Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#21
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article ,
Roland Perry wrote: 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). Depends who the travellers are. I'm currently at an ICANN meeting (I know you know who they are) whose travel department's phobia of public transport that is not an airplane is just comic. But I don't think it's universal. 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. Huh, I do it all the time. I can think of Frankfurt, Paris CDG, Munich, Barcelona, Narita, Haneda, Seoul (now permanently bustituted), Hong Kong, and Singapore. And Gatwick and Prestwick, since I live in the US. I was a bit put off by the difficulty of collecting a pre-bought TGV ticket in Paris, though. Gee, it's easy to put your SNCF ticket on your smartphone. (Yes, I know.) 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 dunno. I was thinking that a lot of them will be within walking distance of where one wants to go. And how widespread is contactless outside the UK? The USA is catching up rapidly, but is probably still in single figure percentages. In the US and Canada I see lots of contactless cards, now that it's a standard feature of new point-of-sale terminals. -- Regards, John Levine, , Primary Perpetrator of "The Internet for Dummies", Please consider the environment before reading this e-mail. https://jl.ly |
#22
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
John Levine wrote:
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. And the same is true in London of course. The Tube runs a much more frequent (12 tph vs 4 tph), but slower stopping service to Heathrow, and the trains are packed with suitcases and travellers (many of them foreign). It carries significantly more pax than HEx and TfL Rail combined. "The Piccadilly Line accounts for the bulk of the rail and tube journeys to Heathrow (42 per cent of all air passenger journeys to the airport by public transport and 16 per cent of all air passenger journeys to the airport by all modes)." https://bettertransport.org.uk/sites/default/files/research-files/surface-access-final.pdf |
#23
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In message , at 22:54:23 on Wed, 6 Nov 2019,
John Levine remarked: In article , Roland Perry wrote: 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). Depends who the travellers are. I'm currently at an ICANN meeting (I know you know who they are) I'm vaguely following the proceedings from Montreal on social media. whose travel department's phobia of public transport I've been to about a dozen, even by train for Paris, Brussels and London (although the latter is hardly surprising as there are no flights from Cambridge to London). But never had any involvement from their travel department. Because it was my third or fourth trip to the City, I used public transport to get to get from the airport to their meeting in Prague. I know the RIR policy would be "you must be mad - we'll order you a limo". that is not an airplane is just comic. But I don't think it's universal. The RIRs are almost as bad! 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. Huh, I do it all the time. Every *first* time you visit these places? I can think of Frankfurt, Paris CDG, Munich, Barcelona, Narita, Haneda, Seoul (now permanently bustituted), Hong Kong, and Singapore. And Gatwick and Prestwick, since I live in the US. You are much more travelled than average. And quite likely visit them more than once, so you have a chance to come to grips with the local peculiarities. For example, I've been to Seoul twice now, and the second time I took an express coach back to the airport. The railway line stopped short. I was a bit put off by the difficulty of collecting a pre-bought TGV ticket in Paris, though. Gee, it's easy to put your SNCF ticket on your smartphone. (Yes, I know.) My experience with using foreign transport apps (and I *have* tried) is that between them either not apparently working at all, and the steep learning curve, if you are visiting for the first time it's easier to just buy a paper ticket when you get there. The HEx app scores an impressive 1.8 stars (almost all the scores are 1 - "terrible"). 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 dunno. I was thinking that a lot of them will be within walking distance of where one wants to go. The kind of airline passenger who would normally have got a taxi door-to-door previously, but decides to give HEx a try instead, isn't likely to be wanting to be wandering round London on foot in all weathers with with their baggage trying to find heir hotel. And how widespread is contactless outside the UK? The USA is catching up rapidly, but is probably still in single figure percentages. In the US and Canada I see lots of contactless cards, now that it's a standard feature of new point-of-sale terminals. There's a lot more issued so far in Canada than USA, apparently. -- Roland Perry |
#24
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In message , at 22:43:10 on Wed, 6 Nov 2019,
John Levine remarked: 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. What I mean is that city subways get tarred with that brush, irrespective of whether or not the NY on goes anywhere near an airport. 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. How many of those people are visitors on their first trip to NY? 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. First time visitors to the city, who would normally use a taxi? Atlanta's another metro system where people have said I was crazy to mix it with the locals. It's a very deep seated prejudice. -- Roland Perry |
#25
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In message , at 23:07:30 on Wed, 6 Nov 2019,
Recliner remarked: John Levine wrote: 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. And the same is true in London of course. The Tube runs a much more frequent (12 tph vs 4 tph), but slower stopping service to Heathrow, and the trains are packed with suitcases and travellers (many of them foreign). It carries significantly more pax than HEx and TfL Rail combined. "The Piccadilly Line accounts for the bulk of the rail and tube journeys to Heathrow (42 per cent of all air passenger journeys to the airport by public transport and 16 per cent of all air passenger journeys to the airport by all modes)." That's fine for the people comfortable using it. HEx is for the passengers who would in normal circumstances take a taxi. https://bettertransport.org.uk/sites...ch-files/surfa ce-access-final.pdf -- Roland Perry |
#26
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In message , at 22:06:47 on Wed, 6 Nov 2019,
Recliner remarked: Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 20:05:39 on Wed, 6 Nov 2019, remarked: 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. For the reasons I've explained why airport express services are more attractive than the local commuter services. 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. Remember that HEx and Crossrail will be using the same stations and even the same platforms at Heathrow. That doesn't happen with local commuter services. Someone trying to catch HEx from T4 will actually have to start their journey on a Crossrail train and change at Central, and perhaps again at Paddington, rather than just taking a through train. They'll be able to realise their mistake while looking at the route map on the Crossrail train. By then they've bought their ticket. On their next trip to England they may make a different choice. People waiting for a HEx train at Heathrow Central might have to let a Crossrail service go first, from the same platform. That's not like the Tube or Gatwick Southern services, which aren't visible from the Express platforms. This, of course, will probably lead to confusion between the services: will people always get on their intended train? Do many people today get on HEx services if they've only got a Connect ticket? I don't know, but it's not something that hits the headlines. -- Roland Perry |
#27
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 22:43:10 on Wed, 6 Nov 2019, John Levine remarked: 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. What I mean is that city subways get tarred with that brush, irrespective of whether or not the NY on goes anywhere near an airport. 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. How many of those people are visitors on their first trip to NY? 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. First time visitors to the city, who would normally use a taxi? Atlanta's another metro system where people have said I was crazy to mix it with the locals. It's a very deep seated prejudice. Yes, it's straightforward racial prejudice with MARTA. That could also apply to some other public transit systems that serve airports. |
#28
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 22:06:47 on Wed, 6 Nov 2019, Recliner remarked: Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 20:05:39 on Wed, 6 Nov 2019, remarked: 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. For the reasons I've explained why airport express services are more attractive than the local commuter services. 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. Remember that HEx and Crossrail will be using the same stations and even the same platforms at Heathrow. That doesn't happen with local commuter services. Someone trying to catch HEx from T4 will actually have to start their journey on a Crossrail train and change at Central, and perhaps again at Paddington, rather than just taking a through train. They'll be able to realise their mistake while looking at the route map on the Crossrail train. By then they've bought their ticket. On their next trip to England they may make a different choice. Yup, HEx may only catch them the once, and probably only in one direction. Not a good long-term business model. People waiting for a HEx train at Heathrow Central might have to let a Crossrail service go first, from the same platform. That's not like the Tube or Gatwick Southern services, which aren't visible from the Express platforms. This, of course, will probably lead to confusion between the services: will people always get on their intended train? Do many people today get on HEx services if they've only got a Connect ticket? I don't know, but it's not something that hits the headlines. I don't know either, but it's likely to happen much more with the more frequent Crossrail services. |
#29
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In message , at 16:35:39 on Thu, 7 Nov 2019,
Recliner remarked: Someone trying to catch HEx from T4 will actually have to start their journey on a Crossrail train and change at Central, and perhaps again at Paddington, rather than just taking a through train. They'll be able to realise their mistake while looking at the route map on the Crossrail train. By then they've bought their ticket. On their next trip to England they may make a different choice. Yup, HEx may only catch them the once, and probably only in one direction. Not a good long-term business model. You are over-estimating the willingness of the sort of person whose normal policy is "no-one got fired getting a taxi end to end", to start grappling with London's commuter rail services. How would they even know (or care) what the cheaper fare was on Crossrail? Even assuming that a railhead at one of the Crossrail stations in central London is a compellingly shorter taxi-ride to their ultimate destination than Paddington. -- Roland Perry |
#30
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 16:35:39 on Thu, 7 Nov 2019, Recliner remarked: Someone trying to catch HEx from T4 will actually have to start their journey on a Crossrail train and change at Central, and perhaps again at Paddington, rather than just taking a through train. They'll be able to realise their mistake while looking at the route map on the Crossrail train. By then they've bought their ticket. On their next trip to England they may make a different choice. Yup, HEx may only catch them the once, and probably only in one direction. Not a good long-term business model. You are over-estimating the willingness of the sort of person whose normal policy is "no-one got fired getting a taxi end to end", to start grappling with London's commuter rail services. Not at all: the keenest taxi users use taxis anyway, not HEx. For many people, Paddington just isn't in the right place, even to get a taxi. And you seem to under-estimate the effort in getting from the HEx Padd platform to the taxi rank; many Crossrail stations will have more convenient taxi ranks. People, particularly with luggage, or if travelling as a couple or family, will find a door-to-door taxi much more convenient than taking a train part of the way, then getting a taxi. So HEx only gets a subset of possible taxi users. And that subset will shrink when Crossrail gets going. How would they even know (or care) what the cheaper fare was on Crossrail? Probably large signs advertising Crossrail's lower prices. They'll also see the much more useful route map. Even assuming that a railhead at one of the Crossrail stations in central London is a compellingly shorter taxi-ride to their ultimate destination than Paddington. Not just central London: Ealing Broadway may be more convenient for people heading to west London, and people going to the City or Canary Wharf would be crazy to take HEx rather than Crossrail. |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
New Heathrow Express Advance fares | London Transport | |||
[OT?] Building visible from the Heathrow Express | London Transport | |||
Piccadilly line extension to Terminal 5/Heathrow Express extension to T5 | London Transport | |||
Stansted Express Train - Express ride to a missed flight | London Transport | |||
Heathrow Express | London Transport |