"Two Hours doesn't sound like a terrible hardship unless you missed a connection etc."
Last week, I was riding a MARC, and we were an hour late because of a stuck switch at the Grove interlocking. This was for a 50 minute trip. There was an Amtrak train in the mess, and I suppose they were equally late. The Amtrak ride between Washington and Baltimore is 42 minutes. Thus being a hour late for that ride means your travel time would have been 2.5 times the scheduled travel time. That would be the proportional equivalent of taking the Meteor up from Florida (a 24 hour trip), expecting to arrive on Monday morning, but arriving on Tuesday afternoon instead. Had I been on Amtrak, I would have asked for some consideration, but the $17 fare would have meant the voucher wouldn't have been much.
Then there was the time I got bustituted on the Capital from Pittsburgh (it was when they were doing the track work between Cumberland and Pittsburgh, and we started running late in Ohio). I sent a nice letter to Customer relations, and got a $700 voucher, which was Amtrak's estimate of the pro-rated values of the sleeping car accommodation charge between Pittsburgh and Washington. Yes, if you're forced to sit in a (packed full) bus instead of being able to sleep and dine (they didn't even give us a few bucks for fast food at the Gateway Travel Plaza in Breezewood), you deserve some sort of compensation, even if the bus did get us to Washington right on the schedule time despite our arriving in Pittsburgh 3 hours late.
My favorite, though, was when I rode NER #67 from Boston, and the HHP-8 died somewhere between Rt 128 and Providence. After spending a couple of hours waiting in 12 degree cold with the heat not working for the tech with the "million dollar laptop" to come and try to reboot the loco with the super proprietary software, they transferred us to a northbound train and sent us back to South Station. Where we waited sitting at those tables with the hard uncomfortable chairs. Of course, the station was closed up tight, except for us poor stranded passengers, they wouldn't let us out and go to a bar or something, and they also didn't open the Club Acela for us, where the seats might have been better. They finally towed the stricken train in, found a working AEM-7, and got us on the road around 1 or two in the morning. We didn't get much sleep, it was light by the time we passed New Haven. I think I got into work about 5 hours late. So I wrote a nice letter to the CEO of Amtrak (snail mail!), and it seemed like it dropped into a black hole until I contacted them about the Capitol Limited bustitution. Next thing I know, I got a call, they had been trying to get in touch with me (or maybe I had missed the first letter they sent), they had a voucher for me to the tune of $100. (I think the actual fare was about $130.) So I had $170 in vouchers. I also sent in a whole bunch of ticket stubs for missing AGR credit, and that's also when I first qualified for Select Plus. So two delayed rides, but there was a silver lining behind the cloud.