I believe they serve dinner but it is out of the cafe car. On my trips I passed up the meal between ALB and WOR as we planned to eat dinner with my kids on arrival in WOR so I haven't partaken of it, but I assume it is the usual cafe car fare which you get for "free", similar to lunch on 449 which I did partake of.I *think* you might get a meal of some sort between Albany and WOR but not sure.
Thanks for the information about the Worcester station. I did not know about the construction. First timer in Worcester, going for the breweries and then back home on Monday lol... Just for a little labor day trip. Glad they leave at 930pm in Chicago. Do they leave this late in Chicago to give the crew time to rest before heading back? assuming it is a New York crew that runs those trains.
That sounds weird. Every time I've taken the LSL east-bound, the train pulled into Albany, everyone destined for Albany or elsewhere who wanted to get off did so, then they closed the doors and split the train. The Boston section pulled forward, then backed into a different track (on the other side of the platform), the New York engine backed in and coupled to the NY section (the back end of the train) and the attendants re-opened all the doors. The people who had gotten off got back on, as did all of the passengers waiting in Albany for either Boston or NY, and then the trains left. The split took about 15-20 minutes.Don't know if this has changed, but the last time I did this (NYC sleeper from Chicago, coach to Boston due to a bad ordered BOS sleeper) you may not be able to switch between cars at Albany. The train was split and the BOS section went through the station first, then the NYC section.
Our sleeper attendant had us switch at Schenectady. The other sleeper did not, and almost got left behind at Albany. We had to back up to get them.
That has been my experience also.That sounds weird. Every time I've taken the LSL east-bound, the train pulled into Albany, everyone destined for Albany or elsewhere who wanted to get off did so, then they closed the doors and split the train. The Boston section pulled forward, then backed into a different track (on the other side of the platform), the New York engine backed in and coupled to the NY section (the back end of the train) and the attendants re-opened all the doors. The people who had gotten off got back on, as did all of the passengers waiting in Albany for either Boston or NY, and then the trains left. The split took about 15-20 minutes.
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