Taking my first trip with my wife in a roomette from Atlanta to Philadelphia in late June. Are the rooms reasonably cool or should I expect to be hot?
Just my experience. I almost froze in the top bunk of a viewliner due to a faulty thermostat and being to dumb to close the curtains in the winter.Being that you'll be riding the Crescent, which is Viewliner equipped, being too hot or too cold won't be a problem. Heating/cooling controls in each roomette are far better than those on Superliners out west (and the Capitol Ltd)
If it gets too hot/cold, simply adjust the thermostat as desired. Opening the sliding vents along the bottom of the window and turning up the two small fans above and below the thermostat will speed the change in room temperature.
Why not turn down the heat and give out extra blankets? Telling hot folks they can use two rooms only works when there are extra rooms. It's almost like Amtrak has no idea how temperature works or that mammals are hotblooded.The attendant couldn't turn the air down because those on the north side of the car would have frozen.
In the summer you can bundle up but in the Winter the HVAC is stuck on Beach as you roll through the Rockies.Be prepared for cool. Can't do much about hot.
Why not turn down the heat and give out extra blankets? Telling hot folks they can use two rooms only works when there are extra rooms. It's almost like Amtrak has no idea how temperature works or that mammals are hotblooded.
Huh?Why not turn down the heat and give out extra blankets? Telling hot folks they can use two rooms only works when there are extra rooms. It's almost like Amtrak has no idea how temperature works or that mammals are hotblooded.
In the summer you can bundle up but in the Winter the HVAC is stuck on Beach as you roll through the Rockies.
On Amtrak Superliners the interior temperature tends to be rather cold in the summer. In these cases I can easily bundle up or turn on the heater, which is the only functional part of the room controls in my experience. In the winter Amtrak tends to vary from warm to hot but there is no practical method for working around an overheated room and I have been miserable more than once because the SCA refused to make adjustments. That being said I defer to folks more familiar with Viewliners for advice with the Eastern fleet (applicable to the OP).Huh?
Just my experience. I almost froze in the top bunk of a viewliner due to a faulty thermostat and being to dumb to close the curtains in the winter.
Ive ridden Viewliner 1 sleepers (bedrooms and roomettes) at least 30+ times over many years. 3/4 of the trips the temps have been fine. Other times hot or cold depending on the season. Never had much luck at all with a functioning thermostat when needed. I always travel any Amtrak train prepared for hot, normal or cold temps.Being that you'll be riding the Crescent, which is Viewliner equipped, being too hot or too cold won't be a problem. Heating/cooling controls in each roomette are far better than those on Superliners out west (and the Capitol Ltd)
If it gets too hot/cold, simply adjust the thermostat as desired. Opening the sliding vents along the bottom of the window and turning up the two small fans above and below the thermostat will speed the change in room temperature.
Enter your email address to join: