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![]() wrote in message thlink.net... Trouble is you have to allow around 3 hours to get through the security and check in process on US flights these days but here in Europe I can get from London to Paris in that period and clear customs and immigration on the train. True but they've been at it for longer in Europe. Americans are still getting used to the idea of all the security, and importunely allot of the personal that are manning the checkpoints aren't trained to the same standard or level the their counterparts in Europe are. To be fair the main difference is that the trains are specialist International trains making many fewer local stops. It would be very hard to clear the Toronto-New York train as it makes more than a dozen stops along the way. The other factors are that the distances between population centers are much lower in Europe, this means that a city centre to city centre journey of 500 miles is a long trip and that high speed rail can compete much more realistically with air travel. |
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![]() "Kevin Brooks" wrote in message om... Trouble is you have to allow around 3 hours to get through the security and check in process on US flights these days but here in Europe I can get from London to Paris in that period and clear customs and immigration on the train. Keith You are exaggerating a bit, at least based upon personal experience. The general guideline for domestic flights is to arrive one hour before the flight; we just had four out-of-town guests arrive from and return to Chicago, and that hour was plenty for them both at O'Hare and at Reagan. Even if I took your example at face value, I would *still* be better off versus rail in most long-distance cases (guaranteed that the time it would take to clear security and fly from here to Boston would be one heck of a lot less than the seven or eight hours it would take by rail). Brooks Not much based on recent experience On my last flight out of Seattle (June this year) to SFO my flight was due to leave at 7.40 and I arrived at the airport just after 5.00 and had no time to spare, arriving at the gate just as they started boarding. I spent over an hour standing in line just to check in and then another 40 minutes waiting to get through security. At this point they were making everyone remove their belts and shoes and x-taying tme separately The flight from JFK to LHR was almost as bad, my luggage was already checked through but it still took almost 90 minutes to get from check in to the gate. Keith |
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