View Single Post
  #3   Report Post  
Old May 9th 08, 08:42 AM posted to uk.transport.london
MIG MIG is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity at LondonBanter: Jun 2004
Posts: 3,154
Default about Oyster Card and Travelcard

On May 9, 1:09*am, wrote:
We'll be in London in late July for 4 nights and in mid-to-late August
for two more nights. *Because of these two times in London, it seems
like the Oyster card is probably the way for the three of us to get
around.

What does it mean to "top up your Oyster Card with a Travelcard"?
Let me see if I have this right -- We buy Oyster Cards when we arrive
at Heathrow and while making this purchase, we can then choose how
many quid we want stored on each Oyster Card and we can choose whether
we want a Travelcard also electronically-embedded on the cards as
well?

This is just how I read page 10 of:

* *http://www.tfl.gov.uk/assets/downloa...most-out-of-oy...

and other such documents on the TfL website.

But it doesn't quite makes sense. *How does the "touch" know whether
you want to use the Travelcard or subtract from whatever balance I
stored on the Oyster Card?

To top up a card that I've already purchased, do I take the card to a
Tube station machine (I won't have a laptop and maybe not even a cell
phone), enter whatever ID or authentication is necessary and then use
a credit card to add additional funds?

Thanks a bunch!


There's a lot of things unknown about your trip, eg what zones you'll
be travelling in, what times of day you'll travel, whether you'll use
National Rail (mostly not allowed with Pay as You Go) etc.

There's a good chance that your best bet would be to get the Oyster
card with a weekly travelcard on it for the first trip. That would
avoid the £3 deposit.

A weekly travelcard (maybe for zones 1 and 2, plus enough pay as you
go to get from Heathrow and back) costs around the same as five times
the off-peak capping limit, plus you can use it before 0930, plus you
can use it on National Rail.

Then you'd have the cards with no deposit to put more Pay as You Go
credit on for the shorter trip.