Are these Deutsche Bahn train seats side-by-side?
I booked two tickets on the direct Deutsche Bahn (ICE 93) train from Berlin to Vienna and the seat information is shown as - "Side-by-side seats Carriage 27, seats 13, 15". I would normally have expected the seat numbers to be continuous, e.g. "13, 14" or "14, 15", although I have never travelled by train in Germany so do not know the seat number system.
I booked the tickets via Trainline EU and I asked them. Their reply was:
Unfortunately, we don't have access to the seat plan of this train, so
there is no way for me to confirm or deny if you are next to each
other. Usually, when you're booking for multiple passengers at the
same time, the system automatically tries to put them together(if
possible), or the at the very least close to one another.
Could someone confirm that the seats are indeed side-by-side (and also not separated by the aisle)? Also, if anyone could show the seats on a seating plan that would be helpful.
Edit: This is the same train on a different date:
trains germany seating
|
show 5 more comments
I booked two tickets on the direct Deutsche Bahn (ICE 93) train from Berlin to Vienna and the seat information is shown as - "Side-by-side seats Carriage 27, seats 13, 15". I would normally have expected the seat numbers to be continuous, e.g. "13, 14" or "14, 15", although I have never travelled by train in Germany so do not know the seat number system.
I booked the tickets via Trainline EU and I asked them. Their reply was:
Unfortunately, we don't have access to the seat plan of this train, so
there is no way for me to confirm or deny if you are next to each
other. Usually, when you're booking for multiple passengers at the
same time, the system automatically tries to put them together(if
possible), or the at the very least close to one another.
Could someone confirm that the seats are indeed side-by-side (and also not separated by the aisle)? Also, if anyone could show the seats on a seating plan that would be helpful.
Edit: This is the same train on a different date:
trains germany seating
3
seat61.com/Europe-train-seat-plans.htm Seat61 is your friend for such queries.
– DumbCoder
Nov 28 '18 at 9:43
1
@DCTLib Looks as though ICE 93 is a new addition in the December timetable change. A bahn.de search for Berlin-Vienna after 9 December brings it up (depart 10:05, arrive 17:45).
– Pont
Nov 28 '18 at 9:58
5
Related: How do DB seat numbers work?
– chirlu
Nov 28 '18 at 10:22
3
It should be noted that DB themselves sometimes don't know (or care). I've had it on several occasions that I booked a seat only to be told: "Oh yes, we are now on ICE4, and the seats are different than from ICE3, we didn't update the booking system yet". (that being 2 months after the switch)
– Damon
Nov 28 '18 at 16:36
3
93 is not the train type but the train-equivalent of a flight number.
– shoover
Nov 28 '18 at 21:54
|
show 5 more comments
I booked two tickets on the direct Deutsche Bahn (ICE 93) train from Berlin to Vienna and the seat information is shown as - "Side-by-side seats Carriage 27, seats 13, 15". I would normally have expected the seat numbers to be continuous, e.g. "13, 14" or "14, 15", although I have never travelled by train in Germany so do not know the seat number system.
I booked the tickets via Trainline EU and I asked them. Their reply was:
Unfortunately, we don't have access to the seat plan of this train, so
there is no way for me to confirm or deny if you are next to each
other. Usually, when you're booking for multiple passengers at the
same time, the system automatically tries to put them together(if
possible), or the at the very least close to one another.
Could someone confirm that the seats are indeed side-by-side (and also not separated by the aisle)? Also, if anyone could show the seats on a seating plan that would be helpful.
Edit: This is the same train on a different date:
trains germany seating
I booked two tickets on the direct Deutsche Bahn (ICE 93) train from Berlin to Vienna and the seat information is shown as - "Side-by-side seats Carriage 27, seats 13, 15". I would normally have expected the seat numbers to be continuous, e.g. "13, 14" or "14, 15", although I have never travelled by train in Germany so do not know the seat number system.
I booked the tickets via Trainline EU and I asked them. Their reply was:
Unfortunately, we don't have access to the seat plan of this train, so
there is no way for me to confirm or deny if you are next to each
other. Usually, when you're booking for multiple passengers at the
same time, the system automatically tries to put them together(if
possible), or the at the very least close to one another.
Could someone confirm that the seats are indeed side-by-side (and also not separated by the aisle)? Also, if anyone could show the seats on a seating plan that would be helpful.
Edit: This is the same train on a different date:
trains germany seating
trains germany seating
edited Nov 28 '18 at 10:08
camden_kid
asked Nov 28 '18 at 9:39
camden_kidcamden_kid
243414
243414
3
seat61.com/Europe-train-seat-plans.htm Seat61 is your friend for such queries.
– DumbCoder
Nov 28 '18 at 9:43
1
@DCTLib Looks as though ICE 93 is a new addition in the December timetable change. A bahn.de search for Berlin-Vienna after 9 December brings it up (depart 10:05, arrive 17:45).
– Pont
Nov 28 '18 at 9:58
5
Related: How do DB seat numbers work?
– chirlu
Nov 28 '18 at 10:22
3
It should be noted that DB themselves sometimes don't know (or care). I've had it on several occasions that I booked a seat only to be told: "Oh yes, we are now on ICE4, and the seats are different than from ICE3, we didn't update the booking system yet". (that being 2 months after the switch)
– Damon
Nov 28 '18 at 16:36
3
93 is not the train type but the train-equivalent of a flight number.
– shoover
Nov 28 '18 at 21:54
|
show 5 more comments
3
seat61.com/Europe-train-seat-plans.htm Seat61 is your friend for such queries.
– DumbCoder
Nov 28 '18 at 9:43
1
@DCTLib Looks as though ICE 93 is a new addition in the December timetable change. A bahn.de search for Berlin-Vienna after 9 December brings it up (depart 10:05, arrive 17:45).
– Pont
Nov 28 '18 at 9:58
5
Related: How do DB seat numbers work?
– chirlu
Nov 28 '18 at 10:22
3
It should be noted that DB themselves sometimes don't know (or care). I've had it on several occasions that I booked a seat only to be told: "Oh yes, we are now on ICE4, and the seats are different than from ICE3, we didn't update the booking system yet". (that being 2 months after the switch)
– Damon
Nov 28 '18 at 16:36
3
93 is not the train type but the train-equivalent of a flight number.
– shoover
Nov 28 '18 at 21:54
3
3
seat61.com/Europe-train-seat-plans.htm Seat61 is your friend for such queries.
– DumbCoder
Nov 28 '18 at 9:43
seat61.com/Europe-train-seat-plans.htm Seat61 is your friend for such queries.
– DumbCoder
Nov 28 '18 at 9:43
1
1
@DCTLib Looks as though ICE 93 is a new addition in the December timetable change. A bahn.de search for Berlin-Vienna after 9 December brings it up (depart 10:05, arrive 17:45).
– Pont
Nov 28 '18 at 9:58
@DCTLib Looks as though ICE 93 is a new addition in the December timetable change. A bahn.de search for Berlin-Vienna after 9 December brings it up (depart 10:05, arrive 17:45).
– Pont
Nov 28 '18 at 9:58
5
5
Related: How do DB seat numbers work?
– chirlu
Nov 28 '18 at 10:22
Related: How do DB seat numbers work?
– chirlu
Nov 28 '18 at 10:22
3
3
It should be noted that DB themselves sometimes don't know (or care). I've had it on several occasions that I booked a seat only to be told: "Oh yes, we are now on ICE4, and the seats are different than from ICE3, we didn't update the booking system yet". (that being 2 months after the switch)
– Damon
Nov 28 '18 at 16:36
It should be noted that DB themselves sometimes don't know (or care). I've had it on several occasions that I booked a seat only to be told: "Oh yes, we are now on ICE4, and the seats are different than from ICE3, we didn't update the booking system yet". (that being 2 months after the switch)
– Damon
Nov 28 '18 at 16:36
3
3
93 is not the train type but the train-equivalent of a flight number.
– shoover
Nov 28 '18 at 21:54
93 is not the train type but the train-equivalent of a flight number.
– shoover
Nov 28 '18 at 21:54
|
show 5 more comments
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
You can check this by trying to book a reservation on bahn.de - Select "Reservation only" on the main page, then search for your train, try to make a reservation (without logging in), click on "select seat" and the layout of the coach will be shown.
For the 20th of December, an ICE train type is used for which seats 13 and 15 are next to each other and appear to be 1st class in Coach 27. Due to copyright reasons, I cannot include the seat plan shown on bahn.de here.
I am not sure if that is the case for all ICE types, but normally, seats 15 and 13 should be next to each other. The numbering scheme comes from the old days of vis-a-vis compartment seating and was just continued to be used when compartments were no longer used.
19
"Due to copyright reasons" According to which law or jurisdiction? Why do you think that DeutscheBahn would sue it's user for using a seat visualization in a discussion board?
– FooBar
Nov 28 '18 at 10:39
22
@FooBar because he doesn’t have the legal rights to licence the image as CS-by-CA 3.0...? So pretty much every law or jurisdiction which prevents relicencing work you do not own!
– Tim
Nov 28 '18 at 11:41
13
@Tim: You can exclude content from being licensed under CC BY-SA by saying so (and ideally using quote markup in addition). In that case, your use of the content has to be allowed by the default copyright laws (see quoting laws). -- In the case of DB train layouts for reservation, I would argue that they can’t be copyrighted to begin with (threshold of originality) -- but even if they are, quoting them in the context of this answer should be perfectly fine.
– unor
Nov 28 '18 at 13:10
3
@unor the image uploaded message suggests differently: i.stack.imgur.com/j6ENh.jpg
– Tim
Nov 28 '18 at 13:44
3
@Tim: Yes, that’s the same message that is also in the footer on each SE page, but it’s still allowed to quote from books, documentation sites etc. (which aren’t licensed under CC BY-SA) without licensing the quotes under CC BY-SA that way. -- I don’t know if it makes a legal difference whether the image is hosted on imgur or somewhere else, though.
– unor
Nov 28 '18 at 14:23
|
show 15 more comments
Using the seating plans on seat61.com, and a bit of deduction:
If it's an ICE 2 or ICE-T-7, then seats 13 and 15 in car 27 are adjacent.
(ICE 1 & 4 don't have car 27. In ICE 3 and ICE-T-5, car 27 is 2nd class only, so it can't be any of those types)
add a comment |
Both seats are indeed adjacent:
8
This will be a very good answer if you can clarify how you found this diagram, to make it clear that it does apply to the train in the question question. Without that, all you're showing is a diagram of some train where seats 13 and 15 are adjacent.
– Chris H
Nov 30 '18 at 8:44
1
The diagram contributed by Diego above can be found during reservation through the Deutsche Bahn website (available in English). Here you can see a seat map and select your seats. This happens in the stage before you confirm your reservation and pay, so can be done even when booking through another website.
– Bahn enthusiast
Nov 30 '18 at 15:12
add a comment |
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3 Answers
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3 Answers
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active
oldest
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You can check this by trying to book a reservation on bahn.de - Select "Reservation only" on the main page, then search for your train, try to make a reservation (without logging in), click on "select seat" and the layout of the coach will be shown.
For the 20th of December, an ICE train type is used for which seats 13 and 15 are next to each other and appear to be 1st class in Coach 27. Due to copyright reasons, I cannot include the seat plan shown on bahn.de here.
I am not sure if that is the case for all ICE types, but normally, seats 15 and 13 should be next to each other. The numbering scheme comes from the old days of vis-a-vis compartment seating and was just continued to be used when compartments were no longer used.
19
"Due to copyright reasons" According to which law or jurisdiction? Why do you think that DeutscheBahn would sue it's user for using a seat visualization in a discussion board?
– FooBar
Nov 28 '18 at 10:39
22
@FooBar because he doesn’t have the legal rights to licence the image as CS-by-CA 3.0...? So pretty much every law or jurisdiction which prevents relicencing work you do not own!
– Tim
Nov 28 '18 at 11:41
13
@Tim: You can exclude content from being licensed under CC BY-SA by saying so (and ideally using quote markup in addition). In that case, your use of the content has to be allowed by the default copyright laws (see quoting laws). -- In the case of DB train layouts for reservation, I would argue that they can’t be copyrighted to begin with (threshold of originality) -- but even if they are, quoting them in the context of this answer should be perfectly fine.
– unor
Nov 28 '18 at 13:10
3
@unor the image uploaded message suggests differently: i.stack.imgur.com/j6ENh.jpg
– Tim
Nov 28 '18 at 13:44
3
@Tim: Yes, that’s the same message that is also in the footer on each SE page, but it’s still allowed to quote from books, documentation sites etc. (which aren’t licensed under CC BY-SA) without licensing the quotes under CC BY-SA that way. -- I don’t know if it makes a legal difference whether the image is hosted on imgur or somewhere else, though.
– unor
Nov 28 '18 at 14:23
|
show 15 more comments
You can check this by trying to book a reservation on bahn.de - Select "Reservation only" on the main page, then search for your train, try to make a reservation (without logging in), click on "select seat" and the layout of the coach will be shown.
For the 20th of December, an ICE train type is used for which seats 13 and 15 are next to each other and appear to be 1st class in Coach 27. Due to copyright reasons, I cannot include the seat plan shown on bahn.de here.
I am not sure if that is the case for all ICE types, but normally, seats 15 and 13 should be next to each other. The numbering scheme comes from the old days of vis-a-vis compartment seating and was just continued to be used when compartments were no longer used.
19
"Due to copyright reasons" According to which law or jurisdiction? Why do you think that DeutscheBahn would sue it's user for using a seat visualization in a discussion board?
– FooBar
Nov 28 '18 at 10:39
22
@FooBar because he doesn’t have the legal rights to licence the image as CS-by-CA 3.0...? So pretty much every law or jurisdiction which prevents relicencing work you do not own!
– Tim
Nov 28 '18 at 11:41
13
@Tim: You can exclude content from being licensed under CC BY-SA by saying so (and ideally using quote markup in addition). In that case, your use of the content has to be allowed by the default copyright laws (see quoting laws). -- In the case of DB train layouts for reservation, I would argue that they can’t be copyrighted to begin with (threshold of originality) -- but even if they are, quoting them in the context of this answer should be perfectly fine.
– unor
Nov 28 '18 at 13:10
3
@unor the image uploaded message suggests differently: i.stack.imgur.com/j6ENh.jpg
– Tim
Nov 28 '18 at 13:44
3
@Tim: Yes, that’s the same message that is also in the footer on each SE page, but it’s still allowed to quote from books, documentation sites etc. (which aren’t licensed under CC BY-SA) without licensing the quotes under CC BY-SA that way. -- I don’t know if it makes a legal difference whether the image is hosted on imgur or somewhere else, though.
– unor
Nov 28 '18 at 14:23
|
show 15 more comments
You can check this by trying to book a reservation on bahn.de - Select "Reservation only" on the main page, then search for your train, try to make a reservation (without logging in), click on "select seat" and the layout of the coach will be shown.
For the 20th of December, an ICE train type is used for which seats 13 and 15 are next to each other and appear to be 1st class in Coach 27. Due to copyright reasons, I cannot include the seat plan shown on bahn.de here.
I am not sure if that is the case for all ICE types, but normally, seats 15 and 13 should be next to each other. The numbering scheme comes from the old days of vis-a-vis compartment seating and was just continued to be used when compartments were no longer used.
You can check this by trying to book a reservation on bahn.de - Select "Reservation only" on the main page, then search for your train, try to make a reservation (without logging in), click on "select seat" and the layout of the coach will be shown.
For the 20th of December, an ICE train type is used for which seats 13 and 15 are next to each other and appear to be 1st class in Coach 27. Due to copyright reasons, I cannot include the seat plan shown on bahn.de here.
I am not sure if that is the case for all ICE types, but normally, seats 15 and 13 should be next to each other. The numbering scheme comes from the old days of vis-a-vis compartment seating and was just continued to be used when compartments were no longer used.
answered Nov 28 '18 at 9:57
DCTLibDCTLib
7,9162241
7,9162241
19
"Due to copyright reasons" According to which law or jurisdiction? Why do you think that DeutscheBahn would sue it's user for using a seat visualization in a discussion board?
– FooBar
Nov 28 '18 at 10:39
22
@FooBar because he doesn’t have the legal rights to licence the image as CS-by-CA 3.0...? So pretty much every law or jurisdiction which prevents relicencing work you do not own!
– Tim
Nov 28 '18 at 11:41
13
@Tim: You can exclude content from being licensed under CC BY-SA by saying so (and ideally using quote markup in addition). In that case, your use of the content has to be allowed by the default copyright laws (see quoting laws). -- In the case of DB train layouts for reservation, I would argue that they can’t be copyrighted to begin with (threshold of originality) -- but even if they are, quoting them in the context of this answer should be perfectly fine.
– unor
Nov 28 '18 at 13:10
3
@unor the image uploaded message suggests differently: i.stack.imgur.com/j6ENh.jpg
– Tim
Nov 28 '18 at 13:44
3
@Tim: Yes, that’s the same message that is also in the footer on each SE page, but it’s still allowed to quote from books, documentation sites etc. (which aren’t licensed under CC BY-SA) without licensing the quotes under CC BY-SA that way. -- I don’t know if it makes a legal difference whether the image is hosted on imgur or somewhere else, though.
– unor
Nov 28 '18 at 14:23
|
show 15 more comments
19
"Due to copyright reasons" According to which law or jurisdiction? Why do you think that DeutscheBahn would sue it's user for using a seat visualization in a discussion board?
– FooBar
Nov 28 '18 at 10:39
22
@FooBar because he doesn’t have the legal rights to licence the image as CS-by-CA 3.0...? So pretty much every law or jurisdiction which prevents relicencing work you do not own!
– Tim
Nov 28 '18 at 11:41
13
@Tim: You can exclude content from being licensed under CC BY-SA by saying so (and ideally using quote markup in addition). In that case, your use of the content has to be allowed by the default copyright laws (see quoting laws). -- In the case of DB train layouts for reservation, I would argue that they can’t be copyrighted to begin with (threshold of originality) -- but even if they are, quoting them in the context of this answer should be perfectly fine.
– unor
Nov 28 '18 at 13:10
3
@unor the image uploaded message suggests differently: i.stack.imgur.com/j6ENh.jpg
– Tim
Nov 28 '18 at 13:44
3
@Tim: Yes, that’s the same message that is also in the footer on each SE page, but it’s still allowed to quote from books, documentation sites etc. (which aren’t licensed under CC BY-SA) without licensing the quotes under CC BY-SA that way. -- I don’t know if it makes a legal difference whether the image is hosted on imgur or somewhere else, though.
– unor
Nov 28 '18 at 14:23
19
19
"Due to copyright reasons" According to which law or jurisdiction? Why do you think that DeutscheBahn would sue it's user for using a seat visualization in a discussion board?
– FooBar
Nov 28 '18 at 10:39
"Due to copyright reasons" According to which law or jurisdiction? Why do you think that DeutscheBahn would sue it's user for using a seat visualization in a discussion board?
– FooBar
Nov 28 '18 at 10:39
22
22
@FooBar because he doesn’t have the legal rights to licence the image as CS-by-CA 3.0...? So pretty much every law or jurisdiction which prevents relicencing work you do not own!
– Tim
Nov 28 '18 at 11:41
@FooBar because he doesn’t have the legal rights to licence the image as CS-by-CA 3.0...? So pretty much every law or jurisdiction which prevents relicencing work you do not own!
– Tim
Nov 28 '18 at 11:41
13
13
@Tim: You can exclude content from being licensed under CC BY-SA by saying so (and ideally using quote markup in addition). In that case, your use of the content has to be allowed by the default copyright laws (see quoting laws). -- In the case of DB train layouts for reservation, I would argue that they can’t be copyrighted to begin with (threshold of originality) -- but even if they are, quoting them in the context of this answer should be perfectly fine.
– unor
Nov 28 '18 at 13:10
@Tim: You can exclude content from being licensed under CC BY-SA by saying so (and ideally using quote markup in addition). In that case, your use of the content has to be allowed by the default copyright laws (see quoting laws). -- In the case of DB train layouts for reservation, I would argue that they can’t be copyrighted to begin with (threshold of originality) -- but even if they are, quoting them in the context of this answer should be perfectly fine.
– unor
Nov 28 '18 at 13:10
3
3
@unor the image uploaded message suggests differently: i.stack.imgur.com/j6ENh.jpg
– Tim
Nov 28 '18 at 13:44
@unor the image uploaded message suggests differently: i.stack.imgur.com/j6ENh.jpg
– Tim
Nov 28 '18 at 13:44
3
3
@Tim: Yes, that’s the same message that is also in the footer on each SE page, but it’s still allowed to quote from books, documentation sites etc. (which aren’t licensed under CC BY-SA) without licensing the quotes under CC BY-SA that way. -- I don’t know if it makes a legal difference whether the image is hosted on imgur or somewhere else, though.
– unor
Nov 28 '18 at 14:23
@Tim: Yes, that’s the same message that is also in the footer on each SE page, but it’s still allowed to quote from books, documentation sites etc. (which aren’t licensed under CC BY-SA) without licensing the quotes under CC BY-SA that way. -- I don’t know if it makes a legal difference whether the image is hosted on imgur or somewhere else, though.
– unor
Nov 28 '18 at 14:23
|
show 15 more comments
Using the seating plans on seat61.com, and a bit of deduction:
If it's an ICE 2 or ICE-T-7, then seats 13 and 15 in car 27 are adjacent.
(ICE 1 & 4 don't have car 27. In ICE 3 and ICE-T-5, car 27 is 2nd class only, so it can't be any of those types)
add a comment |
Using the seating plans on seat61.com, and a bit of deduction:
If it's an ICE 2 or ICE-T-7, then seats 13 and 15 in car 27 are adjacent.
(ICE 1 & 4 don't have car 27. In ICE 3 and ICE-T-5, car 27 is 2nd class only, so it can't be any of those types)
add a comment |
Using the seating plans on seat61.com, and a bit of deduction:
If it's an ICE 2 or ICE-T-7, then seats 13 and 15 in car 27 are adjacent.
(ICE 1 & 4 don't have car 27. In ICE 3 and ICE-T-5, car 27 is 2nd class only, so it can't be any of those types)
Using the seating plans on seat61.com, and a bit of deduction:
If it's an ICE 2 or ICE-T-7, then seats 13 and 15 in car 27 are adjacent.
(ICE 1 & 4 don't have car 27. In ICE 3 and ICE-T-5, car 27 is 2nd class only, so it can't be any of those types)
answered Nov 28 '18 at 10:16
Nick CNick C
2,6351831
2,6351831
add a comment |
add a comment |
Both seats are indeed adjacent:
8
This will be a very good answer if you can clarify how you found this diagram, to make it clear that it does apply to the train in the question question. Without that, all you're showing is a diagram of some train where seats 13 and 15 are adjacent.
– Chris H
Nov 30 '18 at 8:44
1
The diagram contributed by Diego above can be found during reservation through the Deutsche Bahn website (available in English). Here you can see a seat map and select your seats. This happens in the stage before you confirm your reservation and pay, so can be done even when booking through another website.
– Bahn enthusiast
Nov 30 '18 at 15:12
add a comment |
Both seats are indeed adjacent:
8
This will be a very good answer if you can clarify how you found this diagram, to make it clear that it does apply to the train in the question question. Without that, all you're showing is a diagram of some train where seats 13 and 15 are adjacent.
– Chris H
Nov 30 '18 at 8:44
1
The diagram contributed by Diego above can be found during reservation through the Deutsche Bahn website (available in English). Here you can see a seat map and select your seats. This happens in the stage before you confirm your reservation and pay, so can be done even when booking through another website.
– Bahn enthusiast
Nov 30 '18 at 15:12
add a comment |
Both seats are indeed adjacent:
Both seats are indeed adjacent:
answered Nov 30 '18 at 8:18
Diego DuqueDiego Duque
111
111
8
This will be a very good answer if you can clarify how you found this diagram, to make it clear that it does apply to the train in the question question. Without that, all you're showing is a diagram of some train where seats 13 and 15 are adjacent.
– Chris H
Nov 30 '18 at 8:44
1
The diagram contributed by Diego above can be found during reservation through the Deutsche Bahn website (available in English). Here you can see a seat map and select your seats. This happens in the stage before you confirm your reservation and pay, so can be done even when booking through another website.
– Bahn enthusiast
Nov 30 '18 at 15:12
add a comment |
8
This will be a very good answer if you can clarify how you found this diagram, to make it clear that it does apply to the train in the question question. Without that, all you're showing is a diagram of some train where seats 13 and 15 are adjacent.
– Chris H
Nov 30 '18 at 8:44
1
The diagram contributed by Diego above can be found during reservation through the Deutsche Bahn website (available in English). Here you can see a seat map and select your seats. This happens in the stage before you confirm your reservation and pay, so can be done even when booking through another website.
– Bahn enthusiast
Nov 30 '18 at 15:12
8
8
This will be a very good answer if you can clarify how you found this diagram, to make it clear that it does apply to the train in the question question. Without that, all you're showing is a diagram of some train where seats 13 and 15 are adjacent.
– Chris H
Nov 30 '18 at 8:44
This will be a very good answer if you can clarify how you found this diagram, to make it clear that it does apply to the train in the question question. Without that, all you're showing is a diagram of some train where seats 13 and 15 are adjacent.
– Chris H
Nov 30 '18 at 8:44
1
1
The diagram contributed by Diego above can be found during reservation through the Deutsche Bahn website (available in English). Here you can see a seat map and select your seats. This happens in the stage before you confirm your reservation and pay, so can be done even when booking through another website.
– Bahn enthusiast
Nov 30 '18 at 15:12
The diagram contributed by Diego above can be found during reservation through the Deutsche Bahn website (available in English). Here you can see a seat map and select your seats. This happens in the stage before you confirm your reservation and pay, so can be done even when booking through another website.
– Bahn enthusiast
Nov 30 '18 at 15:12
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seat61.com/Europe-train-seat-plans.htm Seat61 is your friend for such queries.
– DumbCoder
Nov 28 '18 at 9:43
1
@DCTLib Looks as though ICE 93 is a new addition in the December timetable change. A bahn.de search for Berlin-Vienna after 9 December brings it up (depart 10:05, arrive 17:45).
– Pont
Nov 28 '18 at 9:58
5
Related: How do DB seat numbers work?
– chirlu
Nov 28 '18 at 10:22
3
It should be noted that DB themselves sometimes don't know (or care). I've had it on several occasions that I booked a seat only to be told: "Oh yes, we are now on ICE4, and the seats are different than from ICE3, we didn't update the booking system yet". (that being 2 months after the switch)
– Damon
Nov 28 '18 at 16:36
3
93 is not the train type but the train-equivalent of a flight number.
– shoover
Nov 28 '18 at 21:54