Right. So while maintenance costs don't get down by tl in traveller, up front costs do. Maintenance is then a percentage of up front costs.
So, we can assume a 30% reduction in those. We can also assume it will be on the low end, not the high end due to higher tl. So let's call it 25k per mile per year.
For cost of the engine, again, we need to go by what traveller has. Looking at vehicle handbook, we'd need to design 3 things. A grav car that's part of the train, an engine, and a train car.
If we assume both you and previous poster are correct, then we get a train engine of say 2 million. A train car of 150k. And a grav car of 50 million.
Assume a train or grav of 50 cars.
Train needs 2 engines for 50 cars, so a total cost of 11.2 million, with an annual maintenance of 12k per year.
Grav costs 2,500,000,000 (2.5 billion) and has an annual maintenance of 2.5 million.
So the train is cheaper (annually) if it has less than 1000 miles of tracks.
So a 50 car train is better than 50 car grav if they need to go less than 1000 miles (per train). Every additional 50 cars you need doubles the length of the track you can support for the same cost.
NOTE: I haven't looked at vehicle handbook. The numbers could be off. But it gives you a concept of how to determine when train is better than grav.
So, we can assume a 30% reduction in those. We can also assume it will be on the low end, not the high end due to higher tl. So let's call it 25k per mile per year.
For cost of the engine, again, we need to go by what traveller has. Looking at vehicle handbook, we'd need to design 3 things. A grav car that's part of the train, an engine, and a train car.
If we assume both you and previous poster are correct, then we get a train engine of say 2 million. A train car of 150k. And a grav car of 50 million.
Assume a train or grav of 50 cars.
Train needs 2 engines for 50 cars, so a total cost of 11.2 million, with an annual maintenance of 12k per year.
Grav costs 2,500,000,000 (2.5 billion) and has an annual maintenance of 2.5 million.
So the train is cheaper (annually) if it has less than 1000 miles of tracks.
So a 50 car train is better than 50 car grav if they need to go less than 1000 miles (per train). Every additional 50 cars you need doubles the length of the track you can support for the same cost.
NOTE: I haven't looked at vehicle handbook. The numbers could be off. But it gives you a concept of how to determine when train is better than grav.