A load of new Paris RER trains have been ordered (by STIF). The design is based on Alstom's X'trapolate series though for some reason (probably devious and political) Bomardier are helping them.
These are double-decker trains, not unusual on the RER, but this time also open throughout (car-width gangways) and with a very high standing capacity. They quote 1860 passengers in a 130 m length - compare that with Crossrail's 1950 (min) in 205 m (max).
Alstom's announcement has a cut-away picture in it, which shows large vestibules with only tip-up seats, and that area is marked "5 minutes". Then there's downstairs, with 30 seats in 3+0, but several of these are tip-ups, marked "20 minutes". Then upstairs is 18 seats in 2+0, again with some of them tip-ups, and marked "50 minutes".
Now that pictures has ambiguities: upstairs could be 2+2 with the nearside cut away, and downstairs might have single seats along the nearside. But then some seats shown down might flip up - or even all of them! Cramming so many people into the length is not going to be easy.
I can't explain, in terms of vehicle lengths and numbers, how trains are made in 112 m and 130 m lengths. Despite being Alstom the bogies are not shared. The inner vehicle length does look short, though, presumably to optimise the vestibule and double-deck lengths in relation to the number of doors).
You might well call them sheep trucks (they are better then cattle at climbing the stairs). To compare with here, the furthest terminals are Malesherbes at 60 km on RER D, and will be similar for Mantes-la-Jolie on RER E once extended. Those are straight-line from the city centre, on which basis Reading is also 60 km. Thameslink of course goes a lot further.
[This seems as good a place as any ... for now, anyway.]