Anonymous wrote:Sometimes it’s the only car with open seats. Doesn’t excuse it but it’s a reason.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The other post about the guy on the phone in the cafe car made me think of this. I take the train a lot for work. Almost every ride, there are people who sit in the quiet car and proceed to chat with their friend or the random person next to them the entire trip. The conductor will tell them that they’re in the quiet car, and they say okay and then just proceed in a loud whisper with their constant conversation. I use earbuds and white noise so I mostly can block these folks out, but I’m always confused as to why a person chooses to sit in the quiet car if they know they want to chat. You have to walk further to get to the quiet car, and seats are usually harder to come by in that car than in others, so it makes no sense to me. On the Acela quiet car, there is a quiet car sign every two feet so I don’t know how people could possibly end up there by mistake.
NP I thought the quiet car meant no cell phones or loud talk. Are you really saying no quiet chat allowed?
The Amtrak Quiet Car is, for the uninitiated, the single car reserved on most Northeast Corridor trains (and a few other routes) where peace and quiet reign. No cell phone use is allowed, no audible noise is supposed to emerge from devices and there is no talking in anything above a whisper. Riders in the Quiet Car are told to maintain a “library-like atmosphere,” and technically speaking, you’re not really even supposed to talk in a library voice for very long. If you plan on speaking at length, says Matt Hardison, Amtrak’s chief marketing and sales officer, “you should really move into another car, even if you’re speaking quietly.” (Quiet Car amateurs, take note!)
Anonymous wrote:Some times it really isn’t clear when you are walking from car to car trying to find an open seat.
Anonymous wrote:The other post about the guy on the phone in the cafe car made me think of this. I take the train a lot for work. Almost every ride, there are people who sit in the quiet car and proceed to chat with their friend or the random person next to them the entire trip. The conductor will tell them that they’re in the quiet car, and they say okay and then just proceed in a loud whisper with their constant conversation. I use earbuds and white noise so I mostly can block these folks out, but I’m always confused as to why a person chooses to sit in the quiet car if they know they want to chat. You have to walk further to get to the quiet car, and seats are usually harder to come by in that car than in others, so it makes no sense to me. On the Acela quiet car, there is a quiet car sign every two feet so I don’t know how people could possibly end up there by mistake.