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#1
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Can anyone help answer a query from a friend in Japan?
He's trying to find information about when magnetic stripe tickets were first used, and heard that LT had some in the 1960s. Were there experiments before the current ones were introduced (1980s if I recall correctly)? Thanks. |
#2
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"Orienteer" wrote in message
... Can anyone help answer a query from a friend in Japan? He's trying to find information about when magnetic stripe tickets were first used, and heard that LT had some in the 1960s. Were there experiments before the current ones were introduced (1980s if I recall correctly)? Didn't the old yellow strip cards have a magnetic strip? Can't recall when they came in, though. Presumably when the first automatic gates arrived. -- Terry Harper, Web Co-ordinator, The Omnibus Society http://www.omnibussoc.org E-mail: URL: http://www.terry.harper.btinternet.co.uk/ |
#3
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On Thu, 4 Dec 2003 18:11:18 +0000 (UTC), "Terry Harper"
wrote: "Orienteer" wrote in message ... Can anyone help answer a query from a friend in Japan? He's trying to find information about when magnetic stripe tickets were first used, and heard that LT had some in the 1960s. Were there experiments before the current ones were introduced (1980s if I recall correctly)? Didn't the old yellow strip cards have a magnetic strip? Can't recall when they came in, though. Presumably when the first automatic gates arrived. ISTR when the Victoria line opened. They didn't have a stripe as such, just a brown magnetic back. LT staff, when giving talks about their proud new railway, claimed that an old woman had asked why the ticket was brown on the back. 'That's oxide, madam", 'Doesn't look like leather to me.", she replied. |
#4
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Orienteer wrote:
Can anyone help answer a query from a friend in Japan? He's trying to find information about when magnetic stripe tickets were first used, and heard that LT had some in the 1960s. Were there experiments before the current ones were introduced (1980s if I recall correctly)? I think it was pre Victoria line opening. I've a set of notes that I got on a training course many years back about the Rapid Printer (machine for printing and encoding the original yellow magnetic tickets) that are dated 1968. These wouldn't have been used until the machines were being used so mid 1960's seems a good starting point. I'll have a deeper delve to see if anything is filed in the more remote regions of the house. -- Cheers for now, John from Harrow, Middx remove spamnocars to reply |
#5
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On Thu, 04 Dec 2003 17:32:21 GMT, "Orienteer"
wrote: Can anyone help answer a query from a friend in Japan? He's trying to find information about when magnetic stripe tickets were first used, and heard that LT had some in the 1960s. Were there experiments before the current ones were introduced (1980s if I recall correctly)? Like others in this thread, I'm sure it was about the time of the Victoria Line opening in the late 1960s. This was very much a production system, not just an experiment. Again as mentioned elsewhere in the thread, the whole of the back of the ticket was a magnetic surface. However these tickets were much smaller than the current tube tickets. The front of these tickets was yellow to make them distinctive to passengers, so those with yellow tickets could go through the automatic gates while those with other tickets had to show them at a barrier Martin |
#6
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Martin Rich wrote:
Again as mentioned elsewhere in the thread, the whole of the back of the ticket was a magnetic surface. However these tickets were much smaller than the current tube tickets. Same size as a 'proper' Edmondson ticket IIRC |
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#8
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![]() "Jim Brittin" wrote in message m... In article , says... Martin Rich wrote: Again as mentioned elsewhere in the thread, the whole of the back of the ticket was a magnetic surface. However these tickets were much smaller than the current tube tickets. Same size as a 'proper' Edmondson ticket IIRC Oxide-backed rapidprinter tickets for single and return journeys normally only showed day and month, the earliest I have with a year showing is dated November 1968. There were certainly weekly season tickets of this type issued in 1970. From memory I think that Hammersmith was used experimentally for oxide tickets prior to the opening of the Victoria Line, and Stamford Brook and Turnham Green for non-oxide tickets showing barcodes. AFAIK oxide Edmondsons didn't appear until 1979. Thanks for all your responses. Are there any books on (LT including LU) ticket history? |
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On Fri, 5 Dec 2003 15:12:34 +0000 (UTC), Jim Brittin
wrote: In article , says... Martin Rich wrote: Again as mentioned elsewhere in the thread, the whole of the back of the ticket was a magnetic surface. However these tickets were much smaller than the current tube tickets. Same size as a 'proper' Edmondson ticket IIRC Oxide-backed rapidprinter tickets for single and return journeys normally only showed day and month, the earliest I have with a year showing is dated November 1968. There were certainly weekly season tickets of this type issued in 1970. From memory I think that Hammersmith was used experimentally for oxide tickets prior to the opening of the Victoria Line, and Stamford Brook and Turnham Green for non-oxide tickets showing barcodes. AFAIK oxide Edmondsons didn't appear until 1979. As I used to work for someone who was involved with this back in the 60s that all sounds correct to me except for the 1979 reference to oxide Edmondson tickets. That seems very very late given that credit card sized tickets for UTS were introduced in something like 1984/5 with gates at Regents Park in 1987. I'd be surprised that a ticketing development like that would be introduced when a brand new alternative was under development. -- Paul C Admits to Working for London Underground! |
#10
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Can anyone help answer a query from a friend in Japan?
He's trying to find information about when magnetic stripe tickets were first used, and heard that LT had some in the 1960s. ... I visited Montreal at least three times in the 1960s and 1970s, and I'm pretty sure the tickets for the Montreal Metro were of the same style on each occasion. If I'm right, this means they were using magnetic- stripe tickets there by 1967 -- presumably from 1966 when their first two Metro lines opened. Further, since the MUCTC/SCTUM chose to mimic the Paris Metro in various respects, this suggests that Paris may also have been using magnetic- stripe tickets by the mid-1960s. However, unless the Paris tickets have changed size and shape since then, Montreal didn't copy that; the Paris ones I've used (since 1985) are about Edmondson size, whereas the Montreal ones I remember are smaller and squarer, like normal North American transit tickets. So maybe Montreal didn't copy the use of magnetic stripes from Paris either, in which case I have no idea when they were first used in Paris. -- Mark Brader "Doing the wrong thing is worse than doing nothing." Toronto "Doing *anything* is worse than doing nothing!" -- Lynn & Jay: YES, PRIME MINISTER My text in this article is in the public domain. |
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