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#122
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On Thu, 06 Oct 2005 10:58:02 +0100, Paul
wrote: James Farrar wrote: On Wed, 05 Oct 2005 12:36:00 +0100, Paul paulroberthill_NOSPAM wrote: If you use a travelcard on national rail stick to a paper ticket. With Oyster you pay *more* money. What a con. If you buy your Travelcard on Oyster from South West Trains (not sure about other TOCs) they give you the same discount for poor performance that you'd get with their paper version. How many SWT stations in London have the facility to sell Oyster cards? It's only 2 or 3. Same for SET. If you care about the discount, you'll go out of your way once a year to buy your Travelcard. I buy monthly (as I think the majority of people do). An annual Z1-5 travelcard is a lot of money to pay in one lump sum. So you're already choosing to pay more. I just looked at uswitch.com and it gave me a whole list of 12-month loans that the monthly payment is less than a monthly Travelcard (using the example of a Z1-5 as quoted). And that assumes that your employer doesn't offer interest-free loans for such a purpose. -- James Farrar . @gmail.com |
#123
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On Thu, 6 Oct 2005 01:36:02 +0100, "Chris" wrote:
From: http://www.alwaystouchout.com/project/66 "The DfT recently specified that TfL's zonal fares must be rolled out to all rail services within London by 2007, with a phased approach being taken to achieve this with an individual train company at a time." And this is taken from tfl's latest board meeting minutes last month: TfL's proposal to further integrate Oyster pre-pay on the National Rail Network has been subject to continuing negotiations with Train Operating Companies (TOC's) and DfT. The work is not on schedule and implementation in 2007 is no longer achievable. Looks like we could be in for a long wait. If it's going to be introduced one TOC at a time, as mentioned above, any idea which TOCs might be first, and when we might see it happen? Do all TOCs have to have agreed together to accept pre-pay before it can be rolled out on any of them? |
#124
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Neil Williams wrote:
On Wed, 05 Oct 2005 22:29:49 GMT, Chris Tolley But what is the principle? It's effectively no different from buying a book of ten stamps when you only have an immediate need for one, is it? You are not penalised for buying one stamp on its own instead. The price of a book of 12 stamps is 12 times the price of one. For the life of me, I can't see how either of those comments relates to the discussion in hand. If you want to make a single journey with Oyster, how are you penalised? If you make a multiple journey, then Oyster can give you a discount compared with buying individual tickets through the capping process. The point I was making about the purchase of a stamp book was in light of your earlier comment about losing interest on a few quid. -- http://gallery120232.fotopic.net/p9680306.html (81 001 on an evening duty at Birmingham New Street in 1979) |
#125
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"Steve M" wrote in message
... I have a friend who won't get an Oyster card because she doesn't want "them" to know where she's been and what she's been doing. Not even an unregistered pre-pay card... Presumably she's on benefit and working, in which case the new fares will claw back some money from her. My objection to Oyster is the way it fines you every time you don't concentrate. I have enough pressure to concentrate when I'm working without having that in my spare time too. -- John Rowland - Spamtrapped Transport Plans for the London Area, updated 2001 http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Acro...69/tpftla.html A man's vehicle is a symbol of his manhood. That's why my vehicle's the Piccadilly Line - It's the size of a county and it comes every two and a half minutes |
#126
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In message , at 13:48:31 on Thu,
6 Oct 2005, John Rowland remarked: My objection to Oyster is the way it fines you every time you don't concentrate. That's because you are guilty until proved innocent. I agree about the concentrating, by the way. I always seem to forget to touch in or out at some stage when using the DLR (the pads are in a very non-obvious place at the station I travel to in docklands) and I've arrived at Bank before now to discover the pads on the exit of the DLR weren't working. What is one supposed to do then? -- Roland Perry |
#128
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#129
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![]() "James Farrar" wrote in message ... On Thu, 06 Oct 2005 10:58:02 +0100, Paul wrote: James Farrar wrote: On Wed, 05 Oct 2005 12:36:00 +0100, Paul paulroberthill_NOSPAM wrote: If you use a travelcard on national rail stick to a paper ticket. With Oyster you pay *more* money. What a con. If you buy your Travelcard on Oyster from South West Trains (not sure about other TOCs) they give you the same discount for poor performance that you'd get with their paper version. How many SWT stations in London have the facility to sell Oyster cards? It's only 2 or 3. Same for SET. If you care about the discount, you'll go out of your way once a year to buy your Travelcard. I buy monthly (as I think the majority of people do). An annual Z1-5 travelcard is a lot of money to pay in one lump sum. So you're already choosing to pay more. No you are not. Anyone with any sense does not buy a monthly pass to cover their 2 week xmas and summer break and you only need buy 11 monthly passes (or 10 monthlys and 4 weeklies) I just looked at uswitch.com and it gave me a whole list of 12-month loans that the monthly payment is less than a monthly Travelcard (using the example of a Z1-5 as quoted). but is it less than 11? tim |
#130
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Colin Rosenstiel wrote:
In article , (Tim Bray) wrote: Colin Rosenstiel wrote: At any time? I expect a receipt when I part with cash. If I pay by credit card I expect a transaction voucher. When you feed cash into the machine, you press the receipt button and it gives you one. I had these into work for expenses. And the machines tell me what the Oyster single fares are, do they? On the leaflet, next to the machine. That's not a receipt for the fare paid, just the money put on the card which might then be used for some other purpose. Don't they teach anyone accountancy these days? I think you mean bureaucracy. Accountants some years ago didn't seem to mind. It was accepted that generally you wouldn't have receipts for public transport fares, especially on railways where single tickets were collected at the end of the journey. Do all Tube ticket machines offer receipts? The old ones certainly didn't. -- Richard J. (to e-mail me, swap uk and yon in address) |
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