jducoeur: (Default)
jducoeur ([personal profile] jducoeur) wrote2007-05-10 05:04 pm
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There are times when it's useful to engage one's inner accountant...

So it's time for something new this weekend. We had decided that this was the best chance for me to go visit my mother, and see what her house now looks like. She's selling it, so has finally done 20 years' work of backlogged work on it, and she'd like to show it off before it's sold. (The fact that it's Mother's Day doesn't hurt.) But driving 300 miles each way doesn't fill me with joy. So I'm going to do something I haven't done in decades: I'm taking the train.

The only problem is that it's kind of pricey. I'm taking the Acela down because everyone tells me that it's quite pleasant. It's not available on Saturday, sadly, so I'm taking the less-expensive but less-pleasant Regional train; in order to make that suck less, I blew the extra $30 to upgrade to business class, so hopefully it'll be decent. But all told, it's going to run $225, which feels like Real Money.

At this point, it's useful to run the numbers. Driving myself doesn't *feel* expensive, but it's not as cheap as I think. Even assuming an optimistic 30 miles per gallon, that's 20 gallons of gas at $3, so $60. And figuring that the depreciation on the car is about $.20/mile, that's another $120, bringing the actual total cost of driving myself to $180.

So from that perspective, I'm only spending an extra $45, for the privilege of letting someone else do the driving for 10 hours and relieving myself of a bit of Liberal Environmental Guilt. That's not too bad a deal...

[identity profile] new-man.livejournal.com 2007-05-11 02:56 am (UTC)(link)
It makes me crazy. Boston to New York is 420 miles round trip. Even at 20 m.p.g., and $3.00 per gallon, that's $63 in gas. I don't pay tolls, because from here it's faster and easier to just drop south on 93 to 95. With the depreciation of $84 and parking at around $20 per day, it's $197 to drive down for the weekend.

If I'm going down by myself, I can sort of squint and make the train and driving come out about equal.

If there are two or three of us? Forget about it. The car wins every time1. It makes me so angry. I wrote almost this exact letter to Amtrak about two years ago. I got no response.

1 - The car, in fact, does win almost every time, because 99% of the time I only pay for parking for one day — at the most.

[identity profile] eclecticmagpie.livejournal.com 2007-05-11 04:23 pm (UTC)(link)
To make matters worse, if you want to stop in New Haven to have lunch with a friend, the price of the train trip nearly doubles.

My understanding is that the excess profit from fares on the northeast corridor are justified as making up for losses in the Amtrak system elsewhere. The phone company used to do something similar, but they lost that anti-trust suit.