reaperexpress
Senior Member
Indeed, I don't agree with Paige's statement that the Ottawa-Toronto line is slow. A travel time under 2h10 is the same as driving with no traffic. And there will usually be a fair bit of traffic in Montreal. The main issue as far as travel time is the reliability.I don't have much to say about the realignments that others have proposed or mentioned, however!; Although VIA trains are famously infrequent I don't think Ottawa-Montreal trains are really all that slow or inefficient. It's two hours from Ottawa to Montreal on VIA which is equivalent to driving in good traffic. I'll take that sort of speed in North America. It's not necessarily the same as Ottawa-Toronto which is nearly equivalent to driving but over a much longer distance and with much more annoying hurdles in between.
I anticipate the day when trains can cruise between Toronto-Ottawa without having to trundle through Smiths Falls or Gananoque.
The frequency between Ottawa and Montréal is quite poor though. Last time I went to Montréal I needed to come back in the evening, and I had no choice but to take Orléans Express since the last Via train leaves Montréal at 18:50. You'd think that an evening departure from Montréal to Ottawa would be very popular among all the people from Ottawa who are in Montréal for the day.
Prices are all one-way including tax. It doesn't really help me if there's cheap tickets in January, since I'm travelling in December. Like I said, I always choose Via if the ticket is under $80, and yet I haven't ridden Via since my trip on the 4th of March, which cost $61.02.Are these prices one-way or round-trip? Most of my RTs are ~$120-130, sometimes $100 if i'm lucky. If you try to book Ottawa-Toronto today most of the trips in January are available starting from $54/59.
Here were the advertised prices for when I was booking the intervening 3 trips I took to Toronto by bus or train:
This matches my experience, I think it was indeed car 5. But regardless of how they assign seats, if there are a whole bunch of empty seats from Ottawa to Toronto, it makes no sense to be price gouging on Ottawa to Toronto tickets. They would make just as much money by lowering the price and actually selling all the seats.As for the train being empty, it depends on where your boarding is and where your destination is. Under VIA's now-previous booking system if you boarded at either terminus (or close enough) you were assigned to the "Ottawa-Toronto Car", typically Car 5. The other cars were typically for people either boarding or deboarding somewhere in between. So, if you ended up in Car 4 you were probably sitting amongst Queens students coming from or going to Ottawa/Toronto, depending on the trip. If you book something like Ottawa-Belleville you're put into that car, meaning that your Car is either only busy until Kingston or only busy after Kingston, etc. All of this is moot now as VIA updates their ticket reservation system so that we actually have the freedom to dictate what seat we want to sit, and I can do my best cosplay of Man in Seat 61 on every VIA train in the Corridor.![]()
The practice of grouping particular city pairs into particular coaches is useful for stations which are too short for the entire train to fit, but at normal stations it contributes to their painfully long dwell times by forcing everyone to board and alight from just one or two doors of the train, leaving the remaining doors unutilized.
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