Mr. Dazzle wrote: ↑Thu Mar 18, 2021 7:47 pm
TBF, combining the two for the long distance bit is a pretty good idea. Trains are way more efficient but pretty crap at parking in a supermarket loading bay.
Trains
may be more efficient (but not 'way more') if all the goods going on them originate in the same place and are all going to the same destination. So for things like providing coal to power stations, rail is a no brainer but if you have two truck loads of widgets to move from Aberdeen to Oswestry the two trucks will be halfway there before the whole train is put together and the trucks will be halfway home again (possibly with a back load) before the important bits of the train are uncoupled/unloaded somewhere to be put on a truck.
That's before there are leaves on the line.
I like trains but the reason more freight isn't moved on them is because of efficiency - not rail efficiency. Part of my (all) day job a lifetime ago
was logistics, the real logistics, supplying an army in the field. We regularly trained on unloading and delivering ammunition from trains, we moved tanks and other armoured vehicles on trains etc but I can assure you, even in peace time it was hardly what you could call efficient.