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#11
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solar penguin wrote:
Paul Scott wrote: The TOCs already announced, (some time prior to 2008 when all non-seasons became zonally priced), that all point to point seasons within the zones would be changed to zonal pricing from Jan 2010. I don't think anything more has been announced about that recently though. Seasons could still show origin and destination, but there'd be little point in not making them valid zonally. That's depressing news. Thanks for the warning. Out of curiosity, will these be zonal NR-only season tickets? Or will there only be Travelcards, forcing us to pay for tube/DLR etc. validity that we don't need. As I've just posted elsewhere in the thread, the new prices appear to have been loaded, so it ought to be possible to use the National Rail enquires season ticket calculator to test what the new prices are, and compare with your existing season? http://ojp.nationalrail.co.uk/en/pj/sts Paul S |
#12
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![]() John B wrote: On Dec 7, 9:37 am, "solar penguin" wrote: If Oyster becomes standard on National Rail, it could be a serious blow against proper point-to-point seasons. I'm worried they might even be abolished on NR to force everyone into paying extra for Travelcards, just like has already happened on LU. Almost certainly the plan - and for my money it can't come a moment too soon. The straightforward, convenient LU way of doing it is far more sensible than the arcane, point-to-point NR way of doing it. I'm curious. Why do you think zonal fares are "straightforward, convenient" and "sensible"? IMHO they're an ungainly compromise between a proper flat-fare system and a proper route based system, either of which in themselves could be "straightforward, convenient" and "sensible". But like all such compromises, the zonal system manages to combine the worst aspects of both and the best of neither. Here's a simple example. Go one stop northbound from Kennington on either of the branches of the Northern line. Common sense says that these similar journeys ought to cost the same. Instead one costs much more than the other because it just happens to take you across a random, imaginary line on a map, while the other doesn't! Add to that the fact with Travelcards instead of normal seasons, you're forced into paying extra for availability on other modes of transport, etc. that 99% of the time you're just not going to be using, and it becomes even less sensible. (Well, I suppose that might be sensible, convenient etc. for you, if and only if you routinely travel on many different modes of transport. But for the rest of us, it just plain isn't.) |
#13
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On 7 Dec, 19:48, "solar penguin" wrote:
Out of curiosity, will these be zonal NR-only season tickets? Or will there only be Travelcards, forcing us to pay for tube/DLR etc. validity that we don't need. * Neither - It'll be the same as we already have for singles/returns in the zones - same tickets, same point-to-point validities, but uniform pricing based on the zones passed through. So a Gipsy Hill-Croydon season will cost the same Z3-5 rate as a Barnes-Twickenham season. This will be less than the Travelcard rate, but I can't find 2010 pricing anywhere. In fact, Southern already use zonal pricing for their seasons, so a Gipsy Hill - Sutton season costs exactly the same as what the OP has and I'm fairly certain is valid via both East and West Croydon and, so there's very little reason for them not to switch to one. U |
#14
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![]() Paul Corfield wrote: On Mon, 7 Dec 2009 09:37:44 -0000, "solar penguin" wrote: I've been thinking a lot about my feelings towards Oyster, trying to work out _why_ I'm so sceptical towards it. I think it's because I'm sceptical towards the whole "zonal fares and Travelcards" concepts which Oyster is far too heavily mixed up in for my liking. You'll have to explain your thinking here. If there is a zonal, ride at will, multi modal ticket available I would always purchase it. Really? Why? I wouldn't unless it that ticket just happened to be the best option for my specific journey. My thinking is that if there's a simple, no-frills product that gives exactly what I want, then I'm the sort of person who will always prefer that instead of fancy, all-singing, all-dancing products whose extra features I'll probably never use enough to justify getting them. In short, I just hate buying stuff that I'm got going to use fully. It feels wrong and wasteful And there's nothing special or magical about train tickets that makes them an exception to this rule. It just gives so much more choice over travel options with little need to be concerned about where you are going once you've worked out the zones you want. Still I've buying zonally based tickets (all over the world) for about 30 years or so so I suppose I'm used to them. I don't think I'll ever get used to them. In fact, I'd actually prefer the option of being able to choose to buy special cheap-rate tickets that give even less choice than at present, for those times when they're the best option for my journey. Take for example, a return ticket between Gipsy Hill and "London Terminals". At the moment tickets are valid to and from any of half-a-dozen terminals, by almost any possible route. But if I know in advance I'm going to London Bridge and returning from there, it would be great to get a London Bridge only ticket, which cheaper because I don't have to pay for the availability at Victoria, Waterloo, etc. I would also caution that you are mixing ticket products with ticket media. Oyster is simply the Smartcard which in turn is just a very clever, higher capacity magnetic ticket. Travelcards existed a long time before Oyster was even conceived. True, but before it was always possible to ignore them in favour of better options. They were just a useless irrelevance, with the obvious exception of the One Day Travelcard of course, which is useful on those rare special occasions when I do need to make complex journeys. The fact that Travelcards are the _only_ form of season on Oyster means that the other, potentially better types of season are becoming ignored, neglected, etc. by the powers that be. The idea of Pay as you Go (or Stored Value) was also conceived in the days of magnetic ticketing. Hong Kong and Singapore started off on magnetically based SVT systems. I can sort of conceive why someone may be dubious about SVT replacing a "ride at will" ticket but I struggle with why anyone would be bothered by having a Travelcard in place of a point to point season. I'm bothered because when I'm normally only travelling between Gipsy Hill and West Croydon then I only need a ticket between a ticket between Gipsy Hill and West Croydon, and no more. I don't see why I should be forced into paying extra for a ticket that's also valid between on the tube Hampstead and Edgware, or the DLR between Canning Town and Woolwich, or etc. etc. on occasions when I don't need any of that. (Actually that's a poor example because there's not a simple Gipsy Hill to West Croydon ticket. You have to get one to "Croydon Stations", which is stupid because the connection at Norwood Junction is so poor that anyone travelling to somewehere in the East Croydon area will usually be quicker going to West Croydon and walking!) OTOH on those isolated occasions when I actually need to make to make a more complicated journey, then I'll happily buy a more complicated ticket like a One Day Travelcard, or whatever the most appropriate ticket for that specific journey is. on LUL travelcard effectively replaced a myriad of point to point season options back in the 1980s - I don't recall there being massive disagreement with that concept. Maybe there should've been. It would've helped avoid the current mess. If Oyster becomes standard on National Rail, it could be a serious blow against proper point-to-point seasons. I'm worried they might even be abolished on NR to force everyone into paying extra for Travelcards, just like has already happened on LU. Oyster has been accepted on NR for season ticket purposes (Travelcards) for years and has not written anything off in terms of point to point seasons. For as long as point to points are largely TOC specific products then they'll survive because the TOCs want the money in their bank accounts and not going through some shared pot like Travelcard. Let's hope so. OTOH If someone could produce a sort of point-to-point equivalent of Oyster, I'd probably welcome it with open arms. (Hmmm... Isn't that more or less what SWT were trying to do before those *******s at TfL stopped them and forced them to use Oyster instead?) I cannot for the life of me see why point to point seasons could not be placed on the Oyster ticket medium. Again, let's hope so. I know much less about ITSO but haven't SWT been trialling ITSO based point to point seasons? That's probably what I was thinking of above. I would have thought it would be a pre-requisite of ITSO adoption that the basic product range offered by all TOCs could be supported via ITSO "products" that can be loaded to ITSO compliant cards via ITSO compatible retailing / validation equipment. |
#15
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![]() Mr Thant wrote: In fact, Southern already use zonal pricing for their seasons, so a Gipsy Hill - Sutton season costs exactly the same as what the OP has Thanks. I didn't know that. You mean they've been charging me for journeys all the way to Sutton even when I've only been going as far as West Croydon! The sneaky *******s! and I'm fairly certain is valid via both East and West Croydon and, so there's very little reason for them not to switch to one. Might also be valid via Balham/Mitcham as well. If so, I'd probably use that enough to justify getting one. Silly question, would it still open the barriers at West Croydon? |
#16
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On Dec 7, 8:10*pm, "solar penguin"
wrote: Add to that the fact with Travelcards instead of normal seasons, you're forced into paying extra for availability on other modes of transport, etc. that 99% of the time you're just not going to be using, and it becomes even less sensible. *(Well, I suppose that might be sensible, convenient etc. for you, if and only if you routinely travel on many different modes of transport. *But for the rest of us, it just plain isn't.) But who doesn't? I mean, who doesn't go out at weekends or evenings, who doesn't vary their route to work based on whether there are delays and if so on what mode, whether it's raining and how tired you are (for nearer-to-home-but-less-convenient-journey versus longer-walk- direct-journey versus bus), on whether they're in their normal office or a site somewhere, on whether they've stayed the night at home or at a friend's or partner's place, on a million other factors...? Across London (and this is true even in Tube-less SE London), there are a huge number of alternative transport modes, be they bus, train or Tube, that you'll certainly want to use when things go a bit wrong, which is fairly often, and that you'll often want to use even when they don't. If LU sold point-to-point seasons and I'd bought one when I last renewed, I'd've had to get it refunded twice - once for a move of house and once for a move of my company's offices, both of which were forced on me by external factors rather than my whim. And that's even before any of the circumstances mentioned above. (as it happens, one possible route to work for me from my current home to my current work - and the one I'd expected when moving to take most often - would be covered by a slightly-cheaper-than-Travelcard NR point-to-point season. If I'd decided to go with that, then I'd be utterly shafted at the moment thanks to the superb work of FCC and its drivers. And I'd have to pay a quid every time I went for the bus to the station instead of a 15-minute walk). -- John Band john at johnband dot org www.johnband.org |
#17
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On Mon, 7 Dec 2009 03:34:17 -0800 (PST), John B wrote:
behind Oyster. Haha. The point is, on LU it isn't a problem, because on LU there's no reason to have a paper season ticket Yes there is - validity to/from an NR station outside the zones. and paper season tickets aren't sold. Yes they are - see above. |
#18
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On Mon, 7 Dec 2009 21:00:10 -0000, solar penguin wrote:
In fact, I'd actually prefer the option of being able to choose to buy special cheap-rate tickets that give even less choice than at present, for those times when they're the best option for my journey. Take for example, a return ticket between Gipsy Hill and "London Terminals". At the moment tickets are valid to and from any of half-a-dozen terminals, by almost any possible route. But if I know in advance I'm going to London Bridge and returning from there, it would be great to get a London Bridge only ticket, which cheaper because I don't have to pay for the availability at Victoria, Waterloo, etc. What makes you think it would be cheaper? |
#19
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On Mon, 7 Dec 2009 21:14:48 -0000, solar penguin wrote:
In fact, Southern already use zonal pricing for their seasons, so a Gipsy Hill - Sutton season costs exactly the same as what the OP has Thanks. I didn't know that. You mean they've been charging me for journeys all the way to Sutton even when I've only been going as far as West Croydon! The sneaky *******s! Guess what, those sneaky *******s have also been charging you for 50 return journeys a day* when you've only been making 1. * Or however many is physically possible in the current timetable. |
#20
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On Mon, 7 Dec 2009 20:10:39 -0000, solar penguin wrote:
I'm curious. Why do you think zonal fares are "straightforward, convenient" and "sensible"? IMHO they're an ungainly compromise between a proper flat-fare system and a proper route based system, either of which in themselves could be "straightforward, convenient" and "sensible". But like all such compromises, the zonal system manages to combine the worst aspects of both and the best of neither. Here's a simple example. Go one stop northbound from Kennington on either of the branches of the Northern line. Common sense says that these similar journeys ought to cost the same. Instead one costs much more than the other because it just happens to take you across a random, imaginary line on a map, while the other doesn't! The line is not random - zone 1 represents the central business area of London. Which is a real, physical thing and not imaginary. Even a point-to-point mileage-based system would take reality into account and charge higher rates per mile for travel in/into the cental area. So the Waterloo journey would still cost more. |
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