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On Fri, 22 Aug 2003 00:30 +0100 (BST), (Colin
Rosenstiel) wrote: Oddly, some journeys *are* cheaper by booking to and from boundary zone 6. When I went to Reading the other day, a Peak Travelcard from Cambridge plus a boundary zone 6 standard day return to Reading was quite a lot cheaper than a standard day return from Cambridge to Reading. The main problem was booking them at Cambridge! Odd, because they are supposed to sell the cheapest fare for a particular journey. True, but the requirement stated in the National Fares Manuals is as follows: quote Tickets should always be sold for the throughout journey required unless a customer specially requests more than one ticket for the journey. In such cases the combination of tickets should cover the entire journey being made. /quote The primary reason for this being that there are around 2500 stations in the country and over 100 ticket types, so if your poor Ticket Office Clerk was to go through every possible combination to try and get you the cheapest fare it could take quite some time. Apart from anything else, you wouldn't immediately think that a Cambridge Peak TC + BZ6 to Oxford SDR would be cheaper than a Cambridge to Oxford SDR via London as it's not obvious. HTH, Barry -- Barry Salter, Read uk.* newsgroups? Read uk.net.news.announce! DISCLAIMER: The above comments do not necessarily represent the views of my employers. |
#3
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In article ,
(Barry Salter) wrote: On Fri, 22 Aug 2003 00:30 +0100 (BST), (Colin Rosenstiel) wrote: Oddly, some journeys *are* cheaper by booking to and from boundary zone 6. When I went to Reading the other day, a Peak Travelcard from Cambridge plus a boundary zone 6 standard day return to Reading was quite a lot cheaper than a standard day return from Cambridge to Reading. The main problem was booking them at Cambridge! Odd, because they are supposed to sell the cheapest fare for a particular journey. True, but the requirement stated in the National Fares Manuals is as follows: quote Tickets should always be sold for the throughout journey required unless a customer specially requests more than one ticket for the journey. In such cases the combination of tickets should cover the entire journey being made. /quote The primary reason for this being that there are around 2500 stations in the country and over 100 ticket types, so if your poor Ticket Office Clerk was to go through every possible combination to try and get you the cheapest fare it could take quite some time. Apart from anything else, you wouldn't immediately think that a Cambridge Peak TC + BZ6 to Oxford SDR would be cheaper than a Cambridge to Oxford SDR via London as it's not obvious. Indeed, but it hardly suggests the fares are right, if people have to ask for a combination they wouldn't think of and get a substantial saving, as much as a tenner ISTR. -- Colin Rosenstiel |
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