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#61
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On Tue, 23 May 2006 22:54:46 +0100, Paul Ebbens wrote:
I think you'll find it applies to all EU member states on this particular matter -- hence why IBAN/BIC codes are "slowly" being introduced onto all statements (I had never ever seen them before LloydsTSB put them on the statements... not a single word from them to explain to anyone what they're for) but even having these codes.. it only allows Inward transactions you still have to run about trying to get a natural transfer of money, why isn't it the same as a "foreign" exchange in cash? I have received, in the past 6 months, a number of transfers from the UK using IBAN and BIC. (Some people first tried to send me a cheque, but cheques drawn on a foreign bank are pretty useless here.) Ah well if they want to loose customers they're doing the right things. Who does Euro accounts in UK, cos then I'll be saved... Googling on "euro account" suggested Lloyds TSB... http://www.lloydstsb.com/travel/the_euro.asp Regards, Rian -- Rian van der Borgt, Leuven, Belgium. e-mail: www: http://www.evonet.be/~rvdborgt/ |
#62
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![]() "Rian van der Borgt" wrote in message ... On Tue, 23 May 2006 22:54:46 +0100, Paul Ebbens wrote: I think you'll find it applies to all EU member states on this particular matter -- hence why IBAN/BIC codes are "slowly" being introduced onto all statements (I had never ever seen them before LloydsTSB put them on the statements... not a single word from them to explain to anyone what they're for) but even having these codes.. it only allows Inward transactions you still have to run about trying to get a natural transfer of money, why isn't it the same as a "foreign" exchange in cash? I have received, in the past 6 months, a number of transfers from the UK using IBAN and BIC. (Some people first tried to send me a cheque, but cheques drawn on a foreign bank are pretty useless here.) Yes they turn into pretty useless things when the bank charge is higher than the value. I have transferred money to EU via www.AuctionChex.com they charge some money on the side (of course) but didn't seem too unreasonable, nothing like the UK Bank £10 or more charges at least... and uses IBAN BIC codes, very useful for me. Ah well if they want to loose customers they're doing the right things. Who does Euro accounts in UK, cos then I'll be saved... Googling on "euro account" suggested Lloyds TSB... http://www.lloydstsb.com/travel/the_euro.asp Yes unfortunately they class it as "Offshore" and "International" account, neither which are strictly true... and are a pain to get hold of because they like people with LOTS of money for these things it seems, not much interest in day-to-day "junk". |
#63
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On Tue, 23 May 2006 23:41:32 +0100, Paul Ebbens wrote:
"Rian van der Borgt" wrote: I have received, in the past 6 months, a number of transfers from the UK using IBAN and BIC. (Some people first tried to send me a cheque, but cheques drawn on a foreign bank are pretty useless here.) Yes they turn into pretty useless things when the bank charge is higher than the value. Well, not even that. I couldn't cash them at all... Regards, Rian -- Rian van der Borgt, Leuven, Belgium. e-mail: www: http://www.evonet.be/~rvdborgt/ |
#64
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In message , at 22:10:42 on Tue,
23 May 2006, Rian van der Borgt remarked: Googling on "euro account" suggested Lloyds TSB... http://www.lloydstsb.com/travel/the_euro.asp I tried them, and spent a happy time in the local branch being passed back and forth between the clerk and whoever the clerk-had-on-the-phone in some distant internal call centre. The upshot was that all they could offer me was an offshore account in the Isle of Man (as indeed that url above confirms). I thought this was far from ideal for many reasons, in particular they don't have a Debit Card for the account, so taking money out is rather hard. HSBC (you know, the one that brags about knowing how to do international stuff) has a Euro account as well, but I think you can only transfer money out by cheque, or the equivalent of a telegraphic transfer; once again, a very long way from what I'd call "personal banking". So I'm still looking for an account where I can get paid my expenses in Euros (and no exchange rate issues), having previously used Euro funds from the account to buy my train tickets in Amsterdam. -- Roland Perry |
#65
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In message , at 22:34:47 on Tue,
23 May 2006, Graeme Wall remarked: I noticed a sign the other day which strongly implied that the newsagent that was renting space within the station building (in an Amsterdam suburb) also sold tickets. That happens at RAI station but the newsagents is only open in the morning peak period. The newsagent at the station I saw was still open at 6pm. Unless there are exhibitions on there doesn't appear to be a lot of off-peak traffic at RAI, the station you saw was presumably in a more populus area. A dormitory suburb. -- Roland Perry |
#66
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In message , at 10:23:42 on
Wed, 24 May 2006, David Walters remarked: So I'm still looking for an account where I can get paid my expenses in Euros (and no exchange rate issues), having previously used Euro funds from the account to buy my train tickets in Amsterdam. Citibank seem to have an account that does all that. http://www.citibank.com/uk/personal/...euro/index.htm With a sting in the tail: "A monthly service charge of €20 on each Euro Current Account will be levied where the credit balance, across your UK Citibank relationship, falls below the currency equivalent of £2000. " I tried getting a UK-based dollar account with them several years ago. At least they *allow* you to have less than £2000 in the accounts nowadays; then I think they'd have politely shown you the door. It's also far from clear what "card" they are talking about. Is it a Citibank VISA (and if so, why do they mainly only mention using it to get cash from Citibank machines). In any event, if it was a Credit Card, wouldn't that be a cash advance? What I wanted was a genuine Debit card that would be accepted for airline and train tickets, hotel rooms etc. -- Roland Perry |
#67
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In message
Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 22:34:47 on Tue, 23 May 2006, Graeme Wall remarked: I noticed a sign the other day which strongly implied that the newsagent that was renting space within the station building (in an Amsterdam suburb) also sold tickets. That happens at RAI station but the newsagents is only open in the morning peak period. The newsagent at the station I saw was still open at 6pm. Unless there are exhibitions on there doesn't appear to be a lot of off-peak traffic at RAI, the station you saw was presumably in a more populus area. A dormitory suburb. Which RAI certainly isn't although it does cater for a lot of cyclist commuters. The other station I use frequently is the one near Arena which is in a run-down residential area but caters for the stadium and a multiplex cinema and shopping complex but that has a full ticket office. -- Graeme Wall This address is not read, substitute trains for rail. Transport Miscellany at http://www.greywall.demon.co.uk/rail/index.html |
#68
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On Wed, 24 May 2006 18:51:03 +0100, Arthur Figgis wrote:
On Tue, 23 May 2006 08:54:16 +0100, Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 00:01:40 on Tue, 23 May 2006, Peter Smyth remarked: I hadn't noticed that. Will give it a try next time I'm in London. I think I once tried buying a ticket in Croydon auf Deutsch once, just to see what happened. I can't remember the outcome, but as I'm not still on the station I suppose I must have managed it. :-) I also regularly do that. Or try the Dutch (ticket machine or cash dispenser) when it's offered where you'd least expect it. Or try the local language and see how far you get :-) One snag with multi-lingual machines is that they will say "welcome to our lovely railway" in half a dozen languages, but the ticket types will only be given in the local language, so you still need to know the words for things like adult, child, single, return, railcard discount, HappyWeekendApexValue(TM) ticket. NS does have them translated, but the fundamental flaw is, especially for international tickets, that you have to choose your ticket type first instead of last. So if you're not a tariff expert, you sometimes have to test various combinations to see what comes out cheapest. I was seriously impressed with some Swiss tram ticket machines which would take both CHFs and EURs. I was also vaguely pleased to find a broken machine on a Swiss narrow gauge line in Biel/Bienne - proving not everything there is perfect. After buying a tram ticket in English, the machines in Grenoble say "Croydon Tramlink wishes you a good journey". I'll have to test that when I'm there :-) Regards, Rian -- Rian van der Borgt, Leuven, Belgium. e-mail: www: http://www.evonet.be/~rvdborgt/ |
#69
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Arthur Figgis wrote:
On Tue, 23 May 2006 08:54:16 +0100, Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 00:01:40 on Tue, 23 May 2006, Peter Smyth remarked: While I don't think they can manage Dutch, the touchscreen ticket machines at most LU stations do have a choice of half a dozen or so different languages. I hadn't noticed that. Will give it a try next time I'm in London. One snag with multi-lingual machines is that they will say "welcome to our lovely railway" in half a dozen languages, but the ticket types will only be given in the local language, so you still need to know the words for things like adult, child, single, return, railcard discount, HappyWeekendApexValue(TM) ticket. I think you will find the LUL touchscreen ticket machines have the different ticket types in the language selected. Or they will sell zonal tickets, but there will be no maps of the zones, as locals are assumed to know. Again, LUL touchscreen ticket machines have a zonal map stuck to them. |
#70
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In message , Arthur Figgis
] writes I was seriously impressed with some Swiss tram ticket machines which would take both CHFs and EURs. I was also vaguely pleased to find a broken machine on a Swiss narrow gauge line in Biel/Bienne - proving not everything there is perfect. Working with a group, I once encountered a smashed telephone kiosk window at a Altstatten station at the lower end of the Appenzellbahn mountain railway station. The booking clerk kept apologising profusely to me about it, asking whether or not such things ever happened in England! To cap it all, as we were boarding the train, a reporter from the local radio station turned up to cover it. So yes, Swiss standards are evidently slipping! Tongue firmly in cheek, although some of Zurich's suburbs might surprise those more used to rural Switzerland. -- Ian Jelf, MITG Birmingham, UK Registered Blue Badge Tourist Guide for London and the Heart of England http://www.bluebadge.demon.co.uk |
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