N
Nathanael
Guest
That's because it wasn't. Ridership on the Crescent drops off sharply south of Atlanta. Amtrak wants to cut off cars at Atlanta, but doesn't have a place to put them.We've ridden the Crescent many times ATL or ATN-NOL, and it never seemed very full.
When we say that a train fills up, we mean that on the *peak segment*, on *peak days*, a given train is full.
As someone else pointed out, the Silver Service peaks in the winter, and the Chicago-West Coast trains (also the Coast Starlight) peak in the summer. The train I've been on which was actually full (for part of the trip) was in August from Denver to Chicago. The trains look a lot emptier in the off-season. The Chicago-East Coast trains also peak in the summer but are busy year-round.
Only on a few peak days in the peak season will the train actually sell out, even in the peak segment.
Each train also has a peak segment. In the case of the California Zephyr, it's somewhere between Denver-Chicago, because traffic drops off west of there. It will actually often be from some random station in the middle to some other random station in the middle, since the combination of a Lincoln, NE - Chicago trip and an Omaha, NE - Denver trip would fill the train up between Lincoln and Omaha.
Even on the peak day, the train will only be sold out for the peak segment. If you're asleep during the peak segment, you won't even notice. (My habit of waking up every time the train stops is the only reason I know that large groups got on and off in the middle of the night.)
Now, I have been told that Amtrak has legal (though large) limits on how much it can vary the price for the same city pair on the same train in the same accomodations. So, if the train is selling out on Tuesday, and unpopular on Wednesday, Amtrak can't slash the Wednesday price by 99% from the Tuesday price. Even if Amtrak can, it's hard for them to predict exactly which days are going to be popular to that degree.
Could Amtrak fill the trains up more often by cutting prices? Yeah, but unless they knew exactly which days to cut prices on, that would probably reduce revenue, as a previous poster noted. If the average load factor is 70%, this means the trains are filling up at peak, using an old rule of thumb. This is very likely to be the maximum revenue point as well.
FWIW, it's a bit simpler to spot how full the train is on the Auto Train, which is end-to-end traffic only. It actually has had declining ridership in recent years.