Oyster ticketing developments
"Roland Perry" wrote in message
...
In message , at 15:29:29 on Sun, 27 Feb
2011, tim.... remarked:
Part of the attraction of the scheme is not having to queue up to buy
tickets (and also not needing to know the system well enough,
including
speaking English, to be able to decide which tickets to buy).
So you'd pay twice as much
Where's this "twice as much" come from?
Capped oyster price for an adult: peak/off peak 8.00/6.60. Cash price for
a
child travelcard 4.00/3.00.
So you are assuming a child with a paywave, deciding whether to use the
paywave (assuming there's no child discount version, which may be true) or
get a travelcard? A bit of a corner case, don't you think?
No. It's the exact question that I asked 6 posts ago
"why would a child want to pay adult Oyster fares when they could buy a
paper
travelcard for less?"
To which you replied (paraphrased) "to avoid queuing up"
not to queue up, would you?
Have you seen the queues at St Pancras?
It's not always like that
It's often like that or worse. I'd hate to be there just after a Eurostar
has arrived (if I'm on such a train I'll be heading for the Midland
Mainline platforms, not the tube).
If you want a travelcard, can you not buy it from the machines in the main
line station?
tim
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