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Hi-Level

The Hi-Level was a type of bilevel intercity railroad passenger car used in the United States. Car types included coaches, dining cars, and lounge cars; a sleeping car variant was considered but never produced. Most passenger spaces were on the upper level, which featured a row of windows on both sides. Boarding was on the lower level; passengers climbed up a center stairwell to reach the upper level. Vestibules on the upper level permitted passengers to walk between cars; some coaches had an additional stairwell at one end to allow access to single-level equipment.

Hi-Level
Hi-Level coaches on Amtrak's Southwest Limited at Albuquerque in 1974; the lounge is second from right.
The interior of an Amtrak Pacific Parlour Car, a refurbished lounge
In service1954–2018
ManufacturerBudd Company
Constructed1952–1964
Number built73 (61 coaches, 6 lounges, 6 diners)
Number preservedVarious in private ownership
Capacity
  • 67 (coach prototypes)
  • 68 (step-down coaches)
  • 72 (coaches)
Operators
Specifications
Car body constructionStainless steel
Car length85 feet (26 m)
Height15 feet 6 inches (4.72 m)
Weight
  • 80 short tons (73 t) (coaches)
  • 83 short tons (75 t) (lounges)
  • 97 short tons (88 t) (dining cars)
Notes/references
[1]

The Budd Company designed the car in the 1950s for the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway ("Santa Fe") for use on the El Capitan, a coach-only streamliner which ran daily between Los Angeles and Chicago. The design was inspired by two recent developments in railroading: the dome car, employed in intercity routes in the western United States, and bilevel commuter cars operating in the Chicago area. Budd built 73 Hi-Level cars between 1952 and 1964.

The first two prototype coaches entered service on the El Capitan in 1954 and were immediately successful. Budd built sufficient coaches, dining cars, and lounge cars to fully equip the El Capitan, with additional coaches seeing use on the San Francisco Chief. Amtrak inherited the entire fleet in 1971 and continued to use the equipment on its western routes. Tunnel clearances restricted their use in the eastern United States. In 1979, the first Superliners, based on the Hi-Level concept although built by Pullman-Standard, entered service. Amtrak gradually retired most of its Hi-Levels in the 1990s as more Superliners became available. Five lounges, dubbed "Pacific Parlour Cars", provided first-class lounge service on the Coast Starlight until their retirement in 2018.

Background edit

The Santa Fe introduced the El Capitan in 1938. The train ran on the Santa Fe's main line between Chicago and Los Angeles. Unusually for streamliners of the period, the El Capitan carried coaches only, and had no sleeping cars; this was meant to provide passengers with a lower-cost alternative to the sleeping car-equipped Super Chief, which served the same route. Passengers flocked to the new train, and the Santa Fe added cars to meet the demand. The train grew from five cars in 1938 to twelve in 1942.[2] By the early 1950s fourteen was common.[3] Only seven or eight of these would be passenger-carrying coaches; other cars included head-end cars, a baggage-dormitory for the crew, two dining cars, and a Big Dome lounge.[4]

Sometimes demand was high enough to justify running a second instance ("section") of the train on the same day. The Santa Fe sought a solution to increase the capacity of the train without lengthening it further. Two popular innovations by the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad (CB&Q) suggested a solution. First, in 1945, the CB&Q introduced the dome car, in which passengers rode on a second level high above the tracks, affording better views. Second, in 1950, it placed bilevel rail cars in commuter service in the Chicago area. Taken together, these innovations suggested a new possibility: a long-distance bilevel coach, with greater capacity than single-level cars, and the panoramic views of a dome.[5]

History edit

Santa Fe edit

 
The exterior of a Hi-Level lounge on the El Capitan soon after completion in 1956
 
The San Francisco Chief in 1971. The train had both Hi-Level and single-level cars.

The Budd Company approached Santa Fe in 1952 with the proposal to build long-distance bilevel cars, building on the gallery commuter car concept. Santa Fe accepted the proposal, and took delivery of two prototype coaches in 1954. The cars went into regular service on the El Capitan.[6] Following a positive customer response, the Santa Fe ordered 47 more cars: ten 68-seat "step down" coaches, twenty-five 72-seat coaches, six lounges, and six dining cars. These constituted five equipment sets ("consists"), sufficient for daily service on the El Capitan.[7] The project cost $13 million.[8]

A press trip took place between Washington, D.C., and Pittsburgh on June 16, 1956, using the route of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad (and presaging the use of Superliners on Amtrak's Capitol Limited).[9] Santa Fe exhibited the equipment throughout the United States during June and early July. A formal christening took place in Albuquerque, New Mexico, on July 8, with the duke of Alburquerque in attendance. Regular revenue service began on July 15.[10] The new train was far more efficient than its predecessor. As Fred Frailey explained:[11]

... a conventional El Cap ran 16 cars, carried 438 people and weighed 1,069 tons. Fred Gurley's $13 million got Santa Fe a 13-car train (including the same head-end cars) that carried 130 additional people and weighed 110 tons less ...

— Fred Frailey, Twilight of the Great Trains

Trains editor David P. Morgan thought the equipment was "comfortable" and "[rode] well, even above 90 mph".[12] S. Kip Farrington wrote that he was "definitely sold on the high level in every angle" and that it was "here to stay".[13] A typical train comprised two step-down coaches, five standard coaches, a lounge, and a dining car. The Hi-Level cars continued in service after the Santa Fe combined the El Capitan and Super Chief in 1958.[14] The Santa Fe also converted six single-level baggage cars to baggage-dormitories (Nos. 3477–3482), with a spoiler at one end to create a visual transition.[15] The cars dated from the 1938 version of the El Capitan.[16]

Despite their success, the cars did not inspire a wave of imitators. By the late 1950s, private-sector passenger travel was in what turned out to be irreversible decline. Most railroads were cutting service; few ordered new equipment of any kind. An exception was the Chicago and North Western Railway (CNW). The CNW, like the Burlington, used bilevel coaches on its Chicago-area commuter routes. In 1958 it ordered thirteen intercity bilevel cars from Pullman-Standard: ten coaches, a parlor car, a coach-parlor, and a coach-lounge. Visually they resembled the CNW's existing commuter equipment; a noticeable difference from the Hi-Levels was the adoption of head-end power (HEP) instead of steam. The cars entered service on the Peninsula 400, a Chicago–Ishpeming, Michigan, day train, on October 26, 1958.[17] The CNW would be the only other railroad to introduce bilevel equipment on intercity runs.[18]

By the 1960s, the Santa Fe encountered capacity problems on the San Francisco Chief, which ran between Chicago and San Francisco. Unlike the El Capitan, the Chief carried a mix of sleeping cars and coaches.[19] To augment capacity, the Santa Fe ordered more coaches in 1963–1964 (standard and step-down, twelve each).[7] This was the final major order for new long-distance passenger equipment before the coming of Amtrak; after Kansas City Southern Railway bought ten new coaches from Pullman-Standard in 1965, no new locomotive-hauled coaching stock would be built until the first Amfleets arrived a decade later.[10][20] Each San Francisco Chief carried four Hi-Level coaches, displacing six single-level coaches.[21]

Amtrak edit

 
Hi-Levels mixed with slightly taller Superliners on the Southwest Limited in 1981
 
Hi-Level coaches mixed with a Superliner coach (center) on the Heartland Flyer in 2005

Throughout the 1960s passenger ridership declined on American railroads while losses mounted. In 1971 the United States federal government created Amtrak, a subsidized for-profit corporation, to take over intercity services and reverse the decline.[22][23] The Santa Fe, after some hesitation, participated.[24] Amtrak took over the Santa Fe's remaining trains on May 1, 1971. It acquired the entire Hi-Level fleet and continued to operate them.[25] The primary assignment continued to be the combined Super Chief/El Capitan, known as the Southwest Limited from 1974 to 1984 and the Southwest Chief thereafter.[26] The Chicago–Houston Texas Chief, another ex-Santa Fe train, also carried Hi-Level coaches.[27]

Amtrak was impressed with the Hi-Levels and used them as the basis for the design of the bilevel Superliner family of railcars. The first of 284 Superliner I cars began arriving from Pullman-Standard in 1978.[28] As the Superliners went into service, Hi-Levels could be found on more of Amtrak's trains throughout the Western United States. Hi-Level coaches appeared on the San Francisco–Chicago San Francisco Zephyr,[29] Chicago–San Antonio, Texas–Los Angeles Eagle,[30] and the Chicago–Seattle, Washington/Portland, Oregon Empire Builder.[31] Dining cars displaced from the Southwest Limited filled in on the Ogden, Utah–Los Angeles Desert Wind.[29] Tunnel clearances around New York City and elsewhere prevented their use on the Northeast Corridor.[32]

The Superliner I order did not include any "step down" coaches, so Hi-Level coaches continued to fulfill this function on Superliner-equipped trains. In the 1980s, Amtrak rebuilt many of these coaches as dormitory-coaches, with half of the car given over to crew space.[33] Amtrak retired all six single-level baggage-dormitory cars by 1981 in lieu of converting them to HEP.[15] By 1990 the Amtrak fleet stood at 69 cars: 36 dormitory-coaches, 21 coaches, six diner-lounges rebuilt from dining cars, and the six lounge cars, which Amtrak marketed as "See-Level Lounges".[34] The arrival of 195 Superliner II cars from Bombardier Transportation in 1993–1995 permitted the retirement of most of the remaining Hi-Level cars.[35] The Chicago–Toronto International used a mix of Superliners and Hi-Levels from 1995 to 2000.[36] Hi-Levels remained in service on the Oklahoma CityDallas Heartland Flyer into the 2000s.[33] The majority of the Hi-Level fleet was retired at the beginning of 2003.[37] The private equity fund Corridor Capital owns most of the fleet, and has proposed employing them for various passenger projects within the United States, including a plan to revive the Coast Daylight.[38][39]

The last major Hi-Level assignment on Amtrak was the Los Angeles–Seattle Coast Starlight. In the late 1990s Amtrak refurbished five of the six lounges for use as sleeping car passenger-only lounges, branded as the "Pacific Parlour Car".[40][41] Amtrak offered separate food and beverage service in the upper level and installed a movie theater in the lower level.[42] The railway writer and historian Karl Zimmermann called them "the greatest treat for sleeping car passengers on Amtrak".[43] By the late 2010s Amtrak was manufacturing new parts for the Hi-Levels at Beech Grove, or in some cases retrofitting the Hi-Levels to use Superliner parts.[44] Amtrak retired the cars after their last run on February 4, 2018, citing safety concerns and rising maintenance costs.[45] They were the last Hi-Levels in regular service, and among the few remaining Heritage Fleet cars.[46] The Steam Railroading Institute, a heritage railroad based in Owosso, Michigan, acquired several for use in excursion service.[47]

Design edit

The Hi-Levels stood 15+12 feet (4.7 m) high, 2 feet (0.61 m) taller than most conventional equipment. Seating occupied the entire upper level, with restrooms, baggage, and other non-revenue areas on the lower level. In most cars, vestibules connected the upper levels only.[48] A central staircase linked the two levels.[49] Hi-Levels featured a row of windows across the upper level; on the prototype coaches, this row slanted inwards.[50] The two-level design offered several advantages over conventional single-level equipment. Budd and the Santa Fe expected the upper level, located 8 feet 7 inches (2.62 m) above the rails, to provide a smoother, quieter ride for passengers. With the lower level free of passengers, designers could provide larger restrooms and baggage areas. Finally, the lower level contained all the electrical equipment, away from the passengers, and with easy access for maintenance.[51] Budd used stainless steel in the construction, with fluted sides.[52] The cars cost $275,000 apiece.[1]

Budd built the Hi-Levels with steam heating, the standard method for ensuring passenger comfort in the 1950s. For air conditioning and other electrical needs, it chose to employ independent diesel generators in each car. Coaches required a single 40-kilowatt (54 hp) generator; the massive dining car required two such generators to support the kitchen appliances. In the lounge car a larger 60-kilowatt (80 hp) generator was employed.[53][54] Beginning in the mid-1970s, Amtrak adopted head-end power (HEP) for new orders. HEP and steam are incompatible, so Amtrak had the Hi-Levels converted to HEP to permit their use with new cars. Santa Fe handled the conversion of the Hi-Levels in its Topeka, Kansas, shops.[55] Of the 73 Hi-Levels, all but three underwent the conversion.[56]

Coaches edit

 
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] The 68-seat coaches featured "step down" stairs at one end to permit access to standard-height equipment; that space was given over to four additional seats on the 72-seat coaches.[7] The prototypes also featured step-down stairs, but carried one fewer passenger.[58]

The passenger windows were 21 inches (53 cm) high. The seat pitch was 50 inches (130 cm).[59] The Dwight Austin-manufactured "Traveleze" seats reclined, and included both head and leg rests.[60] Hand luggage could be stored in racks above the coach seats, or in large storage racks on the lower level.[61] In the prototypes the upper level had no restrooms; in response to passenger feedback, Budd added a restroom to the upper level in the production models. The prototypes also included a "step up" from the aisle to the coach seats; in the production cars, the seats rested flush with the aisle. Each coach weighed 80 short tons (73 t).[49]

Lounges edit

 
Amtrak's Sonoma Valley lounge in 2010

The lounge cars were similar to the full-length Big Dome lounges which had entered service with the Santa Fe in 1954. The most obvious difference was the absence of a forward-looking view on the Hi-Level cars.[12] Each of the six lounges could seat 60 people on the upper level. The seating was a mixture of single seats and two- and four-top tables.[62] Nicknames for these cars included "Top of the Cap" and "Sky Lounges". A glass top across two-thirds of the car distinguished it from the rest of the Hi-Levels. The lower level featured the "Kachina Coffee Shop" and a lounge area with seating for 26. Passengers on the lower level could look out through large, 56-inch (140 cm) windows. The lounge cars weighed 83 short tons (75 t).[63][64] Under Santa Fe operation there were attendants on both levels, and a newsstand on the upper level.[62]

Dining cars edit

Six dining cars were built. Each dining car seated 80, all on the upper level, compared to 36 in a single-level diner, enabling each car to do the work of two single-level dining cars. The lower level housed the kitchen, including ovens, hot plates, a refrigerator, and a dishwasher. Dumbwaiters carried food to the upper level.[53] A diesel generator supplied power to the appliances.[65] The dining cars, the largest single-unit dining cars ever built, weighed 97 short tons (88 t) and rode on six-wheel trucks.[66] As Superliner dining cars arrived in the 1980s, Amtrak rebuilt these cars as diner-lounges, incorporating booths and lounge seating.[67]

Sleeping car proposal edit

Santa Fe considered equipping the Super Chief with Hi-Level sleeping cars, and Budd drafted a design for such a car in 1957. In this design there was an aisle on the lower level only, and set against one side instead of centerline. The lower level also contained six single bedrooms and a toilet. The upper level would have eight two-person "Vista Bedrooms" which spanned the width of the car. Access to these rooms would be from four sets of stairs from the lower level aside. Each Vista Bedroom would contain an individual toilet and two beds: one stacked above the bed in the single bedroom beneath, and one lengthwise over the aisle.[16] Nothing came of this proposal. Pullman-Standard adopted a more traditional design for Amtrak's Superliner I in the 1970s: five bedrooms and ten roomettes on the upper level, two bedrooms and four roomettes on the lower level.[68]

Summary edit

 
A "step down" or transition coach on the Pioneer in 1994. The vestibule is on the lower level.

Including the two prototypes, Budd built 73 Hi-Level cars:[7]

Type Quantity Original road numbers
67-seat prototype coach 2 526–527
68-seat "step down" coach 22 528–549
72-seat coach 37 700–736
Lounge 6 575–580
Diner 6 650–655

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b White 1985, pp. 195–196
  2. ^ Abbey 2016, p. 62
  3. ^ Flick & Kogan 1999, p. 9
  4. ^ Dorin 2005, p. 38
  5. ^ Flick & Kogan 1999, pp. 8–9
  6. ^ Zimmermann 2016, pp. 52–53
  7. ^ a b c d Wayner 1972, pp. 196–197
  8. ^ Frailey 2010, p. 55
  9. ^ Zimmermann 2016, p. 53
  10. ^ a b Zimmermann 2016, p. 57
  11. ^ Frailey 2010, p. 56
  12. ^ a b Morgan 2015, p. 92
  13. ^ Farrington 1958, p. 203
  14. ^ Flick & Kogan 1999, p. 15
  15. ^ a b Simon & Warner 2011, p. 166
  16. ^ a b Dubin 1974, p. 489
  17. ^ Scribbins 2008, pp. 195–196
  18. ^ Reed 1975, pp. 257–258
  19. ^ Flick & Kogan 1999, p. 16
  20. ^ Frailey 2010, pp. 11–12
  21. ^ Flick & Kogan 1999, p. 21
  22. ^ Sanders 2006, pp. 1–3
  23. ^ Thoms 1973, pp. 38–39
  24. ^ Frailey 2010, p. 72
  25. ^ Solomon 2004, p. 129
  26. ^ Sanders 2006, pp. 132–133
  27. ^ Sanders 2006, p. 119
  28. ^ Schafer & Welsh 1997, p. 57
  29. ^ a b Sanders 2006, p. 154
  30. ^ Sanders 2006, p. 120
  31. ^ Sanders 2006, p. 171
  32. ^ Zimmermann 2004, p. 30
  33. ^ a b Yenne 2005, p. 139
  34. ^ Amtrak 1990, p. 12
  35. ^ Sanders 2006, p. 98
  36. ^ Sanders 2006, p. 208
  37. ^ Simon & Warner 2011, p. 190
  38. ^ "Developer working to move AL passenger train project forward". WSFA. July 16, 2016. Retrieved March 15, 2018.
  39. ^ "The Coast Daylight: A California Legend Reborn" (PDF). myftpupload.com. Retrieved 28 December 2019.
  40. ^ Yenne 2005, p. 140
  41. ^ Welsh 1999, p. 56
  42. ^ McCommons 2009, p. 133
  43. ^ Zimmermann 2016, p. 51
  44. ^ Johnston 2017, p. 23
  45. ^ "Coast Starlight Parlour Car Removed" (Press release). Amtrak. Retrieved February 11, 2018.
  46. ^ Kenton, Malcolm (January 18, 2018). "Amtrak permanently retiring Pacific Parlour Cars". Trains News Wire. from the original on January 19, 2018. Retrieved January 19, 2018. (subscription required)
  47. ^ Durr, Matt (March 18, 2019). "North Pole Express offering adults only cars for 2019 trips". MLive.com. Retrieved March 21, 2019.
  48. ^ Griswold 1957, pp. 137–138
  49. ^ a b Flick & Kogan 1999, p. 10
  50. ^ Wayner 1973, inset
  51. ^ . Chicago Tribune. July 18, 1954. p. 40. Archived from the original on February 11, 2018. Retrieved February 11, 2018 – via Newspapers.com.  
  52. ^ Farrington 1958, p. 105
  53. ^ a b Griswold 1957, p. 139
  54. ^ Morgan 2015, pp. 92–94
  55. ^ "Beech Grove HEP Conversion Program Results In Like-New Car For Passengers". Amtrak News. 7 (7): 8. August 1980. from the original on November 18, 2015.
  56. ^ Simon & Warner 2011, pp. 164–166
  57. ^ Griswold 1957, p. 138
  58. ^ Wayner 1973, p. 68
  59. ^ Morgan 2015, p. 90
  60. ^ "Santa Fe Specifies the Dwight Austin Traveleze Seat". Railway Age. April 5, 1954. from the original on September 9, 2015. Retrieved January 21, 2018.
  61. ^ Zimmermann 2016, p. 54
  62. ^ a b Wegman 2008, p. 154
  63. ^ Flick & Kogan 1999, pp. 13–14
  64. ^ Farrington 1958, p. 102
  65. ^ Griswold 1957, p. 240
  66. ^ Flick & Kogan 1999, pp. 12–13
  67. ^ Ingles 1984, p. 18
  68. ^ "superliner sleeper". Amtrak Vacations. from the original on September 6, 2017. Retrieved February 11, 2018.

References edit

  • Abbey, Wallace W. (2016). "Short hop on El Capitan". In McGonigal, Robert S. (ed.). Great Trains West. Waukesha, Wisconsin: Kalmbach Publishing. pp. 60–65. ISBN 978-1-62700-435-0.
  • Amtrak (August 1990). Amtrak's Passenger Trains (PDF).
  • Dorin, Patrick C. (2005). The Super Chief and the El Capitan. Forest, Virginia: TLC Publishing. ISBN 978-0-9766201-9-8.
  • Dubin, Arthur D. (1974). More classic trains. Milwaukee, Wisconsin: Kalmbach Books. OCLC 643578087.
  • Farrington, S. Kip Jr. (1958). Railroads of the Hour. Coward-McCann. OCLC 1226241.
  • Flick, Michael W.; Kogan, Dennis (1999). "Santa Fe's Hi-Level Passenger Cars". Warbonnet. 5 (3). ISSN 0273-7426.
  • Frailey, Fred W. (2010) [1998]. Twilight of the Great Trains (2nd ed.). Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-35477-8.
  • Griswold, Wesley S. (January 1957). "Riding the Santa Fe's Split-Level Train". Popular Science: 136–139, 240–241. ISSN 0161-7370.
  • Ingles, J. David (October 1984). "Arrivals & Departures". Trains. 44 (12): 18. ISSN 0041-0934.
  • Johnston, Bob (August 2017). "There's Beech Grove". Trains. 77 (8): 22–23. ISSN 0041-0934.
  • McCommons, James (2009). Waiting on a Train: The Embattled Future of Passenger Rail Service. White River Junction, Vermont: Chelsea Green Publishing. ISBN 978-1-60358-064-9.
  • Morgan, David P. (2015). "Two-Story Streamliners". In McGonigal, Robert S. (ed.). More trains of the 1950s. Waukesha, Wisconsin: Kalmbach Publishing. pp. 86–94. ISBN 978-1-62700-322-3.
  • Reed, Robert C. (1975). The Streamline Era. San Marino, California: Golden West Books. ISBN 0-87095-053-3.
  • Sanders, Craig (2006). Amtrak in the Heartland. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-34705-3.
  • Schafer, Mike; Welsh, Joe (1997). Classic American Streamliners. Osceola, Wisconsin: MotorBooks International. ISBN 978-0-7603-0377-1.
  • Scribbins, Jim (2008) [1982]. The 400 Story. Minneapolis, Minnesota: University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 978-0-8166-5449-9.
  • Simon, Elbert; Warner, David C. (2011). Holland, Kevin J. (ed.). Amtrak by the Numbers: A Comprehensive Passenger Car and Motive Power Roster – 1971–2011. Kansas City, Missouri: White River Productions. ISBN 978-1-932804-12-6.
  • Solomon, Brian (2004). Amtrak. Saint Paul, Minnesota: MBI. ISBN 978-0-7603-1765-5.
  • Thoms, William E. (1973). Reprieve for the Iron Horse: The AMTRAK Experiment – Its Predecessors and Prospects. Baton Rouge, Louisiana: Claitor's Publishing Division. OCLC 1094744.
  • Wayner, Robert J., ed. (1972). Car Names, Numbers and Consists. New York: Wayner Publications. OCLC 8848690.
  • Wayner, Robert J., ed. (1973). Amtrak Car Spotter (2nd ed.). New York: Wayner Publications. OCLC 1113513.
  • Wegman, Mark (2008). American Passenger Trains and Locomotives Illustrated. Minneapolis, Minnesota: Voyageur Press. ISBN 978-0-7603-3475-1.
  • Welsh, Joe (February 1999). "Showtime on the Coast Starlight". Trains. 58 (2): 50–60. ISSN 0041-0934.
  • White, John H. (1985) [1978]. The American Railroad Passenger Car. Baltimore, Maryland: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-0-8018-2743-3.
  • Yenne, Bill (2005). Santa Fe Chiefs. Saint Paul, Minnesota: MBI. ISBN 978-0-7603-1848-5.
  • Zimmermann, Karl (2004). All Aboard! Passenger Trains Around the World. Honesdale, Pennsylvania: Boyds Mills Press. ISBN 978-1-59078-325-2.
  • Zimmermann, Karl (Winter 2016). "Riding High: Santa Fe's Big Move of 1956". Classic Trains. 17 (4): 50–57. ISSN 1527-0718.

External links edit

  • Santa Fe Hi-Level car plans and elevations 2018-01-29 at the Wayback Machine

level, other, uses, high, level, disambiguation, type, bilevel, intercity, railroad, passenger, used, united, states, types, included, coaches, dining, cars, lounge, cars, sleeping, variant, considered, never, produced, most, passenger, spaces, were, upper, le. For other uses see High level disambiguation The Hi Level was a type of bilevel intercity railroad passenger car used in the United States Car types included coaches dining cars and lounge cars a sleeping car variant was considered but never produced Most passenger spaces were on the upper level which featured a row of windows on both sides Boarding was on the lower level passengers climbed up a center stairwell to reach the upper level Vestibules on the upper level permitted passengers to walk between cars some coaches had an additional stairwell at one end to allow access to single level equipment Hi LevelHi Level coaches on Amtrak s Southwest Limited at Albuquerque in 1974 the lounge is second from right The interior of an Amtrak Pacific Parlour Car a refurbished loungeIn service1954 2018ManufacturerBudd CompanyConstructed1952 1964Number built73 61 coaches 6 lounges 6 diners Number preservedVarious in private ownershipCapacity67 coach prototypes 68 step down coaches 72 coaches OperatorsAtchison Topeka and Santa Fe Railway AmtrakSpecificationsCar body constructionStainless steelCar length85 feet 26 m Height15 feet 6 inches 4 72 m Weight80 short tons 73 t coaches 83 short tons 75 t lounges 97 short tons 88 t dining cars Notes references 1 The Budd Company designed the car in the 1950s for the Atchison Topeka and Santa Fe Railway Santa Fe for use on the El Capitan a coach only streamliner which ran daily between Los Angeles and Chicago The design was inspired by two recent developments in railroading the dome car employed in intercity routes in the western United States and bilevel commuter cars operating in the Chicago area Budd built 73 Hi Level cars between 1952 and 1964 The first two prototype coaches entered service on the El Capitan in 1954 and were immediately successful Budd built sufficient coaches dining cars and lounge cars to fully equip the El Capitan with additional coaches seeing use on the San Francisco Chief Amtrak inherited the entire fleet in 1971 and continued to use the equipment on its western routes Tunnel clearances restricted their use in the eastern United States In 1979 the first Superliners based on the Hi Level concept although built by Pullman Standard entered service Amtrak gradually retired most of its Hi Levels in the 1990s as more Superliners became available Five lounges dubbed Pacific Parlour Cars provided first class lounge service on the Coast Starlight until their retirement in 2018 Contents 1 Background 2 History 2 1 Santa Fe 2 2 Amtrak 3 Design 3 1 Coaches 3 2 Lounges 3 3 Dining cars 3 4 Sleeping car proposal 3 5 Summary 4 Notes 5 References 6 External linksBackground editSee also El Capitan train The Santa Fe introduced the El Capitan in 1938 The train ran on the Santa Fe s main line between Chicago and Los Angeles Unusually for streamliners of the period the El Capitan carried coaches only and had no sleeping cars this was meant to provide passengers with a lower cost alternative to the sleeping car equipped Super Chief which served the same route Passengers flocked to the new train and the Santa Fe added cars to meet the demand The train grew from five cars in 1938 to twelve in 1942 2 By the early 1950s fourteen was common 3 Only seven or eight of these would be passenger carrying coaches other cars included head end cars a baggage dormitory for the crew two dining cars and a Big Dome lounge 4 Sometimes demand was high enough to justify running a second instance section of the train on the same day The Santa Fe sought a solution to increase the capacity of the train without lengthening it further Two popular innovations by the Chicago Burlington and Quincy Railroad CB amp Q suggested a solution First in 1945 the CB amp Q introduced the dome car in which passengers rode on a second level high above the tracks affording better views Second in 1950 it placed bilevel rail cars in commuter service in the Chicago area Taken together these innovations suggested a new possibility a long distance bilevel coach with greater capacity than single level cars and the panoramic views of a dome 5 History editSanta Fe edit nbsp The exterior of a Hi Level lounge on the El Capitan soon after completion in 1956 nbsp The San Francisco Chief in 1971 The train had both Hi Level and single level cars The Budd Company approached Santa Fe in 1952 with the proposal to build long distance bilevel cars building on the gallery commuter car concept Santa Fe accepted the proposal and took delivery of two prototype coaches in 1954 The cars went into regular service on the El Capitan 6 Following a positive customer response the Santa Fe ordered 47 more cars ten 68 seat step down coaches twenty five 72 seat coaches six lounges and six dining cars These constituted five equipment sets consists sufficient for daily service on the El Capitan 7 The project cost 13 million 8 A press trip took place between Washington D C and Pittsburgh on June 16 1956 using the route of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad and presaging the use of Superliners on Amtrak s Capitol Limited 9 Santa Fe exhibited the equipment throughout the United States during June and early July A formal christening took place in Albuquerque New Mexico on July 8 with the duke of Alburquerque in attendance Regular revenue service began on July 15 10 The new train was far more efficient than its predecessor As Fred Frailey explained 11 a conventional El Cap ran 16 cars carried 438 people and weighed 1 069 tons Fred Gurley s 13 million got Santa Fe a 13 car train including the same head end cars that carried 130 additional people and weighed 110 tons less Fred Frailey Twilight of the Great Trains Trains editor David P Morgan thought the equipment was comfortable and rode well even above 90 mph 12 S Kip Farrington wrote that he was definitely sold on the high level in every angle and that it was here to stay 13 A typical train comprised two step down coaches five standard coaches a lounge and a dining car The Hi Level cars continued in service after the Santa Fe combined the El Capitan and Super Chief in 1958 14 The Santa Fe also converted six single level baggage cars to baggage dormitories Nos 3477 3482 with a spoiler at one end to create a visual transition 15 The cars dated from the 1938 version of the El Capitan 16 Despite their success the cars did not inspire a wave of imitators By the late 1950s private sector passenger travel was in what turned out to be irreversible decline Most railroads were cutting service few ordered new equipment of any kind An exception was the Chicago and North Western Railway CNW The CNW like the Burlington used bilevel coaches on its Chicago area commuter routes In 1958 it ordered thirteen intercity bilevel cars from Pullman Standard ten coaches a parlor car a coach parlor and a coach lounge Visually they resembled the CNW s existing commuter equipment a noticeable difference from the Hi Levels was the adoption of head end power HEP instead of steam The cars entered service on the Peninsula 400 a Chicago Ishpeming Michigan day train on October 26 1958 17 The CNW would be the only other railroad to introduce bilevel equipment on intercity runs 18 By the 1960s the Santa Fe encountered capacity problems on the San Francisco Chief which ran between Chicago and San Francisco Unlike the El Capitan the Chief carried a mix of sleeping cars and coaches 19 To augment capacity the Santa Fe ordered more coaches in 1963 1964 standard and step down twelve each 7 This was the final major order for new long distance passenger equipment before the coming of Amtrak after Kansas City Southern Railway bought ten new coaches from Pullman Standard in 1965 no new locomotive hauled coaching stock would be built until the first Amfleets arrived a decade later 10 20 Each San Francisco Chief carried four Hi Level coaches displacing six single level coaches 21 Amtrak edit See also Amtrak History nbsp Hi Levels mixed with slightly taller Superliners on the Southwest Limited in 1981 nbsp Hi Level coaches mixed with a Superliner coach center on the Heartland Flyer in 2005 Throughout the 1960s passenger ridership declined on American railroads while losses mounted In 1971 the United States federal government created Amtrak a subsidized for profit corporation to take over intercity services and reverse the decline 22 23 The Santa Fe after some hesitation participated 24 Amtrak took over the Santa Fe s remaining trains on May 1 1971 It acquired the entire Hi Level fleet and continued to operate them 25 The primary assignment continued to be the combined Super Chief El Capitan known as the Southwest Limited from 1974 to 1984 and the Southwest Chief thereafter 26 The Chicago Houston Texas Chief another ex Santa Fe train also carried Hi Level coaches 27 Amtrak was impressed with the Hi Levels and used them as the basis for the design of the bilevel Superliner family of railcars The first of 284 Superliner I cars began arriving from Pullman Standard in 1978 28 As the Superliners went into service Hi Levels could be found on more of Amtrak s trains throughout the Western United States Hi Level coaches appeared on the San Francisco Chicago San Francisco Zephyr 29 Chicago San Antonio Texas Los Angeles Eagle 30 and the Chicago Seattle Washington Portland Oregon Empire Builder 31 Dining cars displaced from the Southwest Limited filled in on the Ogden Utah Los Angeles Desert Wind 29 Tunnel clearances around New York City and elsewhere prevented their use on the Northeast Corridor 32 The Superliner I order did not include any step down coaches so Hi Level coaches continued to fulfill this function on Superliner equipped trains In the 1980s Amtrak rebuilt many of these coaches as dormitory coaches with half of the car given over to crew space 33 Amtrak retired all six single level baggage dormitory cars by 1981 in lieu of converting them to HEP 15 By 1990 the Amtrak fleet stood at 69 cars 36 dormitory coaches 21 coaches six diner lounges rebuilt from dining cars and the six lounge cars which Amtrak marketed as See Level Lounges 34 The arrival of 195 Superliner II cars from Bombardier Transportation in 1993 1995 permitted the retirement of most of the remaining Hi Level cars 35 The Chicago Toronto International used a mix of Superliners and Hi Levels from 1995 to 2000 36 Hi Levels remained in service on the Oklahoma City Dallas Heartland Flyer into the 2000s 33 The majority of the Hi Level fleet was retired at the beginning of 2003 37 The private equity fund Corridor Capital owns most of the fleet and has proposed employing them for various passenger projects within the United States including a plan to revive the Coast Daylight 38 39 The last major Hi Level assignment on Amtrak was the Los Angeles Seattle Coast Starlight In the late 1990s Amtrak refurbished five of the six lounges for use as sleeping car passenger only lounges branded as the Pacific Parlour Car 40 41 Amtrak offered separate food and beverage service in the upper level and installed a movie theater in the lower level 42 The railway writer and historian Karl Zimmermann called them the greatest treat for sleeping car passengers on Amtrak 43 By the late 2010s Amtrak was manufacturing new parts for the Hi Levels at Beech Grove or in some cases retrofitting the Hi Levels to use Superliner parts 44 Amtrak retired the cars after their last run on February 4 2018 citing safety concerns and rising maintenance costs 45 They were the last Hi Levels in regular service and among the few remaining Heritage Fleet cars 46 The Steam Railroading Institute a heritage railroad based in Owosso Michigan acquired several for use in excursion service 47 Design editThe Hi Levels stood 15 1 2 feet 4 7 m high 2 feet 0 61 m taller than most conventional equipment Seating occupied the entire upper level with restrooms baggage and other non revenue areas on the lower level In most cars vestibules connected the upper levels only 48 A central staircase linked the two levels 49 Hi Levels featured a row of windows across the upper level on the prototype coaches this row slanted inwards 50 The two level design offered several advantages over conventional single level equipment Budd and the Santa Fe expected the upper level located 8 feet 7 inches 2 62 m above the rails to provide a smoother quieter ride for passengers With the lower level free of passengers designers could provide larger restrooms and baggage areas Finally the lower level contained all the electrical equipment away from the passengers and with easy access for maintenance 51 Budd used stainless steel in the construction with fluted sides 52 The cars cost 275 000 apiece 1 Budd built the Hi Levels with steam heating the standard method for ensuring passenger comfort in the 1950s For air conditioning and other electrical needs it chose to employ independent diesel generators in each car Coaches required a single 40 kilowatt 54 hp generator the massive dining car required two such generators to support the kitchen appliances In the lounge car a larger 60 kilowatt 80 hp generator was employed 53 54 Beginning in the mid 1970s Amtrak adopted head end power HEP for new orders HEP and steam are incompatible so Amtrak had the Hi Levels converted to HEP to permit their use with new cars Santa Fe handled the conversion of the Hi Levels in its Topeka Kansas shops 55 Of the 73 Hi Levels all but three underwent the conversion 56 Coaches edit nbsp 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 The 68 seat coaches featured step down stairs at one end to permit access to standard height equipment that space was given over to four additional seats on the 72 seat coaches 7 The prototypes also featured step down stairs but carried one fewer passenger 58 The passenger windows were 21 inches 53 cm high The seat pitch was 50 inches 130 cm 59 The Dwight Austin manufactured Traveleze seats reclined and included both head and leg rests 60 Hand luggage could be stored in racks above the coach seats or in large storage racks on the lower level 61 In the prototypes the upper level had no restrooms in response to passenger feedback Budd added a restroom to the upper level in the production models The prototypes also included a step up from the aisle to the coach seats in the production cars the seats rested flush with the aisle Each coach weighed 80 short tons 73 t 49 Lounges edit nbsp Amtrak s Sonoma Valley lounge in 2010 The lounge cars were similar to the full length Big Dome lounges which had entered service with the Santa Fe in 1954 The most obvious difference was the absence of a forward looking view on the Hi Level cars 12 Each of the six lounges could seat 60 people on the upper level The seating was a mixture of single seats and two and four top tables 62 Nicknames for these cars included Top of the Cap and Sky Lounges A glass top across two thirds of the car distinguished it from the rest of the Hi Levels The lower level featured the Kachina Coffee Shop and a lounge area with seating for 26 Passengers on the lower level could look out through large 56 inch 140 cm windows The lounge cars weighed 83 short tons 75 t 63 64 Under Santa Fe operation there were attendants on both levels and a newsstand on the upper level 62 Dining cars edit Six dining cars were built Each dining car seated 80 all on the upper level compared to 36 in a single level diner enabling each car to do the work of two single level dining cars The lower level housed the kitchen including ovens hot plates a refrigerator and a dishwasher Dumbwaiters carried food to the upper level 53 A diesel generator supplied power to the appliances 65 The dining cars the largest single unit dining cars ever built weighed 97 short tons 88 t and rode on six wheel trucks 66 As Superliner dining cars arrived in the 1980s Amtrak rebuilt these cars as diner lounges incorporating booths and lounge seating 67 Sleeping car proposal edit Santa Fe considered equipping the Super Chief with Hi Level sleeping cars and Budd drafted a design for such a car in 1957 In this design there was an aisle on the lower level only and set against one side instead of centerline The lower level also contained six single bedrooms and a toilet The upper level would have eight two person Vista Bedrooms which spanned the width of the car Access to these rooms would be from four sets of stairs from the lower level aside Each Vista Bedroom would contain an individual toilet and two beds one stacked above the bed in the single bedroom beneath and one lengthwise over the aisle 16 Nothing came of this proposal Pullman Standard adopted a more traditional design for Amtrak s Superliner I in the 1970s five bedrooms and ten roomettes on the upper level two bedrooms and four roomettes on the lower level 68 Summary edit nbsp A step down or transition coach on the Pioneer in 1994 The vestibule is on the lower level Including the two prototypes Budd built 73 Hi Level cars 7 Type Quantity Original road numbers 67 seat prototype coach 2 526 527 68 seat step down coach 22 528 549 72 seat coach 37 700 736 Lounge 6 575 580 Diner 6 650 655Notes edit a b White 1985 pp 195 196 Abbey 2016 p 62 Flick amp Kogan 1999 p 9 Dorin 2005 p 38 Flick amp Kogan 1999 pp 8 9 Zimmermann 2016 pp 52 53 a b c d Wayner 1972 pp 196 197 Frailey 2010 p 55 Zimmermann 2016 p 53 a b Zimmermann 2016 p 57 Frailey 2010 p 56 a b Morgan 2015 p 92 Farrington 1958 p 203 Flick amp Kogan 1999 p 15 a b Simon amp Warner 2011 p 166 a b Dubin 1974 p 489 Scribbins 2008 pp 195 196 Reed 1975 pp 257 258 Flick amp Kogan 1999 p 16 Frailey 2010 pp 11 12 Flick amp Kogan 1999 p 21 Sanders 2006 pp 1 3 Thoms 1973 pp 38 39 Frailey 2010 p 72 Solomon 2004 p 129 Sanders 2006 pp 132 133 Sanders 2006 p 119 Schafer amp Welsh 1997 p 57 a b Sanders 2006 p 154 Sanders 2006 p 120 Sanders 2006 p 171 Zimmermann 2004 p 30 a b Yenne 2005 p 139 Amtrak 1990 p 12 Sanders 2006 p 98 Sanders 2006 p 208 Simon amp Warner 2011 p 190 Developer working to move AL passenger train project forward WSFA July 16 2016 Retrieved March 15 2018 The Coast Daylight A California Legend Reborn PDF myftpupload com Retrieved 28 December 2019 Yenne 2005 p 140 Welsh 1999 p 56 McCommons 2009 p 133 Zimmermann 2016 p 51 Johnston 2017 p 23 Coast Starlight Parlour Car Removed Press release Amtrak Retrieved February 11 2018 Kenton Malcolm January 18 2018 Amtrak permanently retiring Pacific Parlour Cars Trains News Wire Archived from the original on January 19 2018 Retrieved January 19 2018 subscription required Durr Matt March 18 2019 North Pole Express offering adults only cars for 2019 trips MLive com Retrieved March 21 2019 Griswold 1957 pp 137 138 a b Flick amp Kogan 1999 p 10 Wayner 1973 inset Hi Level Car to Be Tested by Santa Fe Chicago Tribune July 18 1954 p 40 Archived from the original on February 11 2018 Retrieved February 11 2018 via Newspapers com nbsp Farrington 1958 p 105 a b Griswold 1957 p 139 Morgan 2015 pp 92 94 Beech Grove HEP Conversion Program Results In Like New Car For Passengers Amtrak News 7 7 8 August 1980 Archived from the original on November 18 2015 Simon amp Warner 2011 pp 164 166 Griswold 1957 p 138 Wayner 1973 p 68 Morgan 2015 p 90 Santa Fe Specifies the Dwight Austin Traveleze Seat Railway Age April 5 1954 Archived from the original on September 9 2015 Retrieved January 21 2018 Zimmermann 2016 p 54 a b Wegman 2008 p 154 Flick amp Kogan 1999 pp 13 14 Farrington 1958 p 102 Griswold 1957 p 240 Flick amp Kogan 1999 pp 12 13 Ingles 1984 p 18 superliner sleeper Amtrak Vacations Archived from the original on September 6 2017 Retrieved February 11 2018 References editAbbey Wallace W 2016 Short hop on El Capitan In McGonigal Robert S ed Great Trains West Waukesha Wisconsin Kalmbach Publishing pp 60 65 ISBN 978 1 62700 435 0 Amtrak August 1990 Amtrak s Passenger Trains PDF Dorin Patrick C 2005 The Super Chief and the El Capitan Forest Virginia TLC Publishing ISBN 978 0 9766201 9 8 Dubin Arthur D 1974 More classic trains Milwaukee Wisconsin Kalmbach Books OCLC 643578087 Farrington S Kip Jr 1958 Railroads of the Hour Coward McCann OCLC 1226241 Flick Michael W Kogan Dennis 1999 Santa Fe s Hi Level Passenger Cars Warbonnet 5 3 ISSN 0273 7426 Frailey Fred W 2010 1998 Twilight of the Great Trains 2nd ed Bloomington Indiana Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 35477 8 Griswold Wesley S January 1957 Riding the Santa Fe s Split Level Train Popular Science 136 139 240 241 ISSN 0161 7370 Ingles J David October 1984 Arrivals amp Departures Trains 44 12 18 ISSN 0041 0934 Johnston Bob August 2017 There s Beech Grove Trains 77 8 22 23 ISSN 0041 0934 McCommons James 2009 Waiting on a Train The Embattled Future of Passenger Rail Service White River Junction Vermont Chelsea Green Publishing ISBN 978 1 60358 064 9 Morgan David P 2015 Two Story Streamliners In McGonigal Robert S ed More trains of the 1950s Waukesha Wisconsin Kalmbach Publishing pp 86 94 ISBN 978 1 62700 322 3 Reed Robert C 1975 The Streamline Era San Marino California Golden West Books ISBN 0 87095 053 3 Sanders Craig 2006 Amtrak in the Heartland Bloomington Indiana Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 34705 3 Schafer Mike Welsh Joe 1997 Classic American Streamliners Osceola Wisconsin MotorBooks International ISBN 978 0 7603 0377 1 Scribbins Jim 2008 1982 The 400 Story Minneapolis Minnesota University of Minnesota Press ISBN 978 0 8166 5449 9 Simon Elbert Warner David C 2011 Holland Kevin J ed Amtrak by the Numbers A Comprehensive Passenger Car and Motive Power Roster 1971 2011 Kansas City Missouri White River Productions ISBN 978 1 932804 12 6 Solomon Brian 2004 Amtrak Saint Paul Minnesota MBI ISBN 978 0 7603 1765 5 Thoms William E 1973 Reprieve for the Iron Horse The AMTRAK Experiment Its Predecessors and Prospects Baton Rouge Louisiana Claitor s Publishing Division OCLC 1094744 Wayner Robert J ed 1972 Car Names Numbers and Consists New York Wayner Publications OCLC 8848690 Wayner Robert J ed 1973 Amtrak Car Spotter 2nd ed New York Wayner Publications OCLC 1113513 Wegman Mark 2008 American Passenger Trains and Locomotives Illustrated Minneapolis Minnesota Voyageur Press ISBN 978 0 7603 3475 1 Welsh Joe February 1999 Showtime on the Coast Starlight Trains 58 2 50 60 ISSN 0041 0934 White John H 1985 1978 The American Railroad Passenger Car Baltimore Maryland Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 0 8018 2743 3 Yenne Bill 2005 Santa Fe Chiefs Saint Paul Minnesota MBI ISBN 978 0 7603 1848 5 Zimmermann Karl 2004 All Aboard Passenger Trains Around the World Honesdale Pennsylvania Boyds Mills Press ISBN 978 1 59078 325 2 Zimmermann Karl Winter 2016 Riding High Santa Fe s Big Move of 1956 Classic Trains 17 4 50 57 ISSN 1527 0718 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hi Level passenger cars Santa Fe Hi Level car plans and elevations Archived 2018 01 29 at the Wayback Machine Hi Level fact sheet from Corridor Capital Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hi Level amp oldid 1173158803, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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