सीट का स्टेटस समझें --
After all, finding out that your train and class is
"PQWL5/WL5" for the 8th of December isn't very illuminating - what do
these figures mean
This tutorial is especially applicable to these four:
- The
official Indianrail website,
- Erail,
- India
Rail Info, and
- IRCTC
Websites like 90di and Cleartrip display availability figures in a
slightly different (and simpler) format.
[a] Figures like AVAILABLE
75
When seats or berths are available in your train/class, it is
fairly simple to understand them. The AVAILABLE means that seats/berths
are available (duh), and the number following the AVAILABLE tells you exactly
how many seats/berths are available. Look at the image below:
Screenshot from www.erail.in
On trains with sleeping accommodation, after all confirmed berths
have been sold out, passengers are usually placed on an RAC ("Reservation Against
Cancellation") list. Being on the RAC list guarantees you a place on
the train, with a small catch - you are guaranteed only a seat on the train.
If enough passengers cancel, you will be allotted a sleeping-berth.
The following image is one for a train-class-date combination that
has now reached the RAC list:
Screenshot from www.erail.in
So if I decide to travel by Sleeper Class (SL) on this train on
the 8th of November, I will be placed on the RAC list.
Hold on, you might say. Why are there two sets of numbers?
Why is it RAC87/RAC 74, and what position on the RAC list will you get -
87 or 74? Good questions. The first number indicates the serial waitlist or RAC position; the second,
the running waitlist
or RAC position. I suspect this clears nothing up for you; I'll simplify
it a bit more.
The serial number (the
first of the two) indicates your position in the queue since the waitlist/RAC
list started, and your serial number will never change. So in this case, all
confirmed berths have been sold out, and you are the 87th person to join the
queue after the RAC list started. The second number (the running
waitlist/RAC list number) is more important - it denotes the position you currently are at in the waitlist or RAC list.
As and when people cancel their tickets, your running waitlist/RAC list
number will reduce until your ticket gets confirmed (if that happens). So
the first number denotes the position you would have been at in the
waitlist/RAC list had no cancellations occurred.
So in this case, you would have been RAC87, but as 13 people have
cancelled their tickets since the RAC list started, you will be RAC 74 if you
book a ticket now.
Well, having two numbers does serve a purpose. For many
passengers who cannot access the net or use technology to find out which coach
and berth they've finally been allotted, the only way to check before boarding
the train is to look at the charts pasted at the station. Checking your
serial waitlist number on the list is easy - only one person can have a serial
RAC position of 87, so all s/he needs to do is look for that entry in the
chart. On the other hand, many people will have the running RAC position
of 74 at different times, which makes searching for the entry on the chart
significantly more difficult.
Another use of two numbers is that before making your booking, you
can:
- tell
how many passengers have already cancelled their tickets,
- look
at cancellation trends for your train and class, which will help you
predict its chances of confirmation with greater accuracy.
[c] Figures like GNWL16/WL4
Availability figures like the one seen below for AC Chair Car (CC)
on the 1st of October can seem even more perplexing:
Screenshot from www.erail.in
You now (hopefully) recognise the two numbers - the first (16) is
the serial position; the second (4), the running position. But what do
GNWL and WL mean?
Four-letter words (not that four-letter word!) when checking
availability usually suggest that a waitlist has started. In trains with
sleeping accommodation, the order is usually as follows:
- If
confirmed berths are available, you will be allotted one.
- Once
all confirmed berths have been sold, you will be placed on the RAC list.
- Once
all confirmed berths and RAC positions booked, you will be placed on the
waitlist.
Keep in mind that there is no RAC for trains with sitting
accommodation (the above screenshot is one such example), and even trains with
sleeper accommodation might not have an RAC list depending on the particular
quota. There is no RAC list for First AC Sleeper either. In all
these cases, the availability status moves directly from AVAILABLE to a
waitlist.
Back to the example above, the first word tells you that it is a
waitlist as well as the type of waitlist. Here are the types of waitlists
you might encounter:
- GNWL (General Waitlist),
- CKWL (Tatkal Waitlist),
- RLWL (Remote Location Waitlist,
also abbreviated RLGN),
- PQWL (Pooled Quota Waitlist),
- RSWL (Roadside Waitlist)
Different waitlists have different chances of confirmation, so
don't ignore this list. Of all these waitlists, PQWL and RSWL are
particularly difficult to get confirmed, with GNWL being the most likely to see
confirmations.
Quotas like the foreign tourist quota, the ladies quota, the
senior citizen quota, the defence quota and the physically handicapped quota
have no waitlists. Once all confirmed seats or berths have been sold from
these quotas, the status changes directly to NOT AVAILABLE.
To wrap up this example, if you book this ticket, you will be 4th
on the (general) waitlist. Expecting four cancellations from other
passengers is not too unreasonable in this case, and this ticket will probably
get confirmed.
[d] Figures like REGRET/WL300
If I wanted to buy a ticket in Sleeper Class (SL) on this train
for the 3rd of November, I wouldn't get very far.
Screenshot from www.erail.in
If you see REGRET as an availability status while trying to book
tickets, you're going to have to choose another train or class. REGRET
means that the train-class-date combination is so full that they've stopped
issuing tickets even on the waitlist. In short, the railways know there
is no chance that such a high waitlist will get confirmed, so they're telling
you to take your business elsewhere.
[e] Figures like GNWL/AVAILABLE
This is a slightly strange figure to see. The first word
suggests a waitlist, so why is there an AVAILABLE after that?
(First AC,
14th October)
Screenshot from www.erail.in
When you see WL/AVAILABLE (irrespective of what type of waitlist
it is), it means that at least one seat or berth is available. This
status tells you that the train got full, and hence a waitlist was started, but
due to cancellations, seats or berths are now available. Annoyingly, it
doesn't tell you exactly how many seats or berths are available, so the only
assumption you can make is that one seat or berth is available. Only
after booking will you know for sure.
If you see WL/AVAILABLE for a train-class combination over a
series of dates, it's probably because the railways have decided to add extra
coaches of that class to the train - the resulting capacity expansion killing
any waitlists.
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