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New evening ticket restrictions from King's Cross to Cambridge
"PRAR" wrote in message ... DERWENT New evening ticket restrictions from King's Cross to Cambridge Tue, 6 Jun 2006 08:04:28 +0100, Roland Perry In message .com, at 14:17:31 on Mon, 5 Jun 2006, Paul Oter remarked: According to a new leaflet "Ticket Changes from 11th June 2006", The new timetable starts then. from that date "the return portion of Cheap Day return, One (sic) Day Travelcard (off-peak), Family Travelcard and DaySave tickets are no longer valid on services departing from [King's Cross and Moorgate] between 1630 and 1901 Monday to Friday. Is this only for out-boundary Travel Cards or can you really not use travel card for journeys suchas Moorgate - Finsbury Park? As I read the leaflet you can use any ODTC, including an out-boundary one, for an evening peak journey entirely within the Travelcard zones. Peter |
New evening ticket restrictions from King's Cross to Cambridge
Peter Masson wrote:
I can't see how they can make the restrictions stick in the case of trains which call at stations like Alexandria Palace or Mill Hill Broadway. CDRs are val;id for break of journey, and ODTCs are valid for multiple journeys. Journeys from Central London to these stations (or others in Zone C on the leaflet) are unrestricted in the evening peak, as aqre journeys from Zone C northwards - all you have to do is to break your journey at a Zone C station. Does it count as break of journey if you resume your journey on the same train? Alter4natively you could of course split tickets at a Zone C station, though your train both ways would have to call at the station where you split your ticket. I think the leaflet is badly-worded, and it would in fact be necessary to split tickets to get around the restriction. While FCC have no control over what happens within the Travelcard area as such, it is surprising that the restrictions have not been applied closer in. Neil |
New evening ticket restrictions from King's Cross to Cambridge
On 6 Jun 2006 12:48:07 -0700, "Neil Williams"
wrote: Peter Masson wrote: I can't see how they can make the restrictions stick in the case of trains which call at stations like Alexandria Palace or Mill Hill Broadway. CDRs are val;id for break of journey, and ODTCs are valid for multiple journeys. Journeys from Central London to these stations (or others in Zone C on the leaflet) are unrestricted in the evening peak, as aqre journeys from Zone C northwards - all you have to do is to break your journey at a Zone C station. Does it count as break of journey if you resume your journey on the same train? Alter4natively you could of course split tickets at a Zone C station, though your train both ways would have to call at the station where you split your ticket. I think the leaflet is badly-worded, and it would in fact be necessary to split tickets to get around the restriction. While FCC have no control over what happens within the Travelcard area as such, it is surprising that the restrictions have not been applied closer in. I think they would have applied them further in if they could have got away with it. I've forgotten which ticket types are subject to controls as part of the privatisation process - I assume CDRs are not part of the regulated bundle of ticket types? I can vaguely understand why an Inter City train operator may wish to impose some restrictions on some journeys but this is blatant profiteering by First. It must also have been endorsed by the DfT as part of accepting the franchise proposals - I wonder when GoVia will introduce the same policy on the South Eastern franchise. -- Paul C Admits to working for London Underground! |
New evening ticket restrictions from King's Cross to Cambridge
In article . com,
Sam Holloway wrote: So what's to stop Cambridge travellers buying an Ely-London cheap day return and using that? Does the small print prevent this? Will the ticket offices at Cambridge sell that one? Failing that, I guess I could always either drive to Ely (despite living within short walking distance of Cambridge station), or buy a single to Ely, and then a travelcard once at Ely. |
New evening ticket restrictions from King's Cross to Cambridge
In article ,
Paul Corfield wrote: Oyster cards have a very limited applicability to the issue under discussion. There is a limited amount of Pre-Pay acceptance on the FCC lines across zone 1 for Thameslink and Moorgate / KX - Finsbury Park for the Cambridge / Peterborough lines. The only other ticket in Oyster format would be a Travelcard based season which is not affected by the new restrictions. My reasoning is that when I go to London, I can buy a standard return (and therefore use peak time trains), and use the Oyster for Underground travel. At the moment I'm buying a day return from Cambridge to London/Travelcard combined ticket. |
New evening ticket restrictions from King's Cross to Cambridge
Sarah Brown wrote:
Will the ticket offices at Cambridge sell that one? They should do: all stations should sell all tickets available on the national network. (Excluding 'experimental' fares like Megatrain). I'm not quite sure of where to find the rules stating that to wave at them though. Failing that, I guess I could always either drive to Ely (despite living within short walking distance of Cambridge station), or buy a single to Ely, and then a travelcard once at Ely. You could also buy your tickets on the internet and collect them from the machines at Cambridge once that's enabled (though I note they currently have notices saying pre-booked tickets should be collected from the ticket office, which surprised me since Qjump etc don't list Cambridge as a collection point so I thought collection wasn't officially provided at Cambridge). Or buy them in advance from the advance purchase window. Theo |
New evening ticket restrictions from King's Cross to Cambridge
Sarah Brown wrote:
Sam Holloway wrote: So what's to stop Cambridge travellers buying an Ely-London cheap day return and using that? Does the small print prevent this? Will the ticket offices at Cambridge sell that one? Failing that, I guess I could always either drive to Ely (despite living within short walking distance of Cambridge station), or buy a single to Ely, and then a travelcard once at Ely. Sadly, tickets are non-transferrable, otherwise I could start a lucrative business buying tickets for people in Ely station and posting them to Cambridge. :-) You can certainly buy tickets from Ely that start at Cambridge (e.g. if you hold Ely-Cam season ticket and want to travel to London, you can buy the Cam-London part from Ely). Sam |
New evening ticket restrictions from King's Cross to Cambridge
On Tue, 6 Jun 2006 19:58:03 +0100, Peter Masson wrote:
I can't see how they can make the restrictions stick in the case of trains which call at stations like Alexandria Palace or Mill Hill Broadway. CDRs are val;id for break of journey, and ODTCs are valid for multiple journeys. Journeys from Central London to these stations (or others in Zone C on the leaflet) are unrestricted in the evening peak, as aqre journeys from Zone C northwards - all you have to do is to break your journey at a Zone C station. Does it count as break of journey if you resume your journey on the same train? Alter4natively you could of course split tickets at a Zone C station, though your train both ways would have to call at the station where you split your ticket. That would be hugely inconvenient if you live north of about Welwyn GC, as you'd have to get an all-stations service at least as far as Potters Bar. It could (at a guess) add 30-60 minutes to your journey (your usual train could be first stop Letchworth or St Neots). |
New evening ticket restrictions from King's Cross to Cambridge
On 6 Jun 2006 08:42:34 -0700, Rob wrote:
I read in a St Albans paper that you can get an unrestricted day return to Elstree and Borehamwood, and then a zone 6 travelcard from there. Works out much cheaper than buying a full priced Travelcard from St Albans. Dont know if anyone can confirm this Yes, but only if you travel on trains that call at Elstree & Borehamwood. |
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