Its not as bad as it looks Ryan, I've ridden in Slumber Coaches and Sections ( including on VIA and various RRs pre- Amtrak) and Couchettes on foreign trains and it beats being in a packed Coach all night!Yeah, I'm wildly disinterested in getting packed into a car like that
That's correct Tom, but when I rode in a Lower on the Canadian it was more comfortable than the Cabin for 1, and Cost Half as Much with the same First Class Amenities!Section sleepers?
Sounds like we're progressing right into the 1940's, doesn't it?
You can always go with the higher priced rooms. No one is holding a gun to your head to ride accommodation that you don't like. but is that a good enough reason to deny such to others that don't mind?Yeah, I'm wildly disinterested in getting packed into a car like that
Generally India uses UIC loading gauge for long distance trains. So no, the coaches are not really any wider. In 3x2 seating in India, the seats are narrower than in the 2x2 seating in the US. But that is not a problem because even I am considered to be fat in India. Most Indians are of smaller stature and fit pretty nicely in the seats. The seat pitch is also less than on Amtrak. They are more like on commuter trains.The ONLY problem that I see with the IR model in the US is that India uses broad gauge and the coaches are wider. You'll lose almost 20% capacity immediately going with 2x2 seating vs 3x2.
I am not necessarily suggesting that this be done, but, in airline Business Class no one makes anyone's bed. You just get a sealed package with a blanket and a pillow and you make use of it as you see fit. No reason that same could not be done on a really inexpensive lie flat accommodation on trains too.Seaboard 92:
In your plan, who makes the beds & remakes them for the next passenger?
Tom
Yeah, well. That's the way they do it on loooong flights with fares that Amtrak can only dream of for even their full service Sleepers. Of course then there is First Class with even higher fares, where you just get more bedding, and in some cases you even get help in setting things up.Hard for me to wrap my head around that. That's probably the way they do it in prison, too (Never been there, so I'm not sure).
I was a little unclear in my post. The double slumbercoach rooms are effectively the same as even a modern-day roomette in a Viewliner or Superliner. (If you look at a room diagram, the layout is exactly the same and I'll bet the overall dimensions are too, more or less.) Roomettes separately existed on some trains in the pre-Amtrak era, but I don't recall Amtrak offering a "double slumbercoach" accommodation, they just lumped them in with other roomettes both for revenue reasons and to avoid confusion.Not exclusively; they had both one-person and two-person compartments. I traveled on the NP North Coast Limited back in the 60s and our family of four fit in two slumbercoaches....
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