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  2. Viewliner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viewliner

    Viewliner I sleeping car. The first production Viewliners were built in 1995–1996 by Amerail (now Alstom)/Morrison-Knudsen. Amtrak's original intention in the 1980s was to order 500–600 new cars, of which 100 would be sleepers and the rest coaches, diners, and lounges.

  3. Superliner (railcar) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superliner_(railcar)

    The order consisted of 55 sleeping cars, 38 coaches, 20 dining cars, 15 lounges, and 12 transition-dormitory cars. The initial order cost $340 million. [ 35 ] In late 1993 Amtrak exercised the option for 55 cars at a cost of $110 million, bringing the total order of Superliner II cars to 195. [ 36 ]

  4. Sleeping car - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sleeping_car

    Pullman sleeping car, original to the William Crooks locomotive, on display in Duluth, Minnesota. The sleeping car or sleeper (often wagon-lit) is a railway passenger car that can accommodate all passengers in beds of one kind or another, for the purpose of sleeping. George Pullman was the American innovator of the sleeper car. [citation needed]

  5. List of Amtrak rolling stock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Amtrak_rolling_stock

    Amtrak operates a fleet of 2,142 railway cars and 425 locomotives for revenue runs and service, collectively called rolling stock.Notable examples include the GE Genesis and Siemens Charger diesel locomotives, the Siemens ACS-64 electric locomotive, the Amfleet series of single-level passenger cars, the Superliner series of double-decker passenger cars, and 20 Acela Express high-speed trainsets.

  6. Heritage Fleet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heritage_Fleet

    Viewliner sleeping cars replaced Heritage Fleet sleepers in the 1990s. [5]: 34 Nevertheless, some Heritage Fleet cars remained in use into the 21st century. By 2011, 101 ex-steam-heat cars remained active: 67 baggage cars, 20 dining cars, five "Pacific Parlour" Hi-Level lounge cars, one dome car, and eight non-revenue cars. [2]: 193

  7. Passenger railroad car - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Passenger_railroad_car

    The term passenger car can also be associated with a sleeping car, a baggage car, a dining car, railway post office and prisoner transport cars. The first passenger cars were built in the early 1800s with the advent of the first railroads, and were small and little more than converted freight cars.

  8. Placid series - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Placid_series

    The Placid series was a fleet of ten lightweight streamlined sleeping cars built by Pullman-Standard for the Union Pacific Railroad in 1956. Each car contained eleven double bedrooms. Amtrak acquired all ten from the Union Pacific and operated them into the 1980s; it retired the last in 1996. Several cars remain in private use.

  9. Pine series (railcar) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pine_series_(railcar)

    A major improvement over the pre-war American series 6-6-4 sleeping car was the rearrangement of the accommodation: in the American series the premium-priced double bedrooms were at the vestibule end of the car over one of the trucks, the roomettes were in the middle, and the sections were at the blind (non-vestibule) end over the other truck ...