• @tlou3please
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    84 months ago

    The furthest I’ve driven in one day was about 9 hours to Edinburgh. Our trains over here are stupid expensive so it worked out much cheaper. But damn I regretted it big time around hour 4 when I realised I wasn’t even half way.

    • Scrubbles
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      fedilink
      English
      64 months ago

      No way man, I’ve ridden the train London to the UK. It’s expensive in the sense that a first class ticket for me was … 200 pounds I believe? Amtrak is gobs more for a much worse experience. We’re fighting tooth and nail over here in the states to try to have something close to your system

      • @tlou3please
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        24 months ago

        Not tried rail in the USA so yeah, fair enough. But I’ve been to Italy a few times and I’m always jealous of their rail.

        • Scrubbles
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          fedilink
          English
          34 months ago

          Fair, although while my ride in Italy was faster, I vastly preferred the overall vibe of the UK’s system.

          It’s honestly hard to explain because it’s so much different compared to your guys’.

          So we have exactly one route that can go up to 125, in a couple of places. So taking that one out of the equation, the next highest speed in our entire system is 90mph.

          I live in Seattle, about 4 million people, about 1.8x of Manchester. We have 3 rail lines, that take you to 3 places.

          • Portland, 5 times a day, 4 hours away
          • Vancouver BC, 3 times a day, 3 hours away
          • Chicago, 1 time a day, 36 hours away.
          • LA, 1 time a day, 24 hours away

          We have what you would call a “well connected” city in the states too. Outside of the northeast corridor, this is in fact a “train city” here in the states.