TVG train-1st or 2nd class?
#22

Joined: Jan 2012
Posts: 12,852
Likes: 26
Being a person who isn't a natural lover of children not my own, I think that assessment is a bit harsh, k. I feel the same way about most dogs not my own but respect those who have feelings for children & dogs, despite my lack. Maybe, instead of astonishment, you could think about feeling sorry for us, or at least recognize that people have multitudes of different affinities. Most of us, I suspect, are good people despite it. And by the way, I don't care for noisy adults either.
#23
Joined: Feb 2011
Posts: 108
Likes: 0
I like booking my tickets on www.capitainetrain.com because they list both 1st and 2nd class fares side by side. I've seen many times where the 1st class ticket is cheaper than the 2nd class ticket.
After sitting in a full 2nd class car on a ride from Hendaye to Paris, I plan on choosing 1st class whenever possible and especially on longer rides.
After sitting in a full 2nd class car on a ride from Hendaye to Paris, I plan on choosing 1st class whenever possible and especially on longer rides.
#24
Joined: Mar 2015
Posts: 1,713
Likes: 0
Some comments here are not necessarily accurate :
On SNCF you can at time have first class tickes cheaper than than second class a little bit later.
So about the comment of differenciation of clients, you can buy a first class and be in a coach full of clients of second class, who will have paid half the price you did.
Secondly, less on TGV, but clearly on Thalys, people in second can behave better than people on first, who, because their boss paid more, consider they have extra rights. Allowing them to be arrogant towards the catering personal, for example, or speak loudly on their phone.
On the opposite, I was recently in the first, behind a guy who spent half an hour explaining (loudly) to his boss that he had to drop his hash because customs were too close to him. Not really the kind of people I love to travel with.
Lastly, I'm a natural hater of people who don't like children. If one cannot stand children one should travel by himself/herself by car or private shuttle and spend his/her vacation on a remote private island.
On SNCF you can at time have first class tickes cheaper than than second class a little bit later.
So about the comment of differenciation of clients, you can buy a first class and be in a coach full of clients of second class, who will have paid half the price you did.
Secondly, less on TGV, but clearly on Thalys, people in second can behave better than people on first, who, because their boss paid more, consider they have extra rights. Allowing them to be arrogant towards the catering personal, for example, or speak loudly on their phone.
On the opposite, I was recently in the first, behind a guy who spent half an hour explaining (loudly) to his boss that he had to drop his hash because customs were too close to him. Not really the kind of people I love to travel with.
Lastly, I'm a natural hater of people who don't like children. If one cannot stand children one should travel by himself/herself by car or private shuttle and spend his/her vacation on a remote private island.
#25
Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 78,320
Likes: 0
After sitting in a full 2nd class car on a ride from Hendaye to Paris, I plan on choosing 1st class whenever possible and especially on longer rides.>
Some folks like me find first class much more relaxing - most folks really yet the Fodor's mantra is 2nd class is the same as first class - nothing could be less true IME of decades of European rail travel.
Some folks like me find first class much more relaxing - most folks really yet the Fodor's mantra is 2nd class is the same as first class - nothing could be less true IME of decades of European rail travel.
#26
Joined: Aug 2008
Posts: 26,390
Likes: 0
I been in both 1st and 2nd and haven't noticed a ban on babies, screaming or otherwise, in 1st. Maybe the official French Baby Police were on strike. I hear they can be quite strict.
Babies and children are less annoying than adults who behave like babies.
Babies and children are less annoying than adults who behave like babies.
#27

Joined: Jun 2003
Posts: 24,040
Likes: 6
I absolutely love 1st class on the TGV, Eurostar, Thalys or Lyria and I choose 1st class whenever the fare is reasonable compared to 2nd class. However, for people who want calm and quiet, I must say that the mobile phone business addicts or just colleagues taking the train together can be far more annoying than any family traveling with children. Families at least try to keep their children quiet while the Masters of the World feel that anything they do is perfectly fine. Therefore, if you require <b>real</b> peace and quiet, travel in 1st class on the weekend only.
#28

Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 8,508
Likes: 0
kerouac,
Are there not any "silent" wagons on SNCF trains? There are on German long-distance trains. I also just booked a trip from home to Paris, and I was able to reserve a seat in a quiet car. Don't know if that will be SNCF or DB though.
s
Are there not any "silent" wagons on SNCF trains? There are on German long-distance trains. I also just booked a trip from home to Paris, and I was able to reserve a seat in a quiet car. Don't know if that will be SNCF or DB though.
s
#32
Joined: Apr 2013
Posts: 4,685
Likes: 0
"I also just booked a trip from home to Paris, and I was able to reserve a seat in a quiet car."
I almost always get a seat in the quiet car on ICE trains and find, alas, that people are more and more ignoring the rules. On the trip back from Heidelberg last week, one couple would not shut up (they were German speakers). Ditto for a pair of German executives (who also talked on their mobiles). I had to hunt down the conductor and ask him to get these self-centered a**holes to pipe down. (It wasn't ignorance, they looked at the Pssst stickers on the windows and shrugged or laughed)
I almost always get a seat in the quiet car on ICE trains and find, alas, that people are more and more ignoring the rules. On the trip back from Heidelberg last week, one couple would not shut up (they were German speakers). Ditto for a pair of German executives (who also talked on their mobiles). I had to hunt down the conductor and ask him to get these self-centered a**holes to pipe down. (It wasn't ignorance, they looked at the Pssst stickers on the windows and shrugged or laughed)
#33
Joined: Aug 2011
Posts: 428
Likes: 0
The only thing that matters - and it doesn't matter much at all, really - is the tiny bit of extra comfort in the 1st class seats. If someone is very tall or very corpulent, he/she won't be extremely comfortable in either class, though those solo seats would be helpful for someone with long legs.
The passengers who board the trains - either in 1st or 2nd class - are beyond anyone's control. People who travel are animals - tired, stressed-out, often drunk or just plain brought up in a barn.
The only way to guarantee a completely stress-free ride is to buy up all the seats in the wagon and bar the door.
The passengers who board the trains - either in 1st or 2nd class - are beyond anyone's control. People who travel are animals - tired, stressed-out, often drunk or just plain brought up in a barn.
The only way to guarantee a completely stress-free ride is to buy up all the seats in the wagon and bar the door.




