Submitted by RoverTheMonster t3_znoy0y in philadelphia
For the past two weeks, I’ve replaced my bike rides to get places with SEPTA bus rides as a way to learn the system. And now that I’ve hit the two week mark I’ve got to say: IMO SEPTA does not make it easy to know where you are and need to go if you 1) don’t actually know the route and 2) lose cell phone reception or power.
Maybe I’m just a moron, but the inconsistency in and inaccessibility of route information (detours and delays) and bus equipment (video screens with upcoming stops, scrolling boards, announcements) made it so much harder to navigate the system than I anticipated — and I’m able-bodied and was traveling on unfamiliar routes with time to spare.
Idk, just wanted to get that off my chest
urbantravelsPHL t1_j0ijc08 wrote
Regular bus user here, very rare subway or rail user. SEPTA is the source of many frustrations. But every new city I've ever moved to or spent time in, it's always damn hard to figure out the buses at first except for the very simplest situations.
SEPTA's app alone is no use for trip planning. My first few years in Philly I always used the transit tab on Google Maps directions for figuring out how to get from Point A to Point B. Supplemented by SEPTA app just for tracking the current bus that I'm waiting for. I have not yet become a real user of the Transit app because I have most of my regular places to go figured out by now, but I agree it has a much nicer interface.
Even with better tools for trip planning...detours will absolutely screw you every time. They happen so often and with so little warning. I have through bitter experience trained myself to check the SEPTA app before I leave the house for any detours on my route, but there are still pitfalls - the sudden unannounced detour; the completely impenetrable SEPTA prose in which a detour is described because they have not yet figured out how to show them as a line on a map; the planned and scheduled detour that ends EARLIER than planned and scheduled (this happens all the time) so that you are, once again, waiting like a chump in the wrong place for the bus.
The "invisible bus" is one of my favorite manifestations. Sometimes the app does not show a bus when there is one supposed to be on the schedule. This may mean that the bus in question is never coming. It may *also* mean that the bus in question has a non-functioning transmitter and you will only know it is coming by beholding it in the flesh. Cue once again waiting like a chump for a bus that may or may not be coming.
Nevertheless, I still prefer the bus to most other modes of transport (physical disability means I can't ride a bike or take really long walks) and I just have to content myself with regular complaining, apologizing to anyone who might be waiting for me at the other end, and taking those delightful little surveys that SEPTA occasionally issues to let me know they're listening...