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Amtrak retained one, Ocean View, as part of its business car fleet and for special use on regular routes, [7] [8] [9] such as the Downeaster service during leaf peeping season. [10] Ocean View was retired in 2019 by Amtrak, due to the age and expense of maintaining the Great Dome Car. [ 11 ]
Interior of a "step-down" coach on Amtrak's Southwest Limited in 1974 The 61 coaches could carry either 68 or 72 passengers, more than the 44 of comparable single-level long-distance coaches. This increased capacity permitted the Santa Fe to run the El Capitan with fewer cars, while increasing the total number of passengers carried. [ 57 ]
Full-height windows were incorporated into the lounge cars. [67] Eleven Superliner I coaches were rebuilt as "snack coaches". These retained the 62 seats on the upper level but removed the lower-level seating in favor of a snack bar and lounge seats. [70] [71] Amtrak rebuilt 34 of the coach-baggage cars as "smoking coaches" in 1996 and 1997. [72]
His idea was to provide a full 360-degree view from above the train in newly built "Vista-Dome" cars. [16] Mr. Osborn took the idea to the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad (CB&Q). The CB&Q took a stainless steel Budd-built coach and rebuilt it at their shops in Aurora, Illinois, with the Vista Dome imagined and sketched by Cyrus Osborn ...
Amtrak announced an overhaul of the Amfleet I interiors in September 2017. [33] The following year, Amtrak began to investigate options to replace the Amfleet I cars altogether. [34] In January 2019, Amtrak issued a request for proposals to replace the 470 Amfleet I cars and ex-Metroliner cab cars then in use. [35] Proposals were due on May 1 ...
Between 1946 and 1948 the Santa Fe increased the length of the El Capitan and added new cars built during and after World War II. The new El Capitan included a storage mail car, baggage-dormitory, eight 44-seat "leg-rest" coaches, two lunch counter-dining cars, a club-lounge, and a coach-observation car.
In the early 1950s Pullman developed a "full-length" design, with the dome seating area stretching the length of the car. This design posed several challenges. The full-length glass roof (625-square-foot (58.1 m 2)) necessitated a new, powerful air-conditioning system from a dedicated diesel motor.
The new baggage cars are used on all Amtrak trains with full baggage cars, both single-level and bi-level, and replaced all of the Heritage Fleet baggage cars that Amtrak inherited from the freight railroads when it was established in 1971. From 2016–2019, 25 Viewliner II dining cars entered service, which replaced all of the Heritage Fleet ...