In San Antonio this morning (10/14) #22 has a standard baggage. #2 still has the baggage as I reported earlier. (From what I could see in the dark from my bedroom window.)
You are thinking of the new baggage-dorms, which are half baggage car and half crew dorm (eight roomettes). I don't know exactly what a "secure cage" is, but the bag-dorms seem just as secure as a full baggage car....(i.e. Viewliner II sleepers with a baggage section) don't have a secure cage???...
Translation: Gun lockerYou are thinking of the new baggage-dorms, which are half baggage car and half crew dorm (eight roomettes). I don't know exactly what a "secure cage" is, but the bag-dorms seem just as secure as a full baggage car....(i.e. Viewliner II sleepers with a baggage section) don't have a secure cage???...
Now, doesn't that sound just like Amtrak...run the baggage cars, but don't announce or offer the services only they can provide (bicycle spaces and Amtrak Express). The next logical step is to say that there's no demand for them.It doesn't look like Amtrak thinks baggage cars are back, at least not on a consistent basis. Just checked Tucson to LA for several dates in October and November – zero bicycle spaces available.
Thanks. Do the bag-dorms have gun lockers, then?Translation: Gun lockerYou are thinking of the new baggage-dorms, which are half baggage car and half crew dorm (eight roomettes). I don't know exactly what a "secure cage" is, but the bag-dorms seem just as secure as a full baggage car....(i.e. Viewliner II sleepers with a baggage section) don't have a secure cage???...
Translation: Gun lockerYou are thinking of the new baggage-dorms, which are half baggage car and half crew dorm (eight roomettes). I don't know exactly what a "secure cage" is, but the bag-dorms seem just as secure as a full baggage car....(i.e. Viewliner II sleepers with a baggage section) don't have a secure cage???...
According to FrensicPic and Knightrail (who works for Amtrak), this is not the case.Someone did post a video on Facebook today of the Sunset Limited of the 18th without the baggage car so at least the Sunset Limited is running without a baggage car. It did have the transition sleeper and one sleeper on the Sunset Limited portion of the consist and one or two coaches.
Sunset Limited #2(12) in rainy Tuscon Sat 10/13 AM with baggage 61058.20181013_085810.jpeg
Full VII baggage car seems to regularly be going on 1 & 2 again. No insight as to why it was halted/resumed though.
That sucks. Just rode from San Jose to Walnut Creek, via Caltrain and BART, and watched a Capitol Corridor do its thing. Bikes, kick scooters and electric scooters -- sit down and stand up types -- all carried on without drama, delays or an employee getting bent. No reason (other than laziness) for Amtrak long distance staff to behave any differently. But they do.I just child checked in to 2 SL with my bicycle and the made me put it in a box because there is no baggage car.
There's no where to secure it in the bag/coaches....don't you think Amtrak would take your money if they could?That sucks. Just rode from San Jose to Walnut Creek, via Caltrain and BART, and watched a Capitol Corridor do its thing. Bikes, kick scooters and electric scooters -- sit down and stand up types -- all carried on without drama, delays or an employee getting bent. No reason (other than laziness) for Amtrak long distance staff to behave any differently. But they do.I just child checked in to 2 SL with my bicycle and the made me put it in a box because there is no baggage car.
You are making a pretty bold statement here. You do know that the Capitol Corridor is state funded and uses significantly different equipment than Amtrak proper. Maybe check this stuff before making an umbrella statement about how Amtrak staff don't have any other reason to behave like this other than laziness.That sucks. Just rode from San Jose to Walnut Creek, via Caltrain and BART, and watched a Capitol Corridor do its thing. Bikes, kick scooters and electric scooters -- sit down and stand up types -- all carried on without drama, delays or an employee getting bent. No reason (other than laziness) for Amtrak long distance staff to behave any differently. But they do.I just child checked in to 2 SL with my bicycle and the made me put it in a box because there is no baggage car.
Depends what you mean by "secure it". If you mean a purpose-designed bike rack, you are correct. Amtrak has not bothered to install any on long distance trains other than in the Viewliner 2 baggage cars. There's no reason they couldn't – bike racks are installed in all kinds of cars on state services, including coaches.There's no where to secure it in the bag/coaches....don't you think Amtrak would take your money if they could?That sucks. Just rode from San Jose to Walnut Creek, via Caltrain and BART, and watched a Capitol Corridor do its thing. Bikes, kick scooters and electric scooters -- sit down and stand up types -- all carried on without drama, delays or an employee getting bent. No reason (other than laziness) for Amtrak long distance staff to behave any differently. But they do.I just child checked in to 2 SL with my bicycle and the made me put it in a box because there is no baggage car.
But if they put it in a place that is not made to physically secure it (and they attach it somehow with a bungee?), what happens if the bungee snaps and falls over, damaging your bike? You'd probably go demanding they repair or replace your bike, since they should be liable.Depends what you mean by "secure it". If you mean a purpose-designed bike rack, you are correct. Amtrak has not bothered to install any on long distance trains other than in the Viewliner 2 baggage cars. There's no reason they couldn't – bike racks are installed in all kinds of cars on state services, including coaches.There's no where to secure it in the bag/coaches....don't you think Amtrak would take your money if they could?That sucks. Just rode from San Jose to Walnut Creek, via Caltrain and BART, and watched a Capitol Corridor do its thing. Bikes, kick scooters and electric scooters -- sit down and stand up types -- all carried on without drama, delays or an employee getting bent. No reason (other than laziness) for Amtrak long distance staff to behave any differently. But they do.I just child checked in to 2 SL with my bicycle and the made me put it in a box because there is no baggage car.
If you mean there's no place where it's possible to secure a bike without a purpose built rack on a long distance train, that's not true. All you need is a bungee cord – before they increased the bike capacity on Capitol Corridor trains, they sold them in the cafe (they still might). It doesn't take much to accomodate a bike – there's plenty of room in baggage cars, in the lower level of Superliners and in various places elsewhere.
Every Amtrak California train accommodates bikes, despite the wide variety of equipment (including single level trains), more frequent and briefer stops, less space and far better on time performance. European, Asian and Antipodean trains manage the same trick. BART does it with zero on board bike facilities, Metrolink with a few racks installed in coaches, Caltrain with dedicated cars. Bus drivers figure it out, despite far, far less space.
There is no physical reason bikes can't be carried on long distance trains, and loaded/unloaded at every stop. All it takes is a willingness on the part of LD management to install the necessary equipment and a willingness on the part of on board LD staff to either use it when it's there, or exert the effort to deal with it when its not. I haven't seen any of that.
So your logic is that because you think bungie cords or something like it could be put in relatively easily, when Amtrak doesn't allow you to take your bike on a train that only has a coach-baggage car, they are just being lazy? Under that logic, if I go to the store and want a Twix bar, and they say they don't sell Twix bars, even though they technically have enough space to sell them, that employee is just being lazy. Do you see the flaw in this logic?Depends what you mean by "secure it". If you mean a purpose-designed bike rack, you are correct. Amtrak has not bothered to install any on long distance trains other than in the Viewliner 2 baggage cars. There's no reason they couldn't – bike racks are installed in all kinds of cars on state services, including coaches.There's no where to secure it in the bag/coaches....don't you think Amtrak would take your money if they could?That sucks. Just rode from San Jose to Walnut Creek, via Caltrain and BART, and watched a Capitol Corridor do its thing. Bikes, kick scooters and electric scooters -- sit down and stand up types -- all carried on without drama, delays or an employee getting bent. No reason (other than laziness) for Amtrak long distance staff to behave any differently. But they do.I just child checked in to 2 SL with my bicycle and the made me put it in a box because there is no baggage car.
If you mean there's no place where it's possible to secure a bike without a purpose built rack on a long distance train, that's not true. All you need is a bungee cord – before they increased the bike capacity on Capitol Corridor trains, they sold them in the cafe (they still might). It doesn't take much to accomodate a bike – there's plenty of room in baggage cars, in the lower level of Superliners and in various places elsewhere.
Every Amtrak California train accommodates bikes, despite the wide variety of equipment (including single level trains), more frequent and briefer stops, less space and far better on time performance. European, Asian and Antipodean trains manage the same trick. BART does it with zero on board bike facilities, Metrolink with a few racks installed in coaches, Caltrain with dedicated cars. Bus drivers figure it out, despite far, far less space.
There is no physical reason bikes can't be carried on long distance trains, and loaded/unloaded at every stop. All it takes is a willingness on the part of LD management to install the necessary equipment and a willingness on the part of on board LD staff to either use it when it's there, or exert the effort to deal with it when its not. I haven't seen any of that.
It seems to me that his thinking is more along the lines of looking at each train as an individual store and Amtrak as a whole as the store chain. The chain advertises that they sell Twix bars; they print in their advertisements how easy and convenient and cheap it is to buy a Twix bar; but when you go to certain of the stores...which do have shelf space available...they say, "Aaah, we don't carry Twix bars at this location." Changes the calculus a bit, I think. And I don't even like Twix bars (actually, I do; what I'm saying is that I've never yet traveled with a bicycle).So your logic is that because you think bungie cords or something like it could be put in relatively easily, when Amtrak doesn't allow you to take your bike on a train that only has a coach-baggage car, they are just being lazy? Under that logic, if I go to the store and want a Twix bar, and they say they don't sell Twix bars, even though they technically have enough space to sell them, that employee is just being lazy. Do you see the flaw in this logic?Depends what you mean by "secure it". If you mean a purpose-designed bike rack, you are correct. Amtrak has not bothered to install any on long distance trains other than in the Viewliner 2 baggage cars. There's no reason they couldn't – bike racks are installed in all kinds of cars on state services, including coaches.There's no where to secure it in the bag/coaches....don't you think Amtrak would take your money if they could?That sucks. Just rode from San Jose to Walnut Creek, via Caltrain and BART, and watched a Capitol Corridor do its thing. Bikes, kick scooters and electric scooters -- sit down and stand up types -- all carried on without drama, delays or an employee getting bent. No reason (other than laziness) for Amtrak long distance staff to behave any differently. But they do.I just child checked in to 2 SL with my bicycle and the made me put it in a box because there is no baggage car.
If you mean there's no place where it's possible to secure a bike without a purpose built rack on a long distance train, that's not true. All you need is a bungee cord – before they increased the bike capacity on Capitol Corridor trains, they sold them in the cafe (they still might). It doesn't take much to accomodate a bike – there's plenty of room in baggage cars, in the lower level of Superliners and in various places elsewhere.
Every Amtrak California train accommodates bikes, despite the wide variety of equipment (including single level trains), more frequent and briefer stops, less space and far better on time performance. European, Asian and Antipodean trains manage the same trick. BART does it with zero on board bike facilities, Metrolink with a few racks installed in coaches, Caltrain with dedicated cars. Bus drivers figure it out, despite far, far less space.
There is no physical reason bikes can't be carried on long distance trains, and loaded/unloaded at every stop. All it takes is a willingness on the part of LD management to install the necessary equipment and a willingness on the part of on board LD staff to either use it when it's there, or exert the effort to deal with it when its not. I haven't seen any of that.
But if they put it in a place that is not made to physically secure it (and they attach it somehow with a bungee?), what happens if the bungee snaps and falls over, damaging your bike? You'd probably go demanding they repair or replace your bike, since they should be liable.
Furthermore, have you ever been in the baggage section of a bag/coach? From what I recall there's literally nothing to attach a bungee cord to, currently. And where is the "plenty of room in the lower level of the Superliners and various other places?" I mean, even if one COULD get a bike up the stairs there's no where to store it. Are you suggesting it go in to the lower level coach seating area?
To clarify, I'm not talking about places where money could be spent to install bike hooks. I am talking about space where you say it could be accommodated as the equipment is right now.
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