Monday, Nov. 11, 1957
Too Lightweight
Lightweight passenger trains, once looked on as the railroads' salvation in their fight against declining revenues and loss of passengers to the airlines, were in trouble last week:
P: The Rock Island railroad removed the nation's first operative lightweight train, the Talgo-type Jet Rocket, from the 161-mile Chicago-Peoria run, put it to carrying commuters on the short haul between Joliet and Chicago.
P: The New York Central put its famed Xplorer, which has been carrying passengers between Cleveland and Cincinnati, into short-haul service between Chicago and Elkhart, Ind.
P: General Motors reported that one of its two experimental Aerotrains has been sent to the La Grange, Ill. yards for remodeling. The other, turned back by Union Pacific after a disappointing nine-month test run between Los Angeles and Las Vegas, is about to be leased to National Railways of Mexico for a tryout there.
Railroad riders generally have not liked the trains. Rock Island found that many passengers got dizzy watching the three-sectioned Jet coaches wriggle around curves. Others complained of the excessive vibration of the low-slung design.
Railroaders themselves are increasingly skeptical of the value of lightweight trains for main-line service. The Pennsylvania, after experimenting with lightweight trains between Washington and Philadelphia, ordered six new light electric cars of a more conventional design from Budd Co. for commuter service. The Chicago & North Western checked lightweight trains, but instead ordered 13 conventional-weight cars last week from Pullman-Standard. Surveying the trend, N. C. Dezendorf, boss of General Motors' electromotive division, admitted: "Several years ago, when lightweight trains were first discussed, there was tremendous enthusiasm among railroads for them. I was turning down orders. There's none of that now. The Eastern roads, which were the most enthusiastic, now seem to want to get completely out of the passenger business."
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