Listen to this guy…I can promise you he knows of what he speaks.
The tariff you see in print is like a window sticker price on a new car")
On my railroad the tariffs are negotiable…volume makes a big difference.
Although Shell Deer Park and Lubrizol are literally directly across our tracks from each other, Shell get a big discount because they have a in house switcher crew with their own locomotive and ship 3 to 4 times the volume of cars.
On the other hand, Geo Bio Science gets one or two cars a week and pay top dollar for them.
What you should look at is the type of work, switching, spotting, inter and intra-plant movement, captured service and bulk long haul service, lots of other charges most people never think about.
[quote user=“Railway Man”]
304live:
Ive googled this quite a few times but I just cant find any rough idea how much it costs to ship car loads via rail of any type.
I would guess that loads vary in price for all kinds of different reasons… type, distance, days it takes to unload, hazmat status, etc.
But are we talking 100’s of dollars to ship something or 1000’s of dollars? I wouldn’t even have an idea what to guess… Can anybody help me out?
Be cautious looking at tariff rates – they’re the “walk-up” rate like you would pay if you ran up to the airline counter and said “Get me on the next flight, price no object!” Almost no shipper pays a walk-up rate, but gains substantial discounts through volume committements, providing their own equipment, and so forth.
The average rate per ton-mile (one ton of freight moved one mile) is just above 3 cents at the present time on U.S. Class 1 railroads. For the full year 2009, the average rate was 3.011 cents. Bulk commodities are well below that average, at abo