. Going down the pass at such a grade will be downright dangerous. Suspect that once funds widthdrawn and work started, there will be a study release that shows need for a tunnel through the steepest portion of pass and they will seek additional government funding. Stopping at Rancho Cucamunga will provide serve to Inland Empire, but not greater LA area. Rancho is 100km by bicycle from LAX. Sections of Metrolink tracks are single track along the way, by the good news is Metrolink controls the tracks to San Bernadino (even through freight yards at San Bernadino) so the freigt companies can't limit frequecies. Whether Metrolink would be allowed to electrify is a big question.

    @jfmezei@jfmezei4 ай бұрын
    • Yes. The Cajon Pass is a 6% grade which is too steep for HSR. If they don't tunnel, they would need to build elevated viaducts along the 15 fwy to reduce the grade to at least 4% though 3% would be better to traverseat higher speeds..

      @mrxman581@mrxman5814 ай бұрын
    • 🧠nice to see somebody actually did their homework on this 💩

      @zvorenergy@zvorenergy3 ай бұрын
  • A smart move to build hi-Speed train lines between highway routes like they are build in the us. There is much potential in this. Finally also Northern America is starting to build more train lines.

    @innsaeimaster@innsaeimaster4 ай бұрын
  • Makes me happy that some people are on board with the development and updating of old and building new high speed rail systems throughout the United States. I guess yea some are against it... bc of costs of building and tickets, some peoples properties being affected, but maybe we can find ways to persuade and show the long term positive effects of another way of transportation instead of being stuck on the interstates, and airports. This would be amazing for future travel and future generations. Increase trade and goods, as well and bringing communities metro areas and possible suburb areas together.

    @aroggo16@aroggo16Ай бұрын
  • I'm assuming it's because this one's stateside, but I appreciate the use of proper units of measurement that actually mean something to me. Thank you.

    @avenged110@avenged11019 күн бұрын
  • On December 20, 1967 the United Aircraft TurboTrain reached 273kmh (~170 US miles per hour) on the Pennsylvania Railroad in New Jersey. This records stands today. However, built by an aircraft company, the old railways used to maintaining steam engines had no epertise to maintain and operate this train. CN in Canada did spend the time to fix the train and learn about it and the Turbo remains in service till early 1980s. Its technology was since blocked by FRA since the 1980s since FRA required heavy steel trains, balked at jacobs bogies (and got amtrak to retire the Talgo trains that had been given an exemption). Except for propulsion, the train itself was right up there with today's TGVs. (aluminium car bodies, jacobs bogies, passive tilting, pressurized interior etc). CN managed to cut Montréal-Toronto by one hour for some time to do the distance in 3:59 instead of over 5 hours (today, VIA does it in 5.5 hours or more). In the end, it is about the tracks, not the trains.

    @jfmezei@jfmezei4 ай бұрын
  • I feel like people don’t realize how large California’s High Speed Rail network is. When fully complete, it will be 1,300 kilometers. That is larger than Italy’s entire high speed rail network, which was built over a 30 year period.

    @Stargate2077@Stargate20774 ай бұрын
    • That's fair... Tho China would like to have a talk with their 42000 km. Even if Cali is faster than Italy (with just a late start), it's still possible to build even faster

      @coreypowers2988@coreypowers29884 ай бұрын
    • @@coreypowers2988China is a communist country that can pay peasant wages with crap safety and minimal standards… not a valid comparison to European or North American infrastructure. Not to mention they just copy European and North American infrastructure.

      @word42069@word420694 ай бұрын
    • It's 15 years since the referendum passed. Cali HSR hasn't laid a single rail. They still don't have funding in place to complete the first ~100 mile section. This ain't a size problem. They're organizationally incompetent.

      @AllenGraetz@AllenGraetz4 ай бұрын
    • @@coreypowers2988 All built within the last 15 years too, China as a developing country started the HSR game decades late than most developed countries, ppl just like making excuses for "their team", stop doing that and demand your leaders to perform better.

      @TheRealIronMan@TheRealIronMan4 ай бұрын
    • @@TheRealIronMan Yep they started in 2008 when they were very underdeveloped.

      @AndrewManook@AndrewManook4 ай бұрын
  • Thanks God.. 2023 finally Indonesia have a bullet train.. first at Asean.. Whoosh.. from Jakarta to Bandung , usually 5 hours now only 1,5 hours.. and now become tourist attraction from local and outside country.. building only 4 years and now starting building second whoosh.. track.. 3x longer track..

    @yudhisetyawan1134@yudhisetyawan11344 ай бұрын
  • I lived in south korea for a year, and japan for 2. I love their rail systems, especially the high speed rail networks like the ktx or shinkansen. I'm a firm believer in high speed rail, and if the US invested in these rail lines and trains between major cities across the US at least, it would be so much better than traveling by air.

    @yeetiusmaximuss@yeetiusmaximuss4 ай бұрын
  • literally so thankful that the brightline exists, my biggest issue with it currently though is that as convenient as it is of an option to get to and from south Florida to Orlando, the tickets (in my opinion) can get so expensive depending on the time of day, and it's still often times more affordable to drive for a lot of people, especially if you're talking about a family or any group of people traveling together :( I hope the prices can become more reasonable here in FL and also that they'll be reasonable for brightline west

    @wholefoods_parmesan@wholefoods_parmesan4 ай бұрын
    • Train travel is only affordable if it is highly subsidized and even then everyone is still paying for it, only indirectly through taxes. Sorry to burst your bubble there.

      @c0d3warrior@c0d3warrior4 ай бұрын
    • @@c0d3warrior yeah, because highway construction and mantainance is not highly (as in 100% if without tolls) subsidised by public money. Sorry to burst your bubble there.

      @asier_getxo@asier_getxo4 ай бұрын
    • Got him good. @@asier_getxo

      @kaspervestergaard2383@kaspervestergaard23834 ай бұрын
    • As an individual rider it’s cheaper to pay hundreds for train tickets verses depreciation on your car

      @chris8576a@chris8576a4 ай бұрын
    • @@asier_getxo Well good luck trying to keep a country running without roads. No, you can't transport everything by rail instead, at least not with building at least as much railway lines as there are roads. And even then some things just can't be transported via rail so now you have to maintain an ungodly amount of train tracks ontop of the still necessaary roads. And even with the most refined public transport system, most passenger journeys in the countryside will have a much shorter travel time by car as opposed to public transport, simply because Trains or Busses will have to drive into villages to stop once in a while to load/unload passengers while the car can continously travel straight from A to B and avoid builtup areas. Public transport will never fully be able to replace cars, so you'll always need roads. Public transport / Train travel therefore will always be optional with limited use. So it onlymakes sense to fund roads with tax money, simply because they are a basic nessecity in any case. But hey, go ahead and fund roads completely by tolls instead, this will increase transport cost for all goods, increaing prices in shops. So even then everyone will still pay for the roads, just through a different channel. Typical activist rhetoric that only reveals your simplistic world view. Cars bad, people bad, me smort. You're an idiot, sorry to burst your bubble.

      @c0d3warrior@c0d3warrior4 ай бұрын
  • Now you can party in Vegas all night and at 3am pass out on the way back for work in LA at 7

    @DudeStone@DudeStone4 ай бұрын
  • What’s hilarious is that that very first clip with the train crossing the bridge happens to be in my home town. 😂

    @geography__jackson6139@geography__jackson61394 ай бұрын
  • It’s not surprising that such a project was started in Orlando. It used to be the experimental prototype city of tomorrow- and today is the international headquarters for space travel. Nothing to scoff at.

    @chrisf1147@chrisf11472 ай бұрын
  • Great idea. We had success with city rail in Perth Western Australia doing a similar thing there were plans for rail to Joondalup and Mandurah but what we have today was because a labor government took over and said. No let’s go straight down the centre of the freeways which were already busways to the city doing it this way got it ALOT further then was ever planned, now the money is being spent on things like airport links and suburban loop lines, perhaps we got lucky the disagreement between the government on which way the trains should go meant a lot of corridors were already preserved but it’s turned out great for WA, Melbourne is now trying to do the same thing for an ENORMOUS cost but Perth already has a partial suburban loop and an airport train 😂😊

    @justindrew9702@justindrew97024 ай бұрын
    • It's blindingly obvious when you think about it now that highway corridors should contain space for future trains. I notice the Forrest Highway is the same lots of space for trains if need be. Maybe one day they will bite the bullet on an direct link to Bunbury god knows the Govt can afford it

      @hoofie2002@hoofie20024 ай бұрын
    • I just flew out of Perth today. Had rented a car and it was cool to see the trains pass by in the middle of the freeway on the drive down to Mandurah.

      @Alex-bt2nz@Alex-bt2nz4 ай бұрын
    • Hopefully Metronet Stage 2 will include more orbital links as well as LIGHT RAIL. Perth needs more options such as trams running between activity centres.

      @thevannmann@thevannmann4 ай бұрын
  • A few added points to make: Part of the reason passenger rail in the US hasn't been seen as great is because of how the rail infrastructure is set up. The four main railroad companies put passenger and freight trains on the same track which means that they'll interfere with each other constantly in terms of schedules. On top of that, those same railroad companies set up their freight trains to be so "efficient" that a single train can take up miles of track at a time; longer than it used to be in years past. And that's not counting the cost-cutting those companies have done to where the rail lines themselves are in dire need of investment and improvement but won't get them to save money to give investors. On the point of the California high speed rail, Elon Musk had a part to play as well in the delays with it. That "Hyperloop" project of his that never amounted to anything was intentionally started to try to sabotage high-speed rail by diverting funding away from it. Musk himself admitted it publicly in the past year or so. I'm not sure how much of an impact it made; but it's certainly a non-zero amount considering the person behind it.

    @pattheriot3963@pattheriot39634 ай бұрын
  • Just flew from Denver back home to Charlotte, I did not enjoy the flight not a lot of turbulence but, I felt really stuffy.

    @danielpruitt8550@danielpruitt85504 ай бұрын
  • I wish them the best of British luck with this project, after the HS2 fiasco here in the UK.

    @evertonporter7887@evertonporter78874 ай бұрын
    • Hey, they're terminating nowhere near the centre of LA so they've copied that idea!

      @stevecooksley@stevecooksley4 ай бұрын
    • Britain railways are a joke I'm an american and I've been around europe and i can say this with absolute confidence

      @Tony-lj5lr@Tony-lj5lr4 ай бұрын
  • It seems that a Phoenix to Las Vegas high-speed rail line could work too. There already exists a straight highway between the cities. Union Pacific is working on re-establishing passenger service between Tucson and Phoenix. Passenger service ended in the mid-1990s and the Phoenix station was closed, but not demolished. Current Amtrak service bypasses Phoenix to the south with the station operating in Maricopa.

    @georgesealy4706@georgesealy47064 ай бұрын
    • Vegas to Albuquerque with a stop in Phoenix would also be possible and would connect the major cities of 3 states together. From there it wouldn't be too hard to connect to and future lines in Texas.

      @DangerB0ne@DangerB0ne4 ай бұрын
    • Same story here in Indianapolis. Train station is almost never used and Amtrak comes like every few days or every few hours and it’s mostly just to chicago and that’s it.

      @aimxdy8680@aimxdy86804 ай бұрын
  • I wish there could be a south west rail network connecting Pheonix, Tuscon, Santa Fe, Alburquerque, and El Paso

    @TheLopez2617@TheLopez26174 ай бұрын
  • Plus if these trains are going to be electric, as they are in Europe and Japan, I don't think that our D+ rated power grid could handle the load. Each TGV can consume tens of millions of watts.

    @jolyonwelsh9834@jolyonwelsh98348 күн бұрын
  • i hope US will catch up with Asia in terms of the HSR network, It'd be great ideas to connect major cities in US with HSR networks. We were doubtful when our first 220mph HSR was constructed back in mid 2010s. The HSR route has been finished this year and so far it has served more than 1 million passenger! Turned out a pretty great idea connecting 2 major Indonesian cities.

    @ronzac55@ronzac554 ай бұрын
    • it will never ever ever catch up lol

      @veriitas33@veriitas334 ай бұрын
    • Nooo we DONT want that ! High speed only where and if needed , not in everyone's back yard .

      @lassepeterson2740@lassepeterson27404 ай бұрын
    • The united states uses railroads for freight which is very efficient and europe use railroads for commuting And diesel trucks for freight which is very inefficient

      @tntgators@tntgators4 ай бұрын
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