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    15 Kommentare

    1. Marcel_The_Blank on

      yes because we don’t count canceled trains, or trains that don’t run the full distance. also trains that skip stops that make up time.

    2. zero-divide-x on

      From what I remember, countries have different criteria to define what constitutes a delay. Switzerland has higher standards than other European countries. Does this chart take this into account?

    3. KostyaFedot on

      Well after taking German trains, I like Belgium ones even more. Netherlands ones are .. meh after Belgium ones as well. 

    4. PutMobile40 on

      It’s Belgium. We just redefine the definition of punctuality and call it at day. 

    5. Background_Summer_55 on

      Long distance trains…no one is using. while short distance trains have delay everyday

    6. BelgianBeerGuy on

      Incoming all the people that took a train 20 years ago and had 10 minutes delay so now they swear by their car to go to work to be part of the file for 30 minutes.

      But hey, we’re Belgians, what else should we do on a Friday night besides ~~complaining~~ drinking?

    7. Lies, damn lies, and statistics. First of all: NMBS/SNCB doesn’t count the ever-increasing number of cancelled trains, which in practice mean a delay of either half an hour or more likely an hour for affected people. Trains running too late will simply get cancelled and won’t count anymore. Next they’ve slowed down most of the trains to give themselves another extra buffer. Next they’ve extended trains from Limburg to Brussels to continue on towards destinations in Wallonia that nobody will ever use, so that the accumulated daily delays in Brussels can magically disappear by the time the trains reach their final destination.

    8. Yea makes sense with how loose the NMBS publishes their numbers. NS is on time way more often (since they calculate percentage of passengers arrived within 5 minutes of what the NS app reccomends, and the NS app generally reccomends pretty realistic routes if you are healthy). This includes missed transfers, cancellations and normal delays, but I don’t think it counts passengers that are early because the earlier train is delayed (which happened to me once on the NS network)

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