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#1
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On 19 Nov, 17:07, Mr Thant
wrote: On 19 Nov, 16:37, wrote: I did wonder whether I could touch-in at the Liverpool St gatelines, and then just leave the journey unresolved as it was the last journey I intended to make that day. You get charged £4 when you touch in, even if you've already reached your cap. This gets reverted to zero when you touch out. The intermediate validator trick works because it refunds the £4 without marking you as having touched out. The way to do it on your journey would be to take the Central Line to Stratford, touch one of the validators on the platform and take the direct Stratford-Stansted service to Harlow. You will be defrauding NXEA of the Stratford-Tottenham fare, of course. U It shouldn't be anything to do with fraud. It ought to be possible to get the appropriate fare without doing ridiculous things like getting off during the journey, particularly if the service is infrequent. This is only going to get worse and I don't understand why it isn't being addressed. |
#2
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On Wed, 19 Nov 2008, MIG wrote:
On 19 Nov, 17:07, Mr Thant wrote: On 19 Nov, 16:37, wrote: I did wonder whether I could touch-in at the Liverpool St gatelines, and then just leave the journey unresolved as it was the last journey I intended to make that day. You get charged £4 when you touch in, even if you've already reached your cap. This gets reverted to zero when you touch out. The intermediate validator trick works because it refunds the £4 without marking you as having touched out. The way to do it on your journey would be to take the Central Line to Stratford, touch one of the validators on the platform and take the direct Stratford-Stansted service to Harlow. You will be defrauding NXEA of the Stratford-Tottenham fare, of course. It shouldn't be anything to do with fraud. It ought to be possible to get the appropriate fare without doing ridiculous things like getting off during the journey, particularly if the service is infrequent. This is only going to get worse and I don't understand why it isn't being addressed. I think the strict answer is that the appropriate fare for a journey from Liverpool Street to Harlow for the holder of a Z1-4 PAYG cap *is* the price of a single from Liverpool Street to Harlow. A PAYG cap is not a travelcard, and doesn't entitle you to tickets from a zone boundary. Rather, it's a form of special offer from TfL - spend a certain amount on travel on their network, get the rest free. Consider that if you have a Z12 travelcard, you would be perfectly entitled to enter the TfL network at Langdon Park and exit it at Finsbury Park without touching in or out (both stations beingungated, so this is physically possible). But if you had a PAYG card with a Z12 cap, AIUI, you wouldn't - you still have to touch in and out, even though you won't be charged for the trip. Now, you could certainly argue that the rules *should* allow you to buy boundary zone tickets on top of a PAYG cap, and if they did, that there should be a way to use it. But that's a different story. tom -- uk.local groups TO BE RENAMED uk.lunatic.fringe groups |
#3
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Tom Anderson wrote:
I think the strict answer is that the appropriate fare for a journey from Liverpool Street to Harlow for the holder of a Z1-4 PAYG cap *is* the price of a single from Liverpool Street to Harlow. A PAYG cap is not a travelcard, and doesn't entitle you to tickets from a zone boundary. Rather, it's a form of special offer from TfL - spend a certain amount on travel on their network, get the rest free. But capping is valid everywhere that PAYG is accepted, which includes both TfL and non-TfL services - including a portion of the OP's route. -- David of Broadway temporarily in Paris then back in New York |
#4
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On 19 Nov, 21:47, David of Broadway
wrote: But capping is valid everywhere that PAYG is accepted, which includes both TfL and non-TfL services - including a portion of the OP's route. But you are perfectly entitled to use the cap to get to TTK. What you can't do is use it to get a discount on the long distance fare, which is what not getting off the train amounts to. U |
#5
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Mr Thant wrote:
On 19 Nov, 21:47, David of Broadway wrote: But capping is valid everywhere that PAYG is accepted, which includes both TfL and non-TfL services - including a portion of the OP's route. But you are perfectly entitled to use the cap to get to TTK. What you can't do is use it to get a discount on the long distance fare, which is what not getting off the train amounts to. I was merely replying to Mr. Anderson's suggestion that capping is a special offer for TfL services. In fact, capping is available everywhere that PAYG is offered, TfL and non-TfL alike, as long as the entire trip is available on PAYG. -- David of Broadway |
#6
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On Nov 20, 6:54*am, David of Broadway
wrote: Mr Thant wrote: On 19 Nov, 21:47, David of Broadway wrote: But capping is valid everywhere that PAYG is accepted, which includes both TfL and non-TfL services - including a portion of the OP's route. But you are perfectly entitled to use the cap to get to TTK. What you can't do is use it to get a discount on the long distance fare, which is what not getting off the train amounts to. I was merely replying to Mr. Anderson's suggestion that capping is a special offer for TfL services. *In fact, capping is available everywhere that PAYG is offered, TfL and non-TfL alike, as long as the entire trip is available on PAYG. I think that capping is a distraction here. There is a far greater and more general problem of having to get off trains to use Oyster to avoid paying the excessive fares that are applied to punish people who use cash where PAYG is valid. Or are we going to have a situation where the cash fare from just outside London will be dramatically cheaper than the cash fare for the part of the route on which PAYG is accepted? |
#7
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On Thu, 20 Nov 2008, David of Broadway wrote:
Mr Thant wrote: On 19 Nov, 21:47, David of Broadway wrote: But capping is valid everywhere that PAYG is accepted, which includes both TfL and non-TfL services - including a portion of the OP's route. But you are perfectly entitled to use the cap to get to TTK. What you can't do is use it to get a discount on the long distance fare, which is what not getting off the train amounts to. I was merely replying to Mr. Anderson's suggestion that capping is a special offer for TfL services. In fact, capping is available everywhere that PAYG is offered, TfL and non-TfL alike, as long as the entire trip is available on PAYG. It is. But i don't see how that's incompatible with it being a special offer! tom -- skin thinking |
#8
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On Nov 19, 6:48*pm, Tom Anderson wrote:
On Wed, 19 Nov 2008, MIG wrote: On 19 Nov, 17:07, Mr Thant wrote: On 19 Nov, 16:37, wrote: I did wonder whether I could touch-in at the Liverpool St gatelines, and then just leave the journey unresolved as it was the last journey I intended to make that day. You get charged £4 when you touch in, even if you've already reached your cap. This gets reverted to zero when you touch out. The intermediate validator trick works because it refunds the £4 without marking you as having touched out. The way to do it on your journey would be to take the Central Line to Stratford, touch one of the validators on the platform and take the direct Stratford-Stansted service to Harlow. You will be defrauding NXEA of the Stratford-Tottenham fare, of course. It shouldn't be anything to do with fraud. *It ought to be possible to get the appropriate fare without doing ridiculous things like getting off during the journey, particularly if the service is infrequent. This is only going to get worse and I don't understand why it isn't being addressed. I think the strict answer is that the appropriate fare for a journey from Liverpool Street to Harlow for the holder of a Z1-4 PAYG cap *is* the price of a single from Liverpool Street to Harlow. A PAYG cap is not a travelcard, and doesn't entitle you to tickets from a zone boundary. Rather, it's a form of special offer from TfL - spend a certain amount on travel on their network, get the rest free. Consider that if you have a Z12 travelcard, you would be perfectly entitled to enter the TfL network at Langdon Park and exit it at Finsbury Park without touching in or out (both stations beingungated, so this is physically possible). But if you had a PAYG card with a Z12 cap, AIUI, you wouldn't - you still have to touch in and out, even though you won't be charged for the trip. Now, you could certainly argue that the rules *should* allow you to buy boundary zone tickets on top of a PAYG cap, and if they did, that there should be a way to use it. But that's a different story. The other side of the "special offer" is that TfL want to encourage people to use Oyster, which will ultimately reduce costs, automatically collect more money and give them comprehensive data about travel patterns. People who won't use Oyster get punished for not cooperating*. Maybe that's fair enough. But people who are cooperating with what TfL wants, and are using Oyster for the part of the journey that they can use it for, can't be persuaded to do any more by being punished. It's more likely to be counterproductive and leave them feeling ripped off. *By being charged cash penalty fares way above what cash fares would have increased to by now. |
#9
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On 19 Nov, 17:55, MIG wrote:
*It ought to be possible to get the appropriate fare without doing ridiculous things like getting off during the journey, I occasionally have to travel from Fulwel to Barons Court during the morming peak. I have found the cheapest way is to buy a single from Fulwel to Gunnersbury and make sure I am by the right door when I arrive there, so I can hop off, touch my Oyster in on the platform validator, and hop back on the same train again to go onwards to Barons Court. I've never been left behind yet (although I do end up standing the rest of the way). Jon |
#10
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On Nov 20, 2:14*pm, Jon wrote:
On 19 Nov, 17:55, MIG wrote: **It ought to be possible to get the appropriate fare without doing ridiculous things like getting off during the journey, I occasionally have to travel from Fulwel to Barons Court during the morming peak. I have found the cheapest way is to buy a single from Fulwel to Gunnersbury and make sure I am by the right door when I arrive there, so I can hop off, touch my Oyster in on the platform validator, and hop back on the same train again to go onwards to Barons Court. I've never been left behind yet (although I do end up standing the rest of the way). Jon Most of LU doesn't have platform validators, unfortunately, and if it became normal, there would probably be safety implications to everyone jumping off. Is the Gunnersbury one a legacy from before LO where one might have changed trains from non-Oyster to Oyster? Strange that there is generally better provision for people changing trains than for people staying on the same train. |
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