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Combination of travelcards and pay-as-you-go Oyster?
John B wrote: MIG wrote: This is a bit of a tangent, but if he had a zone 1 and 2 travelcard and went from Heathrow to Stratford, touching in at Heathrow and out at Stratford, would that count as one or two PAYG journeys, given that it was split by the travelcard valid part? (And I don't think there is any way of avoiding a zone 1 and/or 2 section without touching out and getting a bus, or maybe Silverlink.) Single z3-z6 costs £1.80 on-peak or £1 off-peak. Single z3 only costs £1 at all times. Single z6-z3 via z1 costs £3.50 on-peak or £2 off-peak. So off-peak the passenger would be charged £2, irrespective of how the fare is calculated. On-peak, the passenger would be charged £2.80 for 2 journeys plus travelcard, or £3.50 for one journey. I'm 90% sure that Oyster will give the on-peak passenger the most favourable fare - ie 2 PAYG journeys plus travelcard - but haven't tried it so can't confirm. So that means that the passenger is effectively charged twice (off-peak) for the part of the journey already covered by the travelcard. Given that it is actually only one journey, this seems a bit unfair. I would have thought that there was a good case for the fare being £1 (zone 6 to 3 with the 1 and 2 part already paid for). |
Combination of travelcards and pay-as-you-go Oyster?
In article .com,
John B wrote: Single z3-z6 costs £1.80 on-peak or £1 off-peak. Single z3 only costs £1 at all times. Single z6-z3 via z1 costs £3.50 on-peak or £2 off-peak. So off-peak the passenger would be charged £2, irrespective of how the fare is calculated. On-peak, the passenger would be charged £2.80 for 2 journeys plus travelcard, or £3.50 for one journey. Surely the passenger would be charged 1.80 or 1 for a z3-6 extension, given that it is a single journey that needs z1-6 validity? The travelcard part provides the z12 validty, the extension provides z3-6 for a single journey. -- I don't play The Game - it's for five-year-olds with delusions of adulthood. |
Combination of travelcards and pay-as-you-go Oyster?
On Tue, 26 Sep 2006 13:36:57 +0000 (UTC), Mike Bristow
wrote: In article .com, John B wrote: Single z3-z6 costs £1.80 on-peak or £1 off-peak. Single z3 only costs £1 at all times. Single z6-z3 via z1 costs £3.50 on-peak or £2 off-peak. So off-peak the passenger would be charged £2, irrespective of how the fare is calculated. On-peak, the passenger would be charged £2.80 for 2 journeys plus travelcard, or £3.50 for one journey. Surely the passenger would be charged 1.80 or 1 for a z3-6 extension, given that it is a single journey that needs z1-6 validity? The travelcard part provides the z12 validty, the extension provides z3-6 for a single journey. That is certainly how I understand it. You do not pay twice for your travelcard zones and as London zones are concentric you only pay for Z3 once even if you travel through it twice on both "sides" of your travelcard validity. I'm pretty sure this logic has applied since zones were first introduced. -- Paul C Admits to working for London Underground! |
Combination of travelcards and pay-as-you-go Oyster?
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Combination of travelcards and pay-as-you-go Oyster?
The travelcard covers his journey as far as Northfields (zone 3) and not beyond. He then needs an extension which is valid from Northfields to Heathrow, which has to be a zone 3-6 single. Your logic would work if Northfields were a boundary station in both zones 3 and 4, but it isn't. No, I think it's your logic, that is strange. With your logic if I have ticket for zone 3, and separate ticket for zone 4, I cannot travel between zones 3 and 4 without buying 3rd ticket for 3-4 combined. |
Combination of travelcards and pay-as-you-go Oyster?
On Tue, 26 Sep 2006 17:52:52 GMT, "Richard J."
wrote: wrote: Actually the PAYG fare would be for Zones 3-6, otherwise he would not have a valid ticket between Northfields and Boston Manor (across the zone 3/4 boundary). The costs are the same, though. Actually it would be for 4-6, because his travelcard covers zones 1-3, and so the extension would be for the additional zones he is travelling through - zones 4-6. Otherwise he'd be paying twice for zone 3. The travelcard covers his journey as far as Northfields (zone 3) and not beyond. He then needs an extension which is valid from Northfields to Heathrow, which has to be a zone 3-6 single. Your logic would work if Northfields were a boundary station in both zones 3 and 4, but it isn't. For LU fares you add on the zones as they are contiguous. You do not have to buy from the last station within a zone. -- Paul C Admits to working for London Underground! |
Combination of travelcards and pay-as-you-go Oyster?
On Tue, 26 Sep 2006 17:52:52 GMT, Richard J. wrote:
Actually the PAYG fare would be for Zones 3-6, otherwise he would not have a valid ticket between Northfields and Boston Manor (across the zone 3/4 boundary). The costs are the same, though. Actually it would be for 4-6, because his travelcard covers zones 1-3, and so the extension would be for the additional zones he is travelling through - zones 4-6. Otherwise he'd be paying twice for zone 3. The travelcard covers his journey as far as Northfields (zone 3) and not beyond. He then needs an extension which is valid from Northfields to Heathrow, which has to be a zone 3-6 single. Your logic would work if Northfields were a boundary station in both zones 3 and 4, but it isn't. As others have said, this is not how it works in practice. If you like, the Travelcard is valid to the Z3/4 boundary (a point on the track somewhere between Northfields and Boston Manor), and only a Z4-6 single is needed to cover from there to Heathrow. |
Combination of travelcards and pay-as-you-go Oyster?
asdf wrote:
On Tue, 26 Sep 2006 17:52:52 GMT, Richard J. wrote: Actually the PAYG fare would be for Zones 3-6, otherwise he would not have a valid ticket between Northfields and Boston Manor (across the zone 3/4 boundary). The costs are the same, though. Actually it would be for 4-6, because his travelcard covers zones 1-3, and so the extension would be for the additional zones he is travelling through - zones 4-6. Otherwise he'd be paying twice for zone 3. The travelcard covers his journey as far as Northfields (zone 3) and not beyond. He then needs an extension which is valid from Northfields to Heathrow, which has to be a zone 3-6 single. Your logic would work if Northfields were a boundary station in both zones 3 and 4, but it isn't. As others have said, this is not how it works in practice. If you like, the Travelcard is valid to the Z3/4 boundary (a point on the track somewhere between Northfields and Boston Manor), and only a Z4-6 single is needed to cover from there to Heathrow. Yes, of course! Now you explain it like that, it seems obvious. Please ignore my previous posts in this thread. I should have known better than to try to correct Barry Salter on ticketing! -- Richard J. (to e-mail me, swap uk and yon in address) |
Combination of travelcards and pay-as-you-go Oyster?
Richard J. wrote: Yes, of course! Now you explain it like that, it seems obvious. Please ignore my previous posts in this thread. I should have known better than to try to correct Barry Salter on ticketing! Thats alright, I was about to point out what my job is... but I shan't bother now ;) Just to clarify for anyone who is still confused (there's a lot of different theories bouncing around this thread) if you have a season ticket on oyster, lets use this example of a 1-3 ticket, and you have pre-pay to cover any trips you make beyond zone 3, your extension will be calculated from zone 4 outwards, as you are covered up to and including all stations within zone 3. So travelling Stratford to Heathrow, you are covered for zones 1-3, so when you leave the network at Heathrow (making sure you touch out of course) you will be charged for the extra zones you have travelled through, which are zones 4, 5, and 6. |
Combination of travelcards and pay-as-you-go Oyster?
So travelling Stratford to Heathrow, you are covered for zones 1-3, so when you leave the network at Heathrow (making sure you touch out of course) you will be charged for the extra zones you have travelled through, which are zones 4, 5, and 6. Well, now I'm 100% sure ;-) Thank you! |
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