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London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London. |
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#11
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On 30 Dec 2003 08:58:44 GMT Rian van der Borgt
said... Of course the advantage of having a name on all Eurostar tickets is to be able to retrieve the booking if tickets are lost. Eurostar's conditions of carriage allow lost or stolen tickets to be duplicated providing the original booking reference can be found. When you book over the NMBS website, you do get a reference code if you choose to pick up your ticket at the station (at the ticket window or machine). This should be enough, I guess. Or the (unique) code on the ticket. Loose you're ticket and of course you loose the booking reference, unless you booked by phone or internet when you would (hopefully) still got a separate written or printed record of it. By having a name along with some travel details (date, departure time and/or train number) then you should be able to search on the booking system for the reference. -- Phil Richards, London, UK European Rail Mailing List: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/europeanrail/ |
#12
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On Tue, 30 Dec 2003 12:37:29 +0000 Barry Salter
said... I'm not sure if the SNCF and NMBS systems work the same way, but a Eurostar ticket issued on Tribute has three different references on it: 1) The 8 alphanumeric character Tribute Reference 2) The 6 character ERS Reference 3) The 8(?) digit ticket number (prefixed IV) SNCFs system works by the 6 letter reference. The ticket (IV) number also appears along with a 12-digit reference number (beginning 15) which IIRC is the HERMES booking reference. And, of course, you can also search by name if it was entered into the record at the time of booking. Presumably to narrow the search down you would have to include some journey details in too? -- Phil Richards, London, UK European Rail Mailing List: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/europeanrail/ |
#13
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On Tue, 30 Dec 2003 18:54:57 -0000, Phil Richards
wrote: SNCFs system works by the 6 letter reference. The ticket (IV) number also appears along with a 12-digit reference number (beginning 15) which IIRC is the HERMES booking reference. Yup...Can search by the HERMES reference on Tribute too, though you need to know the Train Number as well. Can do a recall by feeding the ticket into the ATB Printer too. Presumably to narrow the search down you would have to include some journey details in too? Well you don't have to, but it makes life easier if you do, as the search will look through Tribute CTRs, so you'd get Domestic Bookings too. HTH, Barry -- Barry Salter, barry at southie dot me dot uk Read uk.* newsgroups? Read uk.net.news.announce! DISCLAIMER: The above comments do not necessarily represent the views of my employers. |
#14
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Brian Williams wrote:
-- "Jenn" wrote in message ... In article , (L.S) wrote: Hi if anyone could help me regarding a ticketing inquiry with the EuroStar I might have it would be much appreciated. Recently I purchased some Eurostar tickets off someone who didn't need them anymore as his plans where changed and I'm starting to get worried about using them especially on New Years Eve. I phoned up Eurostar and they told me you can't yet my flat mates have done this before and have been fine even when the ticket guard checked their tickets on the train. There is also a web site where people sell there tickets I have noticed.. So anyone out there who has done this could you help reassure me its fine or should I start looking at staying in London.. If you can have any info could you please email me it would be great. Thanks.. technically you can't transfer them BUT in my experience with Eurostar passport checks and ticket checks are separate and carried out by different people so you are unlikely to be caught. I saw no attempt to match names. I should add that, in recent weeks, they have asked for supporting ID at Ashford and Paris when tickets have been checked through manually. regards Brian My girlfriend and I travelled from Amsterdam to London and back on the 21st and 29th of December 2003. We bought our tickets through NS Internationaal in Amsterdam. The tickets issued by NS don't have a magnetic strip so we had to go through the manual check in at both Brussel Zuid and London Waterloo. Neither in Brussels nor in London passports were checked at the check-in. We got a very good deal: EUR 125 return 1st class from any station in NL to London. Both outward and inward the journeys went extremely smooth and with the exception of the traditional waiting for a free platform at Amsterdam Centraal on the return journey everything went according to schedule. The food and wines in 1st class are quite good and the seats in the Eurostar are very comfortable, much better than a plane. It was a my first journey on the CTRL and it was interesting to travel in England at 300 km/h. The trainsets are beginning to look a bit dated. The designs are not very good and my girlfriend was not happy at all with the reading light. And the lights in the ceiling should be in the middle and not the on the edges. A overhaul of the trains would be a good thing. A tip for people from the Eurozone travelling to the UK. Take out some money from your savings account. London is incredibly expensive. Regards, iMark |
#15
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On Wed, 31 Dec 2003 03:18:27 -0000 croft said...
wouldnt they also need to see credit card, to prove it was you who booked? or anyone could get hold of carddetails, book a quick trip, and the holder wouldnt know til he gets the statement! In the UK & France (not sure about Belgium) it is possible to collect your Eurostar tickets from a self-service machine. You'll need the credit card and booking reference. I've seen other self-service ticket machines which work on a similar principle. However most can only be used for domestic tickets, not international ones. -- Phil Richards, London, UK European Rail Mailing List: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/europeanrail/ |
#16
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On Wed, 31 Dec 2003 01:32:02 +0100 iMark
said... My girlfriend and I travelled from Amsterdam to London and back on the 21st and 29th of December 2003. We bought our tickets through NS Internationaal in Amsterdam. The tickets issued by NS don't have a magnetic strip so we had to go through the manual check in at both Brussel Zuid and London Waterloo. Neither in Brussels nor in London passports were checked at the check-in. ISTR reading in this newsgroup a while back that NS were introducing a new booking system which incorporated magnetic strips. I'm surprised other railways (e.g. DB) haven't introduced ATB technology. There are big advantages, for example the system used in France will allow you to insert your ticket into a machine to carry out last minute exchanges (amongst other things) which save having to queue up. We got a very good deal: EUR 125 return 1st class from any station in NL to London. Both outward and inward the journeys went extremely smooth and with the exception of the traditional waiting for a free platform at Amsterdam Centraal on the return journey everything went according to schedule. Even the "inconvenience" of the check-in which some regulars in this newsgroup make a big issue of? The trainsets are beginning to look a bit dated. The designs are not very good and my girlfriend was not happy at all with the reading light. And the lights in the ceiling should be in the middle and not the on the edges. A overhaul of the trains would be a good thing. Agree and a refurbishment program to completely re-fit the carriage interiors is scheduled. What worse than the decor is the incredible poor condition/cleanliness of the carpets which are badly in need of replacing. A tip for people from the Eurozone travelling to the UK. Take out some money from your savings account. London is incredibly expensive. The exchange rate between the Pound & Sterling is a lot more favourable for visitors to the UK now than say two years back. But I agree, London (hotels and admission fees especially) is an expensive city compared to others in the Eur ozone. Another expensive city is of course Dublin. -- Phil Richards, London, UK European Rail Mailing List: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/europeanrail/ |
#17
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![]() Phil Richards wrote in article ... On Wed, 31 Dec 2003 01:32:02 +0100 iMark said... A tip for people from the Eurozone travelling to the UK. Take out some money from your savings account. London is incredibly expensive. The exchange rate between the Pound & Sterling is a lot more favourable for visitors to the UK now than say two years back. But I agree, London (hotels and admission fees especially) is an expensive city compared to others in the Eur ozone. Another expensive city is of course Dublin. And don't forget the Scandinavian cities. I found especially Oslo to be very expensive. On the other hand, cities in Central and Eastern Europe are still much cheaper than in Western Europe. Even Prague, where prices are much higher than in regular Czech cities, is still cheaper than capitals in Western Europe. Regards, David |
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