- A baby bullet train making 5-6 stops will make the SF - SJ trip in 45 minutes, down from 60 minutes today.
- A train making the SF - SJ trip in 60 minutes will be able to stop 13 times, up from 6 stops today.
Both of these claims are greatly inflated. They are easy to verify using a computer program known as a train performance calculator, which numerically integrates the differential equations of motion of a train based on the known characteristics of the track (vertical profile, curve, speed limits, station stops, etc.) and of the train (power, weight, tractive effort, drag, etc.) Physics and math can predict timetable performance quite accurately.
Myth #1: the 45-minute Baby Bullet express
Today's diesel performance (pure run time, no padding) |
Here is what a typical baby bullet run looks like today, with an MP-36 diesel locomotive, six Bombardier coaches, and a load of 600 passengers. There are five stops in this example, each lasting (very optimistically, as riders will attest) just 60 seconds. The pure run time from San Jose to San Francisco 4th and King is 52:22 under ideal conditions, without any margin or padding that is added to a real timetable; compare to the weekday northbound timetable at 64 to 67 minutes, or up to 25% longer (!) than the pure run time. Note that the weekday timetable has been extensively padded lately due to crowding; in 2012, the same run was timetabled at 59 minutes with 12% padding.
Tomorrow's EMU performance (pure run time, no padding) |
All other things being equal, let's substitute an EMU train for our slow diesel. The same run drops to 48:15, just four minutes quicker. This isn't surprising: baby bullet trains spend most of their time cruising near the speed limit, where the faster acceleration of EMUs doesn't provide a benefit. With all other things being equal (including crowding and long dwell times--why would electrification resolve these?) we can expect the timetable for our five-stop baby bullet to drop by the same four minutes, or 60 to 63 minutes. That is a full 15 to 18 minutes slower than claimed by Caltrain! Even if you remove the copious 5-8 minutes of extra padding present in today's timetable and compare to the 2012 timetable, we're still 10 minutes slower than claimed, at 55 minutes.
EMU performance at 110 mph (pure run time, no padding) |
How could you possibly get to 45 minutes? One approach is to raise the speed limit to 110 mph, which is planned in the long term but clearly outside of the scope of the electrification project. Changing only that variable, and slowing down as needed where curves limit the speed to below 110 mph, our EMU now makes the same San Jose to San Francisco run in 41:32, almost seven minutes faster. However, we're still 7 to 10 minutes slower than Caltrain's 45-minute claim, or 2 minutes slower when using 12% padding. Again, the reasons for having such enormous amounts of timetable padding will not suddenly disappear after electrification!
The best way to get there is with level boarding, which alleviates Caltrain's crippling dwell time problem. Level boarding has two benefits: the primary benefit is in the form of reduced dwell time during each stop, and the secondary benefit is in the smaller amount of timetable padding that is needed, thanks to the improved schedule adherence that is possible when the occasional wheelchair lift deployment no longer threatens to inject random three-minute delays. Padding could conceivably be cut to 7%, and dwell time to 30 seconds. No new simulation runs are required-- our five-stop 79 mph EMU makes it in (48:15 - 2:30)*1.07 = 49 minutes on the timetable; the 110 mph EMU makes it in (41:32 - 2:30)*1.07 = 42 minutes.
Caltrain's claim of a 45-minute baby bullet is readily attainable only after three major improvements are made. These are not included in the scope of the electrification project and are currently unfunded:
- Conversion of the baby bullet fleet from diesel to EMU
- Implementation of system-wide level boarding
- Curve realignment, track upgrades and grade crossing safety upgrades for 110 mph
To promise a 45-minute baby bullet run in the short term is at best misleading and at worst a flat-out lie. Once the electrification project is complete, we can expect approximately zero improvement in baby bullet performance, with timetabled runs in the range of 64 to 67 minutes. If the initial slight increase in capacity of the electrification project relieves crowding (but will it, enough to offset the performance loss from dragging a seventh Bombardier car?) then we could return to the 2012 timetable performance of 59 minutes.
Myth #2: the one-hour, 13-stop limited
Let us assume for the moment that padding returns to the 2012 level of about 12%. Assuming 60-second dwells and a 79 mph speed limit, how many intermediate stops can a limited train make between San Jose and San Francisco before the timetable hits one hour? Subtracting 12% pad from one hour, we need to make a pure run time of 53:34.
With today's diesel bullet performance, Caltrain's claim of six stops in one hour checks out reasonably closely at 54:57 or just over one hour including padding, i.e. close enough. Let's change the assumptions, one by one:
Simulation Case | Pure Run Time | Timetable |
Case A, Diesel, dwell 60, 6 stops, 12% pad | 0:54:57 | 1:01:33 |
Case B, EMU, dwell 60, 6 stops, 12% pad | 0:50:10 | 0:56:11 |
Case C, EMU, dwell 60, 7 stops, 12% pad | 0:52:04 | 0:58:19 |
Case D, EMU, dwell 60, 8 stops, 12% pad | 0:53:58 | 1:00:27 |
Case E, EMU, dwell 30, 8 stops, 7% pad (level boarding) | 0:49:58 | 0:53:28 |
Case F, EMU, dwell 30, 9 stops, 7% pad (level boarding) | 0:51:22 | 0:54:58 |
Case G, EMU, dwell 30, 10 stops, 7% pad (level boarding) | 0:52:46 | 0:56:28 |
Case H, EMU, dwell 30, 11 stops, 7% pad (level boarding) | 0:54:10 | 0:57:57 |
Case I, EMU, dwell 30, 12 stops, 7% pad (level boarding) | 0:55:34 | 0:59:27 |
Case J, EMU, dwell 30, 13 stops, 7% pad (level boarding) | 0:56:58 | 1:00:57 |
Case K, EMU, dwell 30, 13 stops, 7% pad (level boarding), 110 mph | 0:53:08 | 0:56:51 |
Simulation Case K (pure run time, no padding) |
The takeaway message to Caltrain is this: don't over-promise and under-deliver on the modernization project. Your electrification project reduces time in motion and establishes a foundation for further improvements, but is not sufficient by itself. To deliver the service benefits promised in your public presentations, you absolutely need level boarding to reduce time at rest.
(do I sound like a broken record?)