The Mercury News Weekend

New engines reduce delays

Amtrak locomotive­s feature electronic­s to pinpoint problems

- By David Porter

NEWARK, N.J. — The introducti­on of 70 new locomotive­s on Amtrak’s most heavily traveled line three years ago has contribute­d to a reduction in engine-related delays of nearly 25 percent, the national passenger railroad said Thursday.

The last of the ACS64 locomotive­s, called the Amtrak Cities Sprinter, is being rolled out this month. They were put into service beginning in summer 2013 to replace an aging fleet that had been in operation for 20 to 30 years and had been driven an average of 3.5 million miles.

The new engines are used on Amtrak’s Northeast Corridor line between Washington, D.C., and Boston, and its Keystone service between Philadelph­ia and Harrisburg, Pennsylvan­ia.

Statistics provided by Amtrak show there were 1,138 locomotive-related delays in the 10 months ending in July 2013. That number dropped nearly 25 percent, to 857 delays, for the similar period ending last month.

“Anything brand new should operate better than the old stuff, but what we’ve experience­d so far is significan­tly better than what we expected,” Amtrak Chief Operating Officer D.J. Stadtler said.

More technologi­cally advanced than the older engines, the ACS64s feature a dashboard with an electronic screen that can tell an engineer what problems to look for even before they happen, Stadtler said. That has led to a 10 percent decrease in the time of the average delay, he said.

“When the engineer calls in, in the old days there would be a checklist he’d have to go through,” he said. “Now there is a code on the dashboard, and they can say, ‘ OK, go right here.’ It really isolates the incident.”

The engines were built in Sacramento by Munich, Germany-based Siemens. As a condition of the federal loan used to build them, the majority of the products and materials used had to have been made in the U.S. More than 60 suppliers in 20 states contribute­d parts, according to Amtrak.

Stadtler said Amtrak is committed to paying back the $466 million federal loan for the locomotive­s over 25 years using net profits from the Northeast Corridor line.

The cost of the new locomotive­s is relatively small compared to Amtrak’s ongoing multibilli­on-dollar plans to upgrade infrastruc­ture on the Northeast Corridor, some of which is 80 to 100 years old.

The reduction in delays “is heartening,” said Sean Jeans-Gail, vice president of government affairs for the National Associatio­n of Rail Passengers, an advocacy organizati­on.

“It shows that, granted we have tens of billions of improvemen­ts we need to be made on the Northeast Corridor, but there’s lowhanging fruit out there,” Jeans-Gail said. “It’s good that we have these success stories to talk to Jane Q. Taxpayer about and say, ‘This is the benefit of this investment.’ ”

“Anything brand new should operate better than the old stuff, but what we’ve experience­d so far is significan­tly better than whatwe expected.” — D.J. Stadtler, Amtrak chief operating officer

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I/ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES ?? A new ACS-64 locomotive in use by the Amtrak Cities Sprinter trains makes a demonstrat­ion run during unveiling ceremonies at the Siemens factory in Sacramento.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I/ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES A new ACS-64 locomotive in use by the Amtrak Cities Sprinter trains makes a demonstrat­ion run during unveiling ceremonies at the Siemens factory in Sacramento.

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