As far as I can tell, the three long distance routes with business class are the Lake Shore Limited, Palmetto and Coast Starlight.
The first two makes sense: LSL is a Viewliner train and needs a cafe car (split with business) for coach passengers who can't use the dining car, and there's no sightseer lounge with the cafe on the lower level. As a day train, the Palmetto has no dining car, so the cafe/business car has a role to play (also a Viewliner train).
So my questions are:
- Why does the Coast Starlight have a Superliner coach car designated as a business car? Why this route and not others?
- Does Amtrak offer business class on the LSL and Palmetto solely because it has to, or partially/fully because there is demand on the routes?
- Can coach customers on the Viewliner-based Cardinal access the dining car? That train no longer runs the split cafe/business class car. Am I missing something?
The first two makes sense: LSL is a Viewliner train and needs a cafe car (split with business) for coach passengers who can't use the dining car, and there's no sightseer lounge with the cafe on the lower level. As a day train, the Palmetto has no dining car, so the cafe/business car has a role to play (also a Viewliner train).
So my questions are:
- Why does the Coast Starlight have a Superliner coach car designated as a business car? Why this route and not others?
- Does Amtrak offer business class on the LSL and Palmetto solely because it has to, or partially/fully because there is demand on the routes?
- Can coach customers on the Viewliner-based Cardinal access the dining car? That train no longer runs the split cafe/business class car. Am I missing something?
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