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Comment by hungie

1 year ago

That seems... poor? A one in twenty trains late stat will basically mean every person will have to deal with a late train roughly every week?

I bet, however, it's not uniformly distributed and some lines are late more than others.

Hopefully that 95% is them being honest about the current state, while they push higher.

> I bet, however, it's not uniformly distributed and some lines are late more than others

Sure. But "with a nearly perfect on-time performance of 99.3% on Hudson, Harlem, and New Haven Lines," there isn't much room to hide problems. (LIRR is 96.3%.)

The point is we have systems that have been well built and well maintained. They just don't get coverage because they just work. (The LIRR is far from perfect, mind you. But it's apparently outperforming the DB. You have to get to some of the worst routes during peak conditions to get in the neighbourhood of DB's systemic numbers.)

That is a lot better than the 62% on-time statistic for Deutsche Bahn inter-city travel.

I deal with late trains around two-thirds of my trips. Sometimes up to two hours of delay.

If true it would beat the 92.5% statistic for Swiss trains that was mentioned in the article.