This.Are your coach guests "Sleeping Car Passengers"? No? Have your reunion elsewhere, like the cafe/lounge car.
I agree with Ryan.Unsurprisingly, I'll provide the contrary opinion.
On the door to the sleeping car should be a sign:
ImageUploadedByAmtrak Forum1461075260.735170.jpg
Are your coach guests "Sleeping Car Passengers"? No? Have your reunion elsewhere, like the cafe/lounge car.
Can you get away with it? Perhaps, especially if you are quiet and well behaved. But common courtesy toward your fellow passengers that paid for private accommodations involves not allowing unauthorized passengers into somewhere they don't belong.
I was waiting for you to post this, Henry.Just make sure the Portland-bound passenger of the opposite *** that you invite to your Seattle-bound sleeping car on the Empire Builder goes back to the coaches before the train gets to Spokane.
I'm Shocked! Shocked! to find out that Working Girls are on Amtrak Long Distance Trains! Round up the Usual Suspects!Just make sure the Portland-bound passenger of the opposite *** that you invite to your Seattle-bound sleeping car on the Empire Builder goes back to the coaches before the train gets to Spokane.
I agree with Ryan too. And would also go as far as asking the conductor or SCA to enforce the rule.I agree with Ryan.Unsurprisingly, I'll provide the contrary opinion.
On the door to the sleeping car should be a sign:
ImageUploadedByAmtrak Forum1461075260.735170.jpg
Are your coach guests "Sleeping Car Passengers"? No? Have your reunion elsewhere, like the cafe/lounge car.
Can you get away with it? Perhaps, especially if you are quiet and well behaved. But common courtesy toward your fellow passengers that paid for private accommodations involves not allowing unauthorized passengers into somewhere they don't belong.
Well if you call Amtrak and then get your real friend on the Roommette reservation problem solved. So unless your willing to put a complete stranger in your roommette reservation and have the conductor upgrade them onto your reservation(if allowed), until that happens your new "friend" is still a "coach passenger." So as the the second part of the sign says, upgrade away, if that means paying extra or you adding them to your reservation, thats fine. Until your "friend" is on the manifest for the sleeper they don't qualify for food inclusion in the dining car or anything else. If your willing to upgrade some random stranger into your room reservation and give them complete access to it, which by definition of putting them on your reservation they get, then whatever happens to you or your belongings is completely on YOU.I agree completely with expecting civilized behavior (which goes for Coach, too - I might add.)
But I fail to understand why, within the capacity of the accommodation, I can not invite a new friend to visit, sleep, or eat with me.
A roomette is the same cost whether 1 or 2 people are booked in it. Clearly any Coach passenger has already paid at least low coach fare.
Why is it taking advantage of the system to add a second occupant? (A single second occupant, not a hot bunking rotation of entertainment.)
Yes I see that there is a rule against it - but to what purpose?
What if it is not a new friend, but an old friend? Say I have a roomette from CHI to LAX, and dear friend intends to join me in Kansas City? Would they not purchase a coach seat from Kansas City and just join me in the roomette? We would use no more "service" that the couple across the aisle who paid exactly the same for the roomette, and both occupy it from CHI.
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