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New fares from 2 January 2006 - pdf
On Thu, 27 Oct 2005 19:17:57 +0100, "TKD" wrote:
But I still feel that PAYG is a daft term for Oyster, since TfL want it to be a replacement for cash fares which really are PAYG and don't have a £3 initial charge. Perhaps cash fares will be rebranded as "Pay through the nose" from January. The £3 deposit can be recouped from two journeys from next year so its hardly a moot point. Cash - 2 x Zone 2 (£3) singles = £6 Oyster - 2 x Zone 2 (£1) prepay = £2 (+ £3 deposit) = £5 Not only recouped but a pound saved. A very basic fact the anti-Oyster brigade seem incapable of understanding! -- Nick Cooper [Carefully remove the detonators from my e-mail address to reply!] The London Underground at War, and in Films & TV: http://www.nickcooper.org.uk/ |
New fares from 2 January 2006 - pdf
Barry Salter wrote:
What "Red Ken" neglects to mention is that Oyster isn't actually compatible with the Integrated Transport Smartcard Organisation (ITSO) specification, nor can the "APTIS replacement" Ticket Office machines handle Oyster. Surely just having an extra piece of equipment in the booking office (similiar to that used by pass agents) for Oyster products would be the logical way round it? -- Phil Richards London, UK Home Page: http://www.philrichards1.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk |
New fares from 2 January 2006 - pdf
What "Red Ken" neglects to mention is that Oyster isn't actually
compatible with the Integrated Transport Smartcard Organisation (ITSO) specification, nor can the "APTIS replacement" Ticket Office machines handle Oyster. Surely just having an extra piece of equipment in the booking office (similiar to that used by pass agents) for Oyster products would be the logical way round it? Exactly what they have at Fenchurch Street. When you buy a ticket on Oyster they use a reader/writer on a counter behind them. |
New fares from 2 January 2006 - pdf
TKD wrote:
Exactly what they have at Fenchurch Street. When you buy a ticket on Oyster they use a reader/writer on a counter behind them. So there you go. NR stations simply become Pass Agents selling the full range of Oyster Products. In addition I'm sure an upgrade of the equipment you see in your friendly newsagent could be applied to sell the full range of TfL products. -- Phil Richards London, UK Home Page: http://www.philrichards1.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk |
New fares from 2 January 2006 - pdf
asdf wrote [...] Harrow & Wealdstone to East Croydon (on the direct service): Standard Day Single £6.00; Cheap Day Single £3.60. Next year the Tube/DLR - Train fare will be £3.40. I would take "and are the maximum that you will pay..." to mean that the (NR) ticket offices at H&W or EC would sell you this ticket instead of the NR singles, as it's cheaper, even though the journey doesn't include a Tube/DLR leg. The implication is for some routes these will represent bad value if the rail companies fare (+ the tube journey) is much less than the combined ticket. Perhaps the ticket office would sell an "old style" combined ticket in this case. For a single this is unlikely but since in your example even an Z1-6 Travelcard is less than twice a £3.40 fare and a CDR is £3.70 (£5.30 using Tube) the ticket office would also have to ask if you were leaving after 9:30 and if you were coming back today or going elsewhere in the London area today. -- Mike D |
New fares from 2 January 2006 - pdf
The £3 deposit can be recouped from two journeys from next year so its hardly
a moot point. Cash - 2 x Zone 2 (£3) singles = £6 Oyster - 2 x Zone 2 (£1) prepay = £2 (+ £3 deposit) = £5 Not only recouped but a pound saved. A very basic fact the anti-Oyster brigade seem incapable of understanding! The *minimum* cash fare of £3 will get the message home. I don't think people quite understand the implication of it just yet. From January just going one stop, even in zone 6, and paying cash is going to cost £3 (instead of £1 on Oyster). This is a mark-up of 200%. If this is prominently advertised at the ticket machines and explained properly by staff surely only the insane would resist migration to Oyster? |
New fares from 2 January 2006 - pdf
On Fri, 28 Oct 2005 21:59:50 +0100, Barry Salter
wrote: On Fri, 28 Oct 2005 17:54:37 +0100, Clive wrote: On the Parliamentary channel the other day was London assembly questions to Ken Livingston who said that NR had been offered full installation of oyster readers in the GLA but didn't want to know, so now was considering taking all the railways in the GLA under the TfL umbrella. What "Red Ken" neglects to mention is that Oyster isn't actually compatible with the Integrated Transport Smartcard Organisation (ITSO) specification, nor can the "APTIS replacement" Ticket Office machines handle Oyster. Which only matters if the TOCs are going to take up smartcards as a form of ticket. IMO smartcards are not passenger friendly form of ticketing which can just about be tolerated for urban servcies but are not acceptable for longer journeys. Members of ITSO include the "Big 5" bus companies (Arriva, First, Go-Ahead, NatEx and Stagecoach), ATOC, various ticketing system manufacturers (Almex, Ascom, ATOS Origin and Cubic Transportation), most of the PTEs, BT, BemroseBooth (who supply most of the ticket blanks to the TOCs) and the Department for Transport. So it's not entirely unreasonable for the train companies to be unwilling to spend a not unsubstantial sum of money installing gates and/or Oyster validators at all the stations in the zonal area if there's no guarantee that the same hardware will be capable of accepting a potential future *national* smartcard system, as at the end of the day, that money will have to come from their passengers, either directly through the farebox, or via increased subsidy from the taxpayer. They may agree that smartcards are not the way to go and have joined ITSO to keep the authorities quiet -- Peter Lawrence |
New fares from 2 January 2006 - pdf
|
New fares from 2 January 2006 - pdf
The £3 deposit can be recouped from two journeys from next year so its hardly a moot point. Cash - 2 x Zone 2 (£3) singles = £6 Oyster - 2 x Zone 2 (£1) prepay = £2 (+ £3 deposit) = £5 Not only recouped but a pound saved. A very basic fact the anti-Oyster brigade seem incapable of understanding! The *minimum* cash fare of £3 will get the message home. I don't think people quite understand the implication of it just yet. From January just going one stop, even in zone 6, and paying cash is going to cost £3 (instead of £1 on Oyster). This is a mark-up of 200%. If this is prominently advertised at the ticket machines and explained properly by staff surely only the insane would resist migration to Oyster? it's called ripping off outsiders. I don't follow. Who is "outside" the group of people that are permitted to hold Oyster Cards? As I understand it anyone can have a card. |
New fares from 2 January 2006 - pdf
Phil Richards wrote:
So if TfL want to make their Oyster product sound like mobile phones, perhaps they should consider another option whereby you get billed and pay by direct debit (or credit card) at the end of each month according to your usage. Vastly increases the possibility of fraud and non-payment. Also means they don't get the money in advance to merrily cream the interest from. Raoul. |
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