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Future of CDRs and NR season tickets in TfL zones?
Solar Penguin wrote:
Trouble is, the stupid zones have been around so long that too many people have got into the habit of thinking that they're a good thing, even when they're clearly not -- and won't hear a word said against them. Maybe it would have been better if TfL abandoned their zones and came into line with the rest of the country with a point-to-point system. Might work fine for the tube as almost every station is gated, perhaps you would like to put forward ideas on how a point-to-point bus fares structure in London can be efficiently run with proper revenue protection. -- Phil Richards London, UK Home Page: http://www.philrichards1.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk |
Future of CDRs and NR season tickets in TfL zones?
Solar Penguin wrote:
Suppose you want to travel, for example, from Crystal Palace to Oxford Circus. Why can't you simply buy a cheap day return from Crystal Palace to Oxford Circus? In all probability I could then do some shopping, wander about and decide to end up at Piccadilly Circus before going back to Crystal Palace. A zonal ticket will work fine, your inflexible point-to-point return ticket of course won't. -- Phil Richards London, UK Home Page: http://www.philrichards1.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk |
Future of CDRs and NR season tickets in TfL zones?
In message , Paul Corfield
writes I acknowledged this point but if you have any memory of the Tube prior to zonal fares and I just about do then the old set up had arrays of free standing single fare machine with huge signs above them saying which stations for that fare. Are there really no pictures of the old machines anywhere on the web? A Google and a look at http://www.ltmuseum.co.uk didn't turn up any. IIRC, they had the fare in huge print and the stations served by that fare on the sloping glass top. I did catch a few seconds of an old film, Seven Days to Noon, I think, the other day. The hero chases the villain into the underground but has to pause to buy a 1 1/2 d ticket! -- Michael Parry 'The Truth Shall Make Ye Fret' (Terry Pratchett, The Truth) |
Future of CDRs and NR season tickets in TfL zones?
On Sun, 13 Feb 2005 17:13:19 +0000, Graham Murray
wrote: Paul Corfield writes: I acknowledged this point but if you have any memory of the Tube prior to zonal fares and I just about do then the old set up had arrays of free standing single fare machine with huge signs above them saying which stations for that fare. If you were very lucky you had a machine with 10 buttons on it. Also, IIRC, there were some larger machines which had a button for every LUL station. Well, those existed well into the zonal fare era, until they got replaced by the touch-screen MFMs a few years ago. I still rather miss them :( |
Future of CDRs and NR season tickets in TfL zones?
On Sun, 13 Feb 2005 17:51:11 +0000, Phil Richards wrote:
Solar Penguin wrote: Might work fine for the tube as almost every station is gated, perhaps you would like to put forward ideas on how a point-to-point bus fares structure in London can be efficiently run with proper revenue protection. with conductors :) -- u n d e r a c h i e v e r |
Future of CDRs and NR season tickets in TfL zones?
On Mon, 14 Feb 2005 01:10:50 +1030, (Aidan Stanger)
wrote: Solar Penguin wrote: Are you sure it's more expensive? I don't know about from Crystal Palace, but from some NR stations a return ticket to Underground Zone 1 is cheaper than a travelcard. Form Norwood Junction (next stop on) the relative fares are Peak Day Travel Card Peak Day Return to Zone 1 Peak Return to London One Day Travel Card Off Peak Day Return to London. PRAR -- http://www.i.am/prar/ As long as people will accept crap, it will be financially profitable to dispense it. Dick Cavett Please reply to the newsgroup. That is why it exists. NB Anti-spam measures in force - If you must email me use the Reply to address and not |
Future of CDRs and NR season tickets in TfL zones?
Mrs Redboots wrote: And you can't see out of a single-decker. But sat in the front seat upstairs on a double-decker (and since those are just by the stairs, no problem with headroom), and in no hurry, it's a joy! Annabel - it must have been a while since you've been on the 3 for you to describe a long journey on it as "a joy"... (On the other hand, IMHO the 137 is a very pleasant way to travel from this corner of London to Oxford St!) |
Future of CDRs and NR season tickets in TfL zones?
Dave Arquati wrote: [snip useful and clear analysis] All that's left are day return journeys to London terminals, which would unfortunately be more expensive under this system. Single would be £2.50 from a Zone 4 station, return would be £4.70 (capped to the price of a Travelcard). If we take Crystal Palace as an example, a single to Victoria would be £3.10 now, or a return would be £3.60. On the plus side, you get free bus and tube travel "thrown in". I guess it all depends what proportion of day-returners arriving at London terminals don't use any other transport during the day. However, as a YP railcard holder I can get a CDR from West Dulwich to Victoria for around £2. Since railcards don't have any effect on zonal fares, a comparable journey via bus 3 and Brixton will end up costing over twice this. I wonder if they've thought about what will happen to railcards if they go zonal? (Incidentally, I'm all in favour of a fully integrated Verkehrsverbund type fare structure, but it is definitely going to hit us tubeless South Londoners the hardest...) |
Future of CDRs and NR season tickets in TfL zones?
In article , Stephen Osborn
writes One basic point to bear in mind is that, in general, systems can be fair or they can be simple. A zonal system can be simpler but full of anomalies (e.g. four stops crossing a zonal boundary costing more than 10 stops with a single zone) and so less fair. A point to point system can be fairer (charging for the distance traveled) but will be more complex. An even more basic point you are all avoiding is defining "fair". Once you have an agreed definition, *then* you can start arguing whether one particular system is "fairer". But first you need to agree the definition. For the record, I *don't* agree that a system is unfair if A-B and A-C ever have the same price. -- Clive D.W. Feather | Home: Tel: +44 20 8495 6138 (work) | Web: http://www.davros.org Fax: +44 870 051 9937 | Work: Please reply to the Reply-To address, which is: |
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