TheCrescent
OBS Chief
- Joined
- Jun 24, 2020
- Messages
- 562
There are so many competing demands for new Amtrak equipment that prioritizing a first class lounge, with or without a bar, for sleeping car passengers ought to be a low priority. What sells sleepers is inherent in the name--you get a private place to sleep lying down. (For what it's worth, I think it's lie-flat seating that sells business class on long haul flights, too.) Access to the dining cars with traditional (or in some ways better) food is also a sales plus for Amtrak in selling sleeper space.
Don't get me wrong--I'd love a Via Park Car equivalent for sleeper passengers, but given the other serious needs for new equipment, I'm willing to share the SSL (and drink from my private bar in my room. )
I believe the rationale for investing in products and services for sleeping car passengers, even if there are other needs, is that the sleeping cars are highest-profit (or least-loss) part of the long-distance train, so the rate of return per dollar spent for sleeping car passengers is much higher than for coach-class passengers. That's not meant to be elitist or classist or offensive, and it does not mean that coach passengers deserve anything less than the best, though.
When I pay approximately $400 for a 700-mile overnight trip on the Crescent, it really makes little sense: I could fly first class at lower cost and have a better onboard experience on a plane. If I, as someone who likes train travel, can hardly justify it (in large part due to Flexible Dining, run-down equipment and no dining car, and a gritty 1970s-era lounge on board), how can someone who doesn't like trains?