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#1
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Until recently, it has been possible to purchase an in-boundary one
day travelcard (one with a London station as the origin) on a trainline-derivative booking site and then collect it from a fastticket machine. This now appears to have changed. On the website, I was told: "Unfortunately collection from a Self-service Ticket machine is not permitted for this ticket." so I queried this. The response I got from the customer services department was: "I am sorry to inform you that a Self Service Ticket Machine option is not available for London Day Travelcard. Since the London Day Travelcard does not get dispensed from the Self Service Ticket Machine, our website does not give this option. In this case, you can purchase the London Day Travelcard from the station." This is clearly nonsense as I can buy a one-day travelcard from a self- service machine at any station within the boundary with that station as the origin. So I went back and made this point. The response I got was: "I would like to inform you that according to the industry policy rules, London Day Travelcards cannot be dispensed from a Self Service Ticket Machine. Furthermore, I have passed the details to our Development Team for review. We appreciate you taking the time out to share your thoughts with us." I can appreciate that "industry policy rules" may be trying to tackle some sort of fraud (i.e. people buying an in-boundary travelcard from an out-boundary station without a ticket to the boundary) but is this really the case? Where are these rules? I think I can still buy one online to be posted to me provided I give enough notice. Jonathan |
#2
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#3
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![]() Barry Salter wrote wrote Until recently, it has been possible to purchase an in-boundary one day travelcard (one with a London station as the origin) on a trainline-derivative booking site and then collect it from a fastticket machine. This now appears to have changed. "The Manual" (formerly Section K of the NFM) that state: + in advance – from 0930 Monday to Friday, any time at weekends, and Public Holidays, up to 7 days in advance of the day for which the ticket is dated. If this applies to any Off-Peak ticket then you can buy one in advance only at on a day and at a time when it would be valid if issued for immediate travel ? Seems pointlessly restrictive Would a NR automatic ticket barrier reject an attempt to use a post-dated ticket ? Which brings me to another question on FastTicket machines: SWT (in the latest, Sept/Oct, free mag) mentions SWT's scheduled enhancement to allow Monthly renewals, pre-paid ticket collection and tickets for tomorrow. But only Anytime (peak) tickets for tomorrow. Is this restriction in force in other areas ? -- Mike D |
#4
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![]() On 16 Sep, 17:23, "Michael R N Dolbear" wrote: Barry Salter wrote wrote Until recently, it has been possible to purchase an in-boundary one day travelcard (one with a London station as the origin) on a trainline-derivative booking site and then collect it from a fastticket machine. *This now appears to have changed. "The Manual" (formerly Section K of the NFM) that state: + *in advance – from 0930 Monday to Friday, any time at weekends, and Public Holidays, up to 7 days in advance of the day for which the ticket is dated. If this applies to any Off-Peak ticket then you can buy one in advance only at on a day and at a time when it would be valid if issued for immediate travel ? Seems pointlessly restrictive Perhaps just intended to keep leisure travellers who wish to buy tickets in advance away from clogging up busy ticket offices during the rush hour (leisure travellers often having a leisurely demeanour whilst rush hour travellers are often... you see where I'm going with this). Would a NR automatic ticket barrier reject an attempt to use a post-dated ticket ? Yes, as would an LU one. Which brings me to another question on FastTicket machines: SWT (in the latest, Sept/Oct, free mag) mentions SWT's scheduled enhancement to allow Monthly *renewals, pre-paid ticket collection and tickets for tomorrow. But only Anytime (peak) tickets for tomorrow. Is this restriction in force in other areas ? You haven't made at all clear what the scheduled enhancement entails - i.e. what is enhanced? |
#5
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On Sep 16, 6:06*pm, Mizter T wrote:
On 16 Sep, 17:23, "Michael R N Dolbear" wrote: Barry Salter wrote wrote Until recently, it has been possible to purchase an in-boundary one day travelcard (one with a London station as the origin) on a trainline-derivative booking site and then collect it from a fastticket machine. *This now appears to have changed. "The Manual" (formerly Section K of the NFM) that state: + *in advance – from 0930 Monday to Friday, any time at weekends, and Public Holidays, up to 7 days in advance of the day for which the ticket is dated. If this applies to any Off-Peak ticket then you can buy one in advance only at on a day and at a time when it would be valid if issued for immediate travel ? Seems pointlessly restrictive Perhaps just intended to keep leisure travellers who wish to buy tickets in advance away from clogging up busy ticket offices during the rush hour (leisure travellers often having a leisurely demeanour whilst rush hour travellers are often... you see where I'm going with this). Would a NR automatic ticket barrier reject an attempt to use a post-dated ticket ? Yes, as would an LU one. But can you still get travelcards from shops that aren't dated till they've been through a barrier? Presumably one could buy them any time, but you'd need to come to an understanding about the date stamped on it. |
#6
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Mizter T wrote:
On 16 Sep, 17:23, "Michael R N Dolbear" wrote: Which brings me to another question on FastTicket machines: SWT (in the latest, Sept/Oct, free mag) mentions SWT's scheduled enhancement to allow Monthly renewals, pre-paid ticket collection and tickets for tomorrow. But only Anytime (peak) tickets for tomorrow. Is this restriction in force in other areas ? I suppose the fact that Offpeak (and Super Offpeak) tickets and e.g. Network Card discounts don't appear on the machines until they become valid makes it unlikely they'd appear the night before. Although pre-paid ticket collection (which I haven't used becasue SWT haven't provided it yet) presumably provides a way round this?? You haven't made at all clear what the scheduled enhancement entails - i.e. what is enhanced? What SWT are calling an 'enhancement' is simply providing the facilities such as pre-paid ticket collection (TOD) and tickets for next day travel that many TOCs already provide. Not sure about monthly season renewal availability generally though. One planned facility that appears to be a real enhancement is intended to be inclusive tickets for attractions such as Chessington, apparently due next summer... Paul |
#7
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![]() On 16 Sep, 18:13, MIG wrote: On Sep 16, 6:06 pm, Mizter T wrote: On 16 Sep, 17:23, "Michael R N Dolbear" wrote: (snip) Would a NR automatic ticket barrier reject an attempt to use a post-dated ticket ? Yes, as would an LU one. But can you still get travelcards from shops that aren't dated till they've been through a barrier? Presumably one could buy them any time, but you'd need to come to an understanding about the date stamped on it. The point you're making isn't exactly clear to me. Note that as ever I don't wish to provide a fare evaders guide, but this stuff is hardly beyond the realm of most peoples capacity for logical thought so I'm certainly not offering up anything that's remotely secret here. Several shops do sell Day Travelcards using the old fashioned method - which involves the shopkeeper stamping the ticket themselves using a manual date stamp. This obviously doesn't encode the magnetic strip, so presumably that happens on first use when the ticket gets passed through an LU gate (or indeed an NR gate, if they are so equipped). I guess there may be some system by which the shopkeeper has several different stocks of Day Travelcards, and picks one in particular that will be valid that day - e.g. there is a ticket stock for Thirsday which will only work on a Thursday - however I think the opportunity for things to get muddled up would be too great for that. This is how local shops (Pass Agents, Ticket Stops, call them what you will) always used to sell one-day Travelcards in the days of yore - however the majority of shops were upgraded to having ticket vending machines that printed and (presumably) encoded the tickets. I *think* this was all part of the Prestige ticketing project (which also brought you Oyster), as these started appearing in the mid to late 90's (the PFI contract being signed in 1995) - these new machines were certainly capable of being upgraded so as to handle Oyster (and thus have Oyster pads fitted). Interestingly I've noticed that a number of shops that previously had this equipment have now had it replaced with simpler Oyster-only kit - i.e. there's no printer, it only does Oyster (pay-as-you-go topups and weekly, monthly or annual Travelcards and bus passes). I have also seen some shops that are new to selling tickets get this kit. However they continue to sell Day Travelcards, but they have reverted to using the manual date stamp method to date the ticket stock. I think that some of these shops only stock some of the Day Travelcard range - from the off-peak range, one near me sells z1&2, z1-4 and z1-6 but not z2-6 - I don't know about what Anytime Day Travelcards they stock are (N.B. the Peak Day Travelcard has now been renamed the Anytime Day Travelcard to fit in with the NR fares 'simplification'). I can see why this may have happened - the logic being that Oyster is now the predominant medium for selling 'ticketing products' (most shops now only sell weekly or longer Travelcards and bus passes on Oyster), so why maintain a far more complex machine that has moving parts in it (i.e. the printer) when on the whole it goes unused. Still, it's a bit annoying as (a) it takes far longer and is more of a faff for the shopkeeper to issue a Day Travelcard, and (b) it would seem that at least some shops don't stock the whole range - and there's always the possibility that they'll be out of stock of the relevant ticket. One thing that certainly is annoying is that the new Oyster-only kit doesn't have a customer facing LCD display - so you can't just pop your Oyster card on the reader and instantly see how much credit you've got left on it (I presume the shopkeeper can see this on their screen however). I suppose some shopkeepers might welcome this as it means that people don't just come in their shop to check their PAYG balance - but I never really saw many people doing that and then walking out, rather people who were buying other things (newspaper, chewing gum etc) certainly do take the opportunity to check their balance when at the till but if their PAYG balance was low they'll often top it up there and then (earning the shopkeeper a commission in the process). |
#8
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On Sep 16, 8:05*pm, Mizter T wrote:
On 16 Sep, 18:13, MIG wrote: On Sep 16, 6:06 pm, Mizter T wrote: On 16 Sep, 17:23, "Michael R N Dolbear" wrote: (snip) Would a NR automatic ticket barrier reject an attempt to use a post-dated ticket ? Yes, as would an LU one. But can you still get travelcards from shops that aren't dated till they've been through a barrier? *Presumably one could buy them any time, but you'd need to come to an understanding about the date stamped on it. The point you're making isn't exactly clear to me. Well, if you wanted a travelcard to use the next day, it might work barriers from when you first used it tomorrow (if that is how they work) but if the shopkeeper stamped today's date on it, it wouldn't pass a visual inspection on a bus tomorrow. To ask for it to be stamped with tomorrow's date would provide no additional cheaty opportunities to what's always possible. |
#9
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![]() On 16 Sep, 21:25, MIG wrote: On Sep 16, 8:05*pm, Mizter T wrote: On 16 Sep, 18:13, MIG wrote: (snip) But can you still get travelcards from shops that aren't dated till they've been through a barrier? *Presumably one could buy them any time, but you'd need to come to an understanding about the date stamped on it. The point you're making isn't exactly clear to me. Well, if you wanted a travelcard to use the next day, it might work barriers from when you first used it tomorrow (if that is how they work) but if the shopkeeper stamped today's date on it, it wouldn't pass a visual inspection on a bus tomorrow. I thought that was the point you were making, but I wasn't entirely clear of that. To ask for it to be stamped with tomorrow's date would provide no additional cheaty opportunities to what's always possible. Absolutely. I don't know what the rules are for TfL "Ticket Stops" - i.e. how many days in advance they're allowed to sell the ticket - but my guess is that it is the same as the National Rail rules, i.e. 7 days in advance. I've only ever bought one for 'tomorrow', beyond that I wouldn't bother in case plans change - but for a whole host of scenarios I can certainly see why buying several days in advance might come in handy. |
#10
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On Tue, 16 Sep 2008 15:47:53 -0700 (PDT), Mizter T
wrote: On 16 Sep, 21:25, MIG wrote: On Sep 16, 8:05*pm, Mizter T wrote: On 16 Sep, 18:13, MIG wrote: (snip) But can you still get travelcards from shops that aren't dated till they've been through a barrier? *Presumably one could buy them any time, but you'd need to come to an understanding about the date stamped on it. The point you're making isn't exactly clear to me. Well, if you wanted a travelcard to use the next day, it might work barriers from when you first used it tomorrow (if that is how they work) but if the shopkeeper stamped today's date on it, it wouldn't pass a visual inspection on a bus tomorrow. I thought that was the point you were making, but I wasn't entirely clear of that. To ask for it to be stamped with tomorrow's date would provide no additional cheaty opportunities to what's always possible. You could use it on the Underground and on buses today in the hope no-one looks at the date and then use it tomorrow only on buses (where the magnetic stripe isn't going to be read?). Absolutely. I don't know what the rules are for TfL "Ticket Stops" - i.e. how many days in advance they're allowed to sell the ticket - but my guess is that it is the same as the National Rail rules, i.e. 7 days in advance. I've only ever bought one for 'tomorrow', beyond that I wouldn't bother in case plans change - but for a whole host of scenarios I can certainly see why buying several days in advance might come in handy. |
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