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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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In message , at
10:58:07 on Mon, 9 Apr 2012, J Lynch remarked: I seem to recall that when the Victoria line was opened in 1969 some form of the "new" gates were used at the Clapham transport museum to gain entrance. However I am not sure that these were the full monty - possibly a simplified mock up. Somewhere I think I've got one of the tickets they used to sell. And you are right about the mechanism - in practice all it would need to do is accept a correctly-sized bit of card. Either there, or maybe in Covent Garden later, they had a cutaway model of one of the Victoria Line ticket readers, showing how it flipped the ticket internally so it could be read properly, whichever orientation it was presented by the passenger. -- Roland Perry |
#12
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#13
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Plus perhaps competition issues. After all, the LT Museum is a
charity separate from TfL. When did that happen? I thought it was owned by LT then TfL. Yes and no. The museum was set up as a separate charitable company and assets transferred in , I think, 2008*. But the company is wholly owned by TfL's trading company. *checks on the wotsit: seems so from eg http://www.tfl.gov.uk/assets/downloa...tructuring.pdf -- Robin reply to address is (meant to be) valid |
#14
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#15
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#16
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In message , at 11:54:54 on Mon, 9 Apr
2012, Roland Perry remarked: I seem to recall that when the Victoria line was opened in 1969 some form of the "new" gates were used at the Clapham transport museum to gain entrance. However I am not sure that these were the full monty - possibly a simplified mock up. Somewhere I think I've got one of the tickets they used to sell. And you are right about the mechanism - in practice all it would need to do is accept a correctly-sized bit of card. Either there, or maybe in Covent Garden later, they had a cutaway model of one of the Victoria Line ticket readers, showing how it flipped the ticket internally so it could be read properly, whichever orientation it was presented by the passenger. I was conflating a few things there, and now I've found the tickets. Classic cardboard ones for the Clapham museum (not sure why the different colours, and what does "Clapham Cl" stand for?) And a special exhibition at the Science Museum, where you were given an "Underground Ticket of the Future" (with magnetic stripe covering the whole of the rear side) which you could put through the mock-up gates I mentioned above. http://yfrog.com/hws5gfj -- Roland Perry |
#17
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![]() "Roland Perry" wrote in message ... In message , at 11:54:54 on Mon, 9 Apr 2012, Roland Perry remarked: I seem to recall that when the Victoria line was opened in 1969 some form of the "new" gates were used at the Clapham transport museum to gain entrance. However I am not sure that these were the full monty - possibly a simplified mock up. Somewhere I think I've got one of the tickets they used to sell. And you are right about the mechanism - in practice all it would need to do is accept a correctly-sized bit of card. Either there, or maybe in Covent Garden later, they had a cutaway model of one of the Victoria Line ticket readers, showing how it flipped the ticket internally so it could be read properly, whichever orientation it was presented by the passenger. I was conflating a few things there, and now I've found the tickets. Classic cardboard ones for the Clapham museum (not sure why the different colours, and what does "Clapham Cl" stand for?) And a special exhibition at the Science Museum, where you were given an "Underground Ticket of the Future" (with magnetic stripe covering the whole of the rear side) which you could put through the mock-up gates I mentioned above. You know you're getting old when the "predicted" future has come .... and gone again tim |
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