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-   -   The PAYG Oystercard rip off (https://www.londonbanter.co.uk/london-transport/11981-payg-oystercard-rip-off.html)

Roland Perry May 7th 11 11:46 AM

The PAYG Oystercard rip off
 
In message , at 12:31:41 on
Sat, 7 May 2011, Paul Corfield remarked:

[1] except at Hong Kong International Airport. The Airport Line has
premium fares so it is separately gated off from all other lines.


Madrid metro has a premium fare to the airport (but not stations earlier
or later on the same line). I assume they enforce this with exit
barriers, I forget. I do remember having to go through barriers when
changing from one line to another near the city centre.
--
Roland Perry

tim.... May 7th 11 12:59 PM

The PAYG Oystercard rip off
 

"Roland Perry" wrote in message
...
In message , at 12:31:41 on
Sat, 7 May 2011, Paul Corfield remarked:

[1] except at Hong Kong International Airport. The Airport Line has
premium fares so it is separately gated off from all other lines.


Madrid metro has a premium fare to the airport (but not stations earlier
or later on the same line). I assume they enforce this with exit barriers,
I forget.


They do.

It's quite funny sitting watching the people with "normal" tickets try to
exit the station :-) (There are machines inside the barrier at which you
have to buy the "premium" airport ticket if you um, forgot, on entry.

tim



Paul Terry[_2_] May 8th 11 08:29 AM

The PAYG Oystercard rip off
 
In message , Roland Perry
writes

I never cease to be amazed at the majority of people I travel with
abroad just jump into taxis


And that can be a seriously bad idea in some cities. Jumping into the
nearest taxi at Prague airport (which has no rail connections) is a
recipe for a rip-off, if not a mugging - pre-booking with a reputable
company or through the information desk at the airport really is
essential for safety.
--
Paul Terry

Colum Mylod May 8th 11 03:47 PM

The PAYG Oystercard rip off
 
On Sat, 7 May 2011 12:46:17 +0100, Roland Perry
wrote:

...
Madrid metro has a premium fare to the airport (but not stations earlier
or later on the same line). I assume they enforce this with exit
barriers, I forget.


Madrid's T123 and T4 have a "suplemento" of ¤1 which you can add at
purchase or near the exit - stick the same ticket into a machine,
throw in a ¤1 coin, ticket is returned with the suplemento and you
exit ok at the gates. As you say, for fun the station between T123 and
T4 is Barajas which is w/o supplement. I wonder when MdM machines will
accept gringo CCs despite the labels showing no reason why.

I do remember having to go through barriers when
changing from one line to another near the city centre.

Curious which. Was it to/from the Cercanias or standard Renfe? MdM
lines connect without barriers but there can be very long walks:
Nuevos Ministeros 8 to 6 is loooong.
--
Old anti-spam address cmylod at despammed dot com appears broke
So back to cmylod at bigfoot dot com

Roland Perry May 8th 11 09:45 PM

The PAYG Oystercard rip off
 
In message , at 16:47:00 on
Sun, 8 May 2011, Colum Mylod remarked:
I do remember having to go through barriers when
changing from one line to another near the city centre.

Curious which. Was it to/from the Cercanias or standard Renfe? MdM
lines connect without barriers but there can be very long walks:
Nuevos Ministeros 8 to 6 is loooong.


It was somewhere on the northern portion of Line 9 (which was acting as
a shuttle), to the remainder.
--
Roland Perry

D A Stocks[_2_] May 15th 11 03:34 PM

The PAYG Oystercard rip off
 
"solar penguin" wrote in message
...


But compare that with how easy it is to fall across problems with
Oyster PAYG. It's unlikely you could use it for even a few trips
without coming across some sort of problem. That's the difference.


There are certasinly things I don't like about Oyster, particularly the need
to *not* touch accidentally on NR pads when I'm using a combination of paper
NR tickets and Oyster. However, over the last few years of PAYG usage the
only problems I've encountered have worked in my favour - usually pads on
buses not working resulting in a free journey. OTOH an NR gate at Victoria
swallowed my paper ODTC as I was exiting the other day, and I was half way
across the concourse before I realised what had happened and it was too late
to do anything about it. This cost me about £18 in single fares to continue
my journeys that day for the loss of a ticket that had only cost about £12
in the first place.

--
DAS


Neil Williams May 15th 11 04:12 PM

The PAYG Oystercard rip off
 
On Sun, 15 May 2011 16:34:24 +0100, "D A Stocks"
wrote:
to do anything about it. This cost me about £18 in single fares to

continue
my journeys that day for the loss of a ticket that had only cost

about £12
in the first place.


Er, why not purchase another Travelcard if that was cheaper?

Neil

--
Neil Williams, Milton Keynes, UK

[email protected] May 16th 11 11:30 AM

The PAYG Oystercard rip off
 
In article
,
(George) wrote:

It's happened to me so many times (on trains and tube) that I now only
use PAYG Oyster for bus and tram travel (where a simple flat fare is
deducted), for rail travel I use paper tickets, normally a ODTC. I
also know many other people who've been similarly overcharged as well,
indeed there was an article about it in the Evening Standard
recently.


The trouble for some of us is that ODTCs from Cambridge would usually cost
me more than Oyster.

--
Colin Rosenstiel

[email protected] May 16th 11 11:30 AM

The PAYG Oystercard rip off
 
In article , (Roland
Perry) wrote:

And that's a site with a very good English-language rendition of
its rules. I never did find anything as useful for Lisbon, so
reluctantly used taxis instead.


Have they still got their wonderful ancient trams?

--
Colin Rosenstiel

Roland Perry May 16th 11 01:02 PM

The PAYG Oystercard rip off
 
In message , at 06:30:28
on Mon, 16 May 2011, remarked:

And that's a site with a very good English-language rendition of
its rules. I never did find anything as useful for Lisbon, so
reluctantly used taxis instead.


Have they still got their wonderful ancient trams?


Yes, although I think some have been rebuilt. None go to the airport
(nor does the Metro), which is the sort of issue I was grappling with -
especially as it's so close to the City Centre. Trams hug the kilometre
closest to the river front.

I see from this map I might have needed the 44 bus (from Oriente
station).

http://mappery.com/map-of/Lisbon-Bus-Tram-and-Metro-Map
--
Roland Perry


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