ac6000cw
Established Member
It feels like sometimes that (given DBs lack of use/interest in the 60s) that it would be a better idea all round if they sold all the 60s to an independent leasing/hire company (that was also responsible for arranging the heavier maintenance), then just leased/hired back the ones they needed. The others would then be available for anyone else who wanted to use them. The same idea might work for the 92s as well.
There are precedents for this sort of thing - the US railroads compete with each other for traffic, but nearly all of the intermodal freight cars they use are owned by a 'rolling stock provider' company (TTX) that is jointly owned by all the big railroads in the US, Canada and Mexico. This means the cars operate effectively as a continent-wide, pooled fleet which improves their utilisation. The railroads also have numerous 'run-through' agreements for motive power (so locos are not changed at railroad boundaries, and then sometimes get 'borrowed' for a while before heading back home). It's easy to track the usage of locos with modern technology, so the railroads just equalise the 'horsepower-hours' between themselves (or pay/collect usage fees instead, if that's easier). It effectively creates an ad-hoc, dynamic, nationwide loco pool (of just a small percentage of the total fleet though).
There are precedents for this sort of thing - the US railroads compete with each other for traffic, but nearly all of the intermodal freight cars they use are owned by a 'rolling stock provider' company (TTX) that is jointly owned by all the big railroads in the US, Canada and Mexico. This means the cars operate effectively as a continent-wide, pooled fleet which improves their utilisation. The railroads also have numerous 'run-through' agreements for motive power (so locos are not changed at railroad boundaries, and then sometimes get 'borrowed' for a while before heading back home). It's easy to track the usage of locos with modern technology, so the railroads just equalise the 'horsepower-hours' between themselves (or pay/collect usage fees instead, if that's easier). It effectively creates an ad-hoc, dynamic, nationwide loco pool (of just a small percentage of the total fleet though).
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