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#21
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Andrew Black (delete obvious bit) wrote:
There are signs saying the pre-pay users (and Saver ticket holders) get on at the front.Â*Â*WhatsÂ*theÂ*difficultyÂ*withÂ*this? The difficulty is that when I saw a bendy bus at a bus stop once, it didn't open the front, and the driver motioned to people to the back doors. It made me wonder how I'd use them if I they ever became a regular occurrence in E6. -- Ian Tindale |
#22
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On Fri, 13 Aug 2004 13:57:31 +0100, Ian Tindale wrote:
Andrew Black (delete obvious bit) wrote: There are signs saying the pre-pay users (and Saver ticket holders) get on at the front.**Whats*the*difficulty*with*this? The difficulty is that when I saw a bendy bus at a bus stop once, it didn't open the front, and the driver motioned to people to the back doors. It made me wonder how I'd use them if I they ever became a regular occurrence in E6. that was the original (and somewhat daft) rule. Drivers tended to be very awkward about opening the front door in order to "educate" people that they could board via the other doors. The use of savers and pre-pay cuts across this though so the front door should be opened to allow tickets to be handed to the driver or cards validated. The validators at the other doors apparently only work with Freedom Passes and another software change is needed to make them work with Pre-Pay. We will soon have the great delight of witnessing the Islington and Stoke Newington version of a rugby scrum when the 73 goes bendy in only 3 weeks time. I feel very sorry for both the 73 drivers and the passengers as I am convinced this change is just not going to work. -- Paul C Admits to working for London Underground! |
#23
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Paul Corfield wrote in
: The validators at the other doors apparently only work with Freedom Passes and another software change is needed to make them work with Pre-Pay. What! I can't even see the point in having a version of the software that only works with freedom passes (there being nowhere that a freedom pass is valid that a zone 1-6 travelcard isn't). Don't all on bus Oyster validators run the same version of the software? Am I missing something? David |
#24
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Paul Corfield wrote:
On Fri, 13 Aug 2004 13:57:31 +0100, Ian Tindale wrote: Andrew Black (delete obvious bit) wrote: There are signs saying the pre-pay users (and Saver ticket holders) get on at the front. Whats the difficulty with this? [..] The validators at the other doors apparently only work with Freedom Passes and another software change is needed to make them work with Pre-Pay. In what sense do the validators "work" with Freedom Passes? I never validate my FP when boarding a bendy bus at the "other" doors, nor have I been told to do so. -- Richard J. (to e-mail me, swap uk and yon in address) |
#25
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On Fri, 13 Aug 2004 18:28:47 +0000 (UTC), David Jackman
wrote: Paul Corfield wrote in : The validators at the other doors apparently only work with Freedom Passes and another software change is needed to make them work with Pre-Pay. What! I can't even see the point in having a version of the software that only works with freedom passes (there being nowhere that a freedom pass is valid that a zone 1-6 travelcard isn't). Don't all on bus Oyster validators run the same version of the software? Am I missing something? I'm only recounting what I have heard - it may be wrong. If you think about it the Freedom Card just needs to be read and validated - a simple check and therefore the software is relatively simple. Pre-Pay is much more complex in that links back the ETM need to be maintained, the card values need to be interrogated and various other checks made. If you think about capping as well it gets more complex again. I believe part of the issue is ensuring proper communication between all the readers on a bendy bus and the ETM. I would imagine that yes all the *remote* readers use one version while the ETM mounted reader has different software - it has to as it can process pre-pay now. -- Paul C Admits to working for London Underground! |
#26
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If you think about it the Freedom Card just needs to be read and
validated - a simple check and therefore the software is relatively simple. Why does a Freedom Card need to be "read and validated"? Surely, it's valid in any event, whether pressed against a reader or not. Admittedly, that's a fundamental difference from an Oyster Card, which is only valid once validated, and has the added complication of stored value etc. . But, as the original questioner asked, why does a Freedom Card need to be "validated"? What would be the consequence for a passenger who had a valid Freedom Card but had not pressed it against the reader on entry to the bus? Marc. |
#27
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![]() Martin Rich wrote: On Wed, 11 Aug 2004 17:35:55 +0100, Annabel Smyth wrote: On Wed, 11 Aug 2004 at 14:01:12, Neil Williams wrote: Also, a good two-doored double-decker loads and unloads far quicker than the single-entrance Routemaster. NO WAY! And yes, I did mean to shout. People get on a Routemaster, sit down, and then look for their Oyster or their fare. On a 2-door bus, first of all the driver very often doesn't open the entrance door until people have finished getting off, and then you have to wait while everybody faffs around finding their pass or their Oyster, or getting out a ticket, or even buying one, outside the central zone. Takes far, far longer than on a RM. Certainly between Finsbury Park and Angel where the two routes run along the same roads it is common for a 19 (Routemaster) to catch up and overtake a 4 (two-door double-decker) but very rare for a 4 to overtake a 19 True, though IME this might be because a lot of 19 drivers drive like maniacs, and the 4 drivers don't. (I've noticed this, that certain routes do get driven differently - why is this? Drivers of the 10 also seem(ed) to get a lot of criticism.) |
#28
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In message , Mait001
writes If you think about it the Freedom Card just needs to be read and validated - a simple check and therefore the software is relatively simple. Why does a Freedom Card need to be "read and validated"? Surely, it's valid in any event, whether pressed against a reader or not. Admittedly, that's a fundamental difference from an Oyster Card, which is only valid once validated, and has the added complication of stored value etc. . But, as the original questioner asked, why does a Freedom Card need to be "validated"? What would be the consequence for a passenger who had a valid Freedom Card but had not pressed it against the reader on entry to the bus? Possibly because the elderly persons' version can only be used after 09.00hrs during weekdays. -- Kat |
#29
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In message , Mait001
writes If you think about it the Freedom Card just needs to be read and validated - a simple check and therefore the software is relatively simple. Why does a Freedom Card need to be "read and validated"? Surely, it's valid in any event, whether pressed against a reader or not. Admittedly, that's a fundamental difference from an Oyster Card, which is only valid once validated, and has the added complication of stored value etc. . But, as the original questioner asked, why does a Freedom Card need to be "validated"? What would be the consequence for a passenger who had a valid Freedom Card but had not pressed it against the reader on entry to the bus? Possibly because the elderly persons' version can only be used after 09.00hrs during weekdays. -- Kat Yes, Kat, that might be so, but this would only apply within an hour or so of that time on weekdays. In any event, what would a reader situated at the rear door of a bendy-bus do if a pensioner used his Freedom Card earlier that 9.00a.m. - sound an alarm in the driver's cab or what? Marc. |
#30
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Dave Newt wrote:
True, though IME this might be because a lot of 19 drivers drive like maniacs, and the 4 drivers don't. (I've noticed this, that certain routes do get driven differently - why is this? Drivers of the 10 also seem(ed) to get a lot of criticism.) 205 drivers take corners quite fast, once so fast that my mum's wheelchair went for a spin. -- To reply direct, remove NOSPAM and replace with railwaysonline For railway information, news and photos see http://www.railwaysonline.co.uk |
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