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by CRConrad
667 days ago
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The outbound ones are scheduled a minute and a half after the inbound. (For neat integers, should have been twice as often, or 8 minutes between them.) But the bigger question: What's the difference between "an inbound train" and "an outbound train"? Aren't almost all trains usually both inbound and outbound? First they arrive at a station, then they go on to the next. Or even at a "terminus"-type station; first they arrive at the terminus, then they go back in the other direction. How does he decide whether a train is an inbound or an outbound one, while it is standing still? |
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