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#11
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Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 17:53:50 on Sun, 3 Nov 2019, Recliner remarked: https://www.independent.co.uk/travel...heathrow-expre ss-ticket-cheap-train-fares-airport-crossrail-travel-a9165661.html Interesting, I wondered how HEx would respond. But it sounds like the cheapest tickets will only be available a long way in advance. I do not understand anything of the prices for this train. 25 pounds 22 pounds 12,50 pounds 5,50 pounds 16,50 pounds 7,50 pounds 6 pounds 5,10 pounds 3,10 pounds "cash fare"? "peak contactless fare"? "off-peak fare"? (I think I understand this, but do not know the off-peak times) How do you explains this to foreigners arriving at Heathrow? Just charge them the most expensive fare, as they won't know otherwise (if they've researched it in advance, they'd know). It's a privately owned airport service, competing with taxis not with other forms of scheduled public transport. That's no longer the case when Crossrail is fully open. Any local, and most visitors, will be better off using Crossrail: quicker, fewer changes, hgher frequency, cheaper. Only people travelling from Paddington itself to T5 might have a slightly faster journey using HEx; everyone else will have a more convenient journey on Crossrail. The market is more segmented than you suggest. Visitors will be conditioned to seek out the "Airport Express" service, which they know will shield them from the complexities of the local commuter services. (Even though sometimes, like Stansted Express, the operational difference is wafer thin) Clearly, many of the people using HEx today aren't heading for hotels or business meetings (or even onward rail transport) in the Paddington area, so they'll continue to use Paddington as the railhead, and let's face it the facilities for travellers there are far better than Tottenham Court Crossrail. Similarly, on the way back getting to Paddington is "safety" as it's in effect an airport annex. If using Crossrail, people won't feel completely comfortable until they've got to the Terminal. Bearing in mind, always, that their audience is people who would otherwise have got a taxi from the airport, not those adventurous enough to take the tube or Heathrow Connect. The fact that they're suddenly providing all these new discounted options proves that HEx lacks your deep insights into airport express services. On the contrary, news of these price cuts are unlikely to make their way through to their main target market, who will continue to pay the full price. Meanwhile, in the UK some gullible people might be persuaded that HEx isn't as expensive (as a commuter service, which isn't its target market) after all. It's not just tourists and Heathrow workers who have to get to the airport: plenty of British travellers and savvy foreign travellers use the airport too. Any of them who have been HEx users will switch to Crossrail when it's fully open, and not just because it's cheaper. That won't leave enough premium payers on HEx to keep it viable. |
#12
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In article ,
Roland Perry wrote: The fact that they're suddenly providing all these new discounted options proves that HEx lacks your deep insights into airport express services. On the contrary, news of these price cuts are unlikely to make their way through to their main target market, ... Despite what that article said, HeX has been offering restricted discount tickets for years. In 2015 I paid £16.10 for a ticket and last year £14.30. I believe there were some exotic under £10 tix last year if you knew 90 days ahead that you'd be travelling on a Sunday. Seems to me that a sensible person books his train tix when he books his flights, which for vacations and conferences can often be months ahead. That's what I do and is how I got those (sort of) low fares. It also seems to me that when Crossrail is running through trains, the HeX time advantage will be a lost for many places Crossrail goes beyond Paddington. It's not just the fares. Perhaps we could have volunteer anti-touts saying "don't buy those silly express tickets, just tap your credit card and take the cheap train." -- Regards, John Levine, , Primary Perpetrator of "The Internet for Dummies", Please consider the environment before reading this e-mail. https://jl.ly |
#13
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On Sun, 3 Nov 2019 22:16:22 -0000 (UTC)
Recliner wrote: Roland Perry wrote: On the contrary, news of these price cuts are unlikely to make their way through to their main target market, who will continue to pay the full price. Meanwhile, in the UK some gullible people might be persuaded that HEx isn't as expensive (as a commuter service, which isn't its target market) after all. It's not just tourists and Heathrow workers who have to get to the airport: plenty of British travellers and savvy foreign travellers use the airport too. Any of them who have been HEx users will switch to Crossrail when it's fully open, and not just because it's cheaper. That won't leave enough premium payers on HEx to keep it viable. I suspect even the owners of HEx know it'll be dead in the water once crossrail opens and are probably just grateful for every extra month crossrail is delayed. |
#14
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wrote:
On Sun, 3 Nov 2019 22:16:22 -0000 (UTC) Recliner wrote: Roland Perry wrote: On the contrary, news of these price cuts are unlikely to make their way through to their main target market, who will continue to pay the full price. Meanwhile, in the UK some gullible people might be persuaded that HEx isn't as expensive (as a commuter service, which isn't its target market) after all. It's not just tourists and Heathrow workers who have to get to the airport: plenty of British travellers and savvy foreign travellers use the airport too. Any of them who have been HEx users will switch to Crossrail when it's fully open, and not just because it's cheaper. That won't leave enough premium payers on HEx to keep it viable. I suspect even the owners of HEx know it'll be dead in the water once crossrail opens and are probably just grateful for every extra month crossrail is delayed. Yes, the two-year Crossrail delay has been a real bonus for HAL. |
#15
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In message , at 22:52:34 on Sun, 3 Nov 2019,
John Levine remarked: In article , Roland Perry wrote: The fact that they're suddenly providing all these new discounted options proves that HEx lacks your deep insights into airport express services. On the contrary, news of these price cuts are unlikely to make their way through to their main target market, ... Despite what that article said, HeX has been offering restricted discount tickets for years. In 2015 I paid £16.10 for a ticket and last year £14.30. I believe there were some exotic under £10 tix last year if you knew 90 days ahead that you'd be travelling on a Sunday. Seems to me that a sensible person books his train tix when he books his flights, which for vacations and conferences can often be months ahead. That's what I do and is how I got those (sort of) low fares. I don't think you are a very typical traveller. Most are very unadventurous when it comes to foreign countries, and hence the race for taxis (and HEx's mission to replace taxis). I wouldn't expect to be able to understand how to pick up pre-booked train tickets at a random overseas airport, and there's a limit to how much we can say "trust us, it's easy in the UK". As a result, and even as a more adventurous traveller (colleagues were amazed I dared get a bus from Geneva to the airport, and didn't even consider rail) I think I've only once got a train on first arrival at a suitably equipped overseas airport. That was Brisbane, which has the advantage of speaking (approx) English, and I was going somewhere an hour away which happened to be on the same line, rather than just the city centre. Of course, having worked things out, I have a few times taken a train *back* to the airport, or used one on a second or subsequent visit. I was a bit put off by the difficulty of collecting a pre-bought TGV ticket in Paris, though. It also seems to me that when Crossrail is running through trains, the HeX time advantage will be a lost for many places Crossrail goes beyond Paddington. It's not just the fares. How many of the Crossrail stations will have taxi ranks? I presume they'll at least all have lifts to avoid having to haul baggage up escalators. Perhaps we could have volunteer anti-touts saying "don't buy those silly express tickets, just tap your credit card and take the cheap train." Or if it's a family holiday "find 4 credit cards between you, to tap". And how widespread is contactless outside the UK? The USA is catching up rapidly, but is probably still in single figure percentages. -- Roland Perry |
#16
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In message , at 22:16:22 on Sun, 3 Nov 2019,
Recliner remarked: It's not just tourists and Heathrow workers who have to get to the airport: plenty of British travellers and savvy foreign travellers use the airport too. Any of them who have been HEx users will switch to Crossrail when it's fully open, and not just because it's cheaper. That won't leave enough premium payers on HEx to keep it viable. It'll leave all the first-time visitors, which will probably be the majority. Plus all the less confident ones who inherently distrust foreign commuter services rather than airport expresses. -- Roland Perry |
#17
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On Wed, 6 Nov 2019 09:38:02 +0000
Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 22:16:22 on Sun, 3 Nov 2019, Recliner remarked: It's not just tourists and Heathrow workers who have to get to the airport: plenty of British travellers and savvy foreign travellers use the airport too. Any of them who have been HEx users will switch to Crossrail when it's fully open, and not just because it's cheaper. That won't leave enough premium payers on HEx to keep it viable. It'll leave all the first-time visitors, which will probably be the Why would it? I'm sure most of them can read a metro map and will immediately spot the lines that go to central london and won't much care for the one that goes to a bears home. majority. Plus all the less confident ones who inherently distrust foreign commuter services rather than airport expresses. Can't be many of them. |
#18
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#20
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In article ,
Roland Perry wrote: majority. Plus all the less confident ones who inherently distrust foreign commuter services rather than airport expresses. Can't be many of them. I think it's a majority. Local commuter services have a poor reputation, the New York subways being the poster boy. The NY subway doesn't go to LGA and only goes to JFK airport with a long slow trip out to Queens with a connection to the Airtrain so I'm not too surprised. The Long Island Railroad also goes to that Airtrain much faster and lots of people take it. The NJ Transit train goes to Newark airport via another airtrain and it's also quite popular. Elsewhere in North America, the subway or local commuter train goes to the airports in Toronto, Boston, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington DC (National), Atlanta, Chicago (both airports), Dallas, St Louis, San Francisco, Portland OR, Seattle, Vancouver, and probably other places I haven't been to. In each case there's been plenty of people on the train with me with suitcases. -- Regards, John Levine, , Primary Perpetrator of "The Internet for Dummies", Please consider the environment before reading this e-mail. https://jl.ly |
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