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Any way to force a break of journey other than using two oystercards?
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July 15th 14, 04:28 PM posted to uk.transport.london
tim.....
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Any way to force a break of journey other than using two oyster cards?
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In article ,
(tim.....) wrote:
wrote in message
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In article ,
(Roland Perry) wrote:
In message , at
03:26:01 on Tue, 15 Jul 2014,
remarked:
and it's particularly bad at penalising you if you make a single
peak journey, only capping you at the peak cap instead of
off?
My guess too.
peak cap plus single fare for peak journey.
It even does this if the peak journey is a bus journey that has no
concept of differential fares for TOD (and might even be considered
as "free" if you exceed the bus cap for the day).
(I have no experience of it actually doing this, the above has come
from reading the explanations, very very carefully)
I thought it would cap at off-peak cap plus single peak fare?
I think that's what Tim is saying it doesn't do.
That's why I was puzzled. I'm sure I read that that should happen.
It seems to say that, but it doesn't
It says:
Calculating peak and off-peak capping
As you travel, the system combines all the zones, times and fares
recorded on your Oyster card so it can calculate the cheapest cap to
apply. This means that sometimes you could be charged a cheaper
Off-Peak cap even if you've travelled during the peak. This is
because the system calculates the cost of:
.All the journeys you made during the peak
.All the journeys you made during the off peak
It then adds these together to work out which cap would offer the
best value. If this total is less than a Peak cap, you'll be charged:
.An Off-peak cap, and
.The cost of the individual journey(s) you made during the peak
If this total is more than the Peak cap, then a Peak cap will be
applied.
Do you see the subtle difference here between what it says, and what
you (and I) think it should say?
The question is? Is it just badly worded, or do they actually do
what the above says?
Maybe I'm missing something but how does that differ from what I said?
There
is one peak and a number of off-peak journeys.
Let's say the OP cap is 12.00 and the peak cap is 20.00.
A) you spend 15.00 OP and 3.00 P (18.00 total). It caps you at the OP cap
plus 3 pounds = 15.00.
b) you spend 18.00 OP and 3.00 P (21.00 total). It caps you at peak cap of
20.00.
c) you spend 8.00 OP and 6.00 P (14.00 total, but crucially, more than the
OP cap). It charges you the OP cap plus 6.00 = 18.00!
(c) can't be right, but that is what it says it does
tim
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