Dakota 400
Engineer
- Joined
- Mar 5, 2014
- Messages
- 3,741
Had you given the SCA a nice tip on the 1st trip? That might have had an effect.
Good question and I hope we learn the answer to that question.
Had you given the SCA a nice tip on the 1st trip? That might have had an effect.
It shouldn't have any effect.Had you given the SCA a nice tip on the 1st trip? That might have had an effect.
Yes. For me personally $20 would be typical, and $30 for exceptional service. I have certainly given $10 before for a trip where the effort was completely lacking and they weren’t obviously overloaded.Had you given the SCA a nice tip on the 1st trip? That might have had an effect.
Personally, I tip $10/night for average service, up to $20/night for exceptional service. I tend to tip on a 2 night basis for the Starlight since it is a long ride for a 1 night train.Yes. For me personally $20 would be typical, and $30 for exceptional service. I have certainly given $10 before for a trip where the effort was completely lacking and they weren’t obviously overloaded.
More or less likewise for me too.Personally, I tip $10/night for average service, up to $20/night for exceptional service. I tend to tip on a 2 night basis for the Starlight since it is a long ride for a 1 night train.
If service doesn't meet average, the tip is bupkis. You have to get a "C" to get a tip from me.
It shouldn't, but she remembered him from the first trip, and people are only human.It shouldn't have any effect.
That won’t help. A lot of the café lounge cars have a dedicated office for the conductor. Basically, they store their luggage in it instead.Very sad, it’s enough to make you believe Amtrak operates for the convenience of the crew, not the passengers. If new LD cars are ever constructed I hope they will be designed for adequate crew space to work/relax with the dining and lounge areas reserved for passengers.
Challenge the conductor at your own peril.This has been outrageous behavior for a long time. Maybe it's time to complain directly to them about it, instead of meekly padding back to our sleepers and missing out on half the reason we travel by train, to chat with strangers over a beer or coffee, and look out the larger windows. If a lot of people challenge them on it, maybe they'll realize we exist and that the cafe car is one of our already-paid-for amenities.
Actually, I think the sleepers have larger windows than the Amfleet cafe car on the Cardinal.....and look out the larger windows.
Actually, I think the sleepers have larger windows than the Amfleet cafe car on the Cardinal.
Challenge the conductor at your own peril.
Yeah you're right. How about a pathetic, sad, "Do you mind if we sit here" when they have one of those Reserved signs on it but no one is sitting there.
You probably were easy to remember - passenger with bike.
Incidently how was the bike issue resolved ?
Bike thrown under the train bus ?
You made to ride your high horse ah er high bike off into the horizon baggage car ?
Disassemble into pieces and parts and stuffed in overhead of a roomette ?
I suspect the only meaningful way to put an end to this "crew hogging tables" malarkey is for somebody to take pictures of these offenses and send them to the proper authorities (whoever they may be). All this talk here is like pissin' up a rope!
The City of New Orleans runs an unmanned Sightseer Lounge, so there's no rule against it!Undoubtedly. Now as to who the “proper authorities“ are, that’s another question.
The bigger question is, should we bother at all with this issue? Or on trains like the Cardinal - should we be pushing to get a mothballed VLII Diner added to the consist as a lounge for sleeping car passengers? They don’t even need to man it as far as I’m concerned. (I’m sure someone will inform me there is a FRA rule prohibiting an unmanned passenger lounge).
As many have stated here, just having a place to escape your room, view scenery out of both sides of the train, and potentially interact with other passengers would make the trip a lot nicer.
The Capitol did, too, before they pulled it. The lounge attendant worked out of the lounge end of the diner lounge. The upstairs of the Sightseer was open, the downstairs closed.The City of New Orleans runs an unmanned Sightseer Lounge, so there's no rule against it!
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