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#1
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On 2008-12-18 19:38:17 +0000, Mizter T said:
On 18 Dec, 16:52, Robert wrote: On 2008-12-18 13:27:27 +0000, Mizter T said: On 18 Dec, 11:11, Robert wrote: (much snipping) This could be adopted for all sorts of other transactions. even ruggedised to work on buses. The buses in Munich are fitted with coin operated ticket issuing machines and I have never yet found one that hasn't worked. Do they issue change? I don't know if all of them do. The buses on my local route were run by a bus company on the edge of Munich which took part in the transport co-operative, but ran routes further out into the country. These machines did give change, as long as the 'change' side of the machine had any money in it. If not then it defaulted to exact fare only. In the centre the machines on buses run by the MVG (the city run bus, tram and U-bahn organisation) looked to be slightly different. I never used one as I had my inner-city season ticket for such journeys so I don't know if they gave change. The next time I go there I'll have a look. Thanks for the details. Despite taking an interest in matters transportational, I invariably manage to miss or look straight through loads of such things when when I'm visiting somewhere else. I am not familiar with this 'Oyster' thing, so I have no experience of the reduced dwell times. If dwell times do cause a significant cost, then the dwell time can be reduced to zero (i.e., excess time above that required for getting on and off) by bringing back the conductor.. .. Oyster has basically been revolutionary on London's buses. Dwell times have been greatly reduced, as hardly anyone pays cash on board any more - I'm serious, it is very rare to find people actually buying a ticket from the driver (and when they do it's quick as there's a flat cash fare of £2). Reduced dwell times means faster and more reliable journeys, leading to a more reliable service that is far more attractive to passengers - in essence buses are faster and more frequent. Snipped It's a great system, and really does make a difference to bus travel. Regarding conductors - it is simply very expensive to put conductors on buses, and where smartcard ticketing exists it would be an unjustifiable luxury. Thank you for the explanation - I didn't realise that it was a flat fare system. Flat fares on buses, yes (not on the Tube, as I mentioned). Other smartcard systems elsewhere in the world work do however work on a tap- in and tap-out policy, which means that the fares don't have to be flat. This could I suppose be implemented in London but it would be a hassle after everyone having got used to flat-fares - the alternative of having to tell the driver what fare you want before having your card validated as appropriate would be a massively retrograde step and recreate a situation similar to the slow pay-as-you-board days of old. These days people just touch-in on the machine next to the driver as they board - all the driver needs to do is verify that everyone is doing just that. (And on bendy buses passengers can board by any door as there are Oyster scanners next to all three - roving teams of inspectors travel on bendy buses doing random ticket checks.) One thing I didn't mention is the daily capping system. On buses this is simple - each journey costs 90p, but the cost of travelling by bus in any one day (i.e. 0430 to 0429) is capped at £3 - so in other words your fourth bus journey will cost you 30p, and your fifth and any beyond that are 'free'. This capping system also applies to using the Tube - and indeed the Tube *and* buses - but it does get rather more complicated as both the time of travel and in the case of the Tube the zones travelled through all affect the price cap that gets applied. That said, so long as you always touch-in and touch-out on the Tube (and the few rail services that accept Oyster pay-as-you-go) then the cheapest daily price cap will be applied automatically. Thank you again. Whenever I go to London I use a One Day Travelcard and just feed it through the slots in the gates. As a result I have never bothered to find out how Oyster works. -- Robert |
#2
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![]() Thank you again. Whenever I go to London I use a One Day Travelcard Get an Oyster. If you happen to make fewer journeys than the price of a ODT, you save. If you make more, it's capped anyway. It spares you having to decide in advance which zones you want, and you don't need to queue to get it. The things where a travelcard is bundled into a day return (which Chiltern have done for a while, but Virgin now seem to do as well) are marginal: they're six zone, which is good if you're going to use it but less good value if you aren't. And I'm never entirely sure (perhaps someone could comment) on if they include buses. ian |
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#4
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On 19 Dec, 03:15, "Mr.G" wrote:
In article , wrote: The things where a travelcard is bundled into a day return (which Chiltern have done for a while, but Virgin now seem to do as well) are marginal: they're six zone, which is good if you're going to use it but less good value if you aren't. *And I'm never entirely sure (perhaps someone could comment) on if they include buses. Yes they do. Also include all NR in the zones, which is important if you have to go to any southern suburbs. Oyster PAYG, with capping, only applies to LU, buses and a few selected NR routes. |
#6
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![]() wrote The things where a travelcard is bundled into a day return (which Chiltern have done for a while, but Virgin now seem to do as well) are marginal: they're six zone, which is good if you're going to use it but less good value if you aren't. And I'm never entirely sure (perhaps someone could comment) on if they include buses. If your National Rail journey is via a central London terminus the off-peak ODTC costs about the same as a CDR plus two Zone 1 tube journeys on Oyster. So if your travel in London is more than this, and especiall;y if it includes any other National Rail journeys, for which Oyster P&G is not valid, then the ODTC is better value. However, if you change from National Rail to TfL at a suburban station (Upminster, Barking, Ealing Broadway, etc) and then only use Oyster on TfL within London, then a CDR plus Oyster is the answer. Peter |
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#8
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![]() On 19 Dec, 01:44, wrote: Thank you again. Whenever I go to London I use a One Day Travelcard Get an Oyster. If you happen to make fewer journeys than the price of a ODT, you save. If you make more, it's capped anyway. It spares you having to decide in advance which zones you want, and you don't need to queue to get it. In situations such as Robert's using Oyster PAYG is not necessarily cheaper than an 'out-boundary' Day Travelcard, but it could be. I shall elaborate... The things where a travelcard is bundled into a day return (which Chiltern have done for a while, but Virgin now seem to do as well) are marginal: they're six zone, which is good if you're going to use it but less good value if you aren't. And I'm never entirely sure (perhaps someone could comment) on if they include buses. (As has already been confirmed out-boundary Travelcards are valid on buses - indeed these days any Travelcard *regardless of zones* is valid on any red London bus anywhere in Greater London and sometimes just beyond too, i.e. zones don't matter on buses any more.) The bundled Travelcard plus day return is known in internal fares lingo as an 'out-boundary' Day Travelcard - that is a Travelcard issued outside the boundary of the London zones - and is, as you say, a Travelcard bundled with a day return. And it's by no means just a Chiltern (or indeed Virgin) thing. The Off-peak version of this ticket has existed since the mid/late 80's and was a Network SouthEast innovation. The Peak version was introduced far more recently (and in line with the fares simplification is now known as the Anytime Day Travelcard). Both versions are available from any station in the former NSE area, and intercity TOCs such as Virgin also make them available from start points further afield. The way NSE priced (off-peak) out-boundary Day Travelcards meant they didn't cost a great deal more than the cost of a CDR to London - i.e. the premium for the Travelcard bit wasn't much. Since privatisation, TOCs have adopted a more market based approach and that can mean that an out-boundary Day Travelcard can cost rather more - i.e. the premium for the Travelcard bit over the OPDR is greater. (Off-peak Day Return aka OPDR being a CDR in new money of course.) Nonetheless it's still quite possible that an out-boundary Day Travelcard will be cheaper than buying a OPDR and then using Oyster PAYG within London - the critical thing being how much travelling around London one is planning on doing (i.e. how many Tube and bus journeys). One quick thing to note is that out-boundary *Day* Travelcards are only available in zones 1-6 flavour (season Travelcards are however different - you can for example get a Banbury to zones 456 season, though not a Banbury to zones 123 season - if you wanted that you'd have to get Banbury to zones 123456). Back to day fares - looking at Reading to London (which is the journey I think Robert makes): ----- OPDR - £14.20 (with Railcard £9.40) Day Travelcard - £18.90 (with Railcard £12.50) ----- So (without a Railcard) the premium for a Travelcard is £4.70. One needs to weigh this up against what one would pay using Oyster PAYG - a single zone 1 Tube journey being £1.50 (at any time), a single bus journey being 90p. So if all a passenger was doing was making two zone 1 Tube journeys, or a few bus journeys, then they'd be better off with Oyster. The off-peak Oyster PAYG price cap for journeys in zones 1 and 2 is £4.80, and the cap for bus journeys only is £3 - so actually if you weren't sure what you was doing but knew you would be staying within zones 1&2 then using Oyster PAYG might well save you money, and would at most cost you just 10p more than the out-boundary Day Travelcard. With a Railcard then the premium for a Travelcard is £3.10 - it's probably easier for most Railcard holders to get this. However, just to spice things up, holders of all Railcards *apart from Network Railcards* can actually take advantage of a discounted Oyster PAYG daily capping rates - though Railcard holders need to actually go to a Tube ticket office and activate their Oyster card to take advantage of this [1]. If they were to do this then the Railcard-discounted Oyster PAYG off- peak cap for journeys in zones 1&2 is just £3.10 - this is, as you can see, exactly the same as the premium paid for an out-boundary Day Travelcard. So whether it's cheaper to just buy an out-boundary Day Travelcard or instead get a normal return to London and then use Oyster PAYG depends on a number of factors... ----- (1) What the difference between an OPDR and an outboundary Travelcard actually is - this varies between TOCs. (2) Whether one is planning on just travelling within zones 1&2 or further afield - if the latter then the out-boundary Travelcard will almost certainly be better value. (3) How many journeys one is planning on doing - if just a couple of Tube trips then Oyster PAYG will probably be better cheaper. (4) Again if one is just travelling on buses then Oyster PAYG will probably be cheaper with its daily bus-only cap of just £3. (5) Whether one is planning on travelling on National Rail services within London south of the river (for example to Greenwich), as Oyster PAYG is not yet valid on these routes [2] - if so then an out-boundary Travelcard should be purchased. (6) Whether one holds a Network Railcard - for whatever reason the discounted Oyster PAYG daily capping rates are not available for Network Railcards, so an out-boundary Travelcard is likely to be the best choice (unless you're just making a couple of bus journeys). ----- In Robert's case he could possibly end up saving a little bit of money but it depends what Railcard he holds. If it is a Senior Railcard then (a) if he ever goes to London and only travels by bus or only makes say one Tube and one bus journey, and (b) can be bothered to get the Railcard discount loaded on an Oyster card, then he might save a little cash, though to be honest it is so marginal I wouldn't get very excited about it! Anyway, sorry I've made this all sound very complicated, I was only intending on writing a short post as well! Well there you go - that's a fairly comprehensive run down of all the various factors that come in to play here. ----- [1] See page 20 of the TfL fares and tickets guide for more info on Railcard discounted daily price caps (PDF): http://www.tfl.gov.uk/assets/downloa...s-zones1-6.pdf (note that this is the 2008 version - fares go up a bit in January) [2] This map shows which National Rail routes in London accept Oyster PAYG (PDF): http://www.tfl.gov.uk/assets/downloa...onal-rail..pdf |
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#10
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On 2008-12-19 15:13:16 +0000, Mizter T said:
On 19 Dec, 01:44, wrote: Thank you again. Whenever I go to London I use a One Day Travelcard Get an Oyster. If you happen to make fewer journeys than the price of a ODT, you save. If you make more, it's capped anyway. It spares you having to decide in advance which zones you want, and you don't need to queue to get it. In situations such as Robert's using Oyster PAYG is not necessarily cheaper than an 'out-boundary' Day Travelcard, but it could be. I shall elaborate... The things where a travelcard is bundled into a day return (which Chiltern have done for a while, but Virgin now seem to do as well) are marginal: they're six zone, which is good if you're going to use it but less good value if you aren't. And I'm never entirely sure (perhaps someone could comment) on if they include buses. (As has already been confirmed out-boundary Travelcards are valid on buses - indeed these days any Travelcard *regardless of zones* is valid on any red London bus anywhere in Greater London and sometimes just beyond too, i.e. zones don't matter on buses any more.) The bundled Travelcard plus day return is known in internal fares lingo as an 'out-boundary' Day Travelcard - that is a Travelcard issued outside the boundary of the London zones - and is, as you say, a Travelcard bundled with a day return. And it's by no means just a Chiltern (or indeed Virgin) thing. The Off-peak version of this ticket has existed since the mid/late 80's and was a Network SouthEast innovation. The Peak version was introduced far more recently (and in line with the fares simplification is now known as the Anytime Day Travelcard). Both versions are available from any station in the former NSE area, and intercity TOCs such as Virgin also make them available from start points further afield. The way NSE priced (off-peak) out-boundary Day Travelcards meant they didn't cost a great deal more than the cost of a CDR to London - i.e. the premium for the Travelcard bit wasn't much. Since privatisation, TOCs have adopted a more market based approach and that can mean that an out-boundary Day Travelcard can cost rather more - i.e. the premium for the Travelcard bit over the OPDR is greater. (Off-peak Day Return aka OPDR being a CDR in new money of course.) Nonetheless it's still quite possible that an out-boundary Day Travelcard will be cheaper than buying a OPDR and then using Oyster PAYG within London - the critical thing being how much travelling around London one is planning on doing (i.e. how many Tube and bus journeys). One quick thing to note is that out-boundary *Day* Travelcards are only available in zones 1-6 flavour (season Travelcards are however different - you can for example get a Banbury to zones 456 season, though not a Banbury to zones 123 season - if you wanted that you'd have to get Banbury to zones 123456). Back to day fares - looking at Reading to London (which is the journey I think Robert makes): ----- OPDR - £14.20 (with Railcard £9.40) Day Travelcard - £18.90 (with Railcard £12.50) ----- So (without a Railcard) the premium for a Travelcard is £4.70. One needs to weigh this up against what one would pay using Oyster PAYG - a single zone 1 Tube journey being £1.50 (at any time), a single bus journey being 90p. So if all a passenger was doing was making two zone 1 Tube journeys, or a few bus journeys, then they'd be better off with Oyster. The off-peak Oyster PAYG price cap for journeys in zones 1 and 2 is £4.80, and the cap for bus journeys only is £3 - so actually if you weren't sure what you was doing but knew you would be staying within zones 1&2 then using Oyster PAYG might well save you money, and would at most cost you just 10p more than the out-boundary Day Travelcard. With a Railcard then the premium for a Travelcard is £3.10 - it's probably easier for most Railcard holders to get this. However, just to spice things up, holders of all Railcards *apart from Network Railcards* can actually take advantage of a discounted Oyster PAYG daily capping rates - though Railcard holders need to actually go to a Tube ticket office and activate their Oyster card to take advantage of this [1]. If they were to do this then the Railcard-discounted Oyster PAYG off- peak cap for journeys in zones 1&2 is just £3.10 - this is, as you can see, exactly the same as the premium paid for an out-boundary Day Travelcard. So whether it's cheaper to just buy an out-boundary Day Travelcard or instead get a normal return to London and then use Oyster PAYG depends on a number of factors... ----- (1) What the difference between an OPDR and an outboundary Travelcard actually is - this varies between TOCs. (2) Whether one is planning on just travelling within zones 1&2 or further afield - if the latter then the out-boundary Travelcard will almost certainly be better value. (3) How many journeys one is planning on doing - if just a couple of Tube trips then Oyster PAYG will probably be better cheaper. (4) Again if one is just travelling on buses then Oyster PAYG will probably be cheaper with its daily bus-only cap of just £3. (5) Whether one is planning on travelling on National Rail services within London south of the river (for example to Greenwich), as Oyster PAYG is not yet valid on these routes [2] - if so then an out-boundary Travelcard should be purchased. (6) Whether one holds a Network Railcard - for whatever reason the discounted Oyster PAYG daily capping rates are not available for Network Railcards, so an out-boundary Travelcard is likely to be the best choice (unless you're just making a couple of bus journeys). ----- In Robert's case he could possibly end up saving a little bit of money but it depends what Railcard he holds. If it is a Senior Railcard then (a) if he ever goes to London and only travels by bus or only makes say one Tube and one bus journey, and (b) can be bothered to get the Railcard discount loaded on an Oyster card, then he might save a little cash, though to be honest it is so marginal I wouldn't get very excited about it! Anyway, sorry I've made this all sound very complicated, I was only intending on writing a short post as well! Well there you go - that's a fairly comprehensive run down of all the various factors that come in to play here. ----- [1] See page 20 of the TfL fares and tickets guide for more info on Railcard discounted daily price caps (PDF): http://www.tfl.gov.uk/assets/downloa...s-zones1-6.pdf (note that this is the 2008 version - fares go up a bit in January) [2] This map shows which National Rail routes in London accept Oyster PAYG (PDF): http://www.tfl.gov.uk/assets/downloa...-national-rail Thank you very much for explaining all that. Yes, I do indeed travel from Reading using a Senior Railcard and, mostly, travel by Tube from Paddington to my destination. This is often in Zones 1 or 2, but I do sometimes go Sarf ov the Rivver. The One-Day Off Peak card costs GBP 12.50 with my Railcard. I have been known to use buses too, certainly from Paddington to Oxford Street or nearby, but they lurch and sway and bounce and brake so sharply that I'd rather take a train or Tube if possible. I've just thought about my last 4 trips (all in the last 6 weeks). All were for pleasure, i.e., to meet family or friends, so not being able to get to Paddington before 10.00 was not a problem. One was to an address near Marylebone Station and back, so an Oyster would probably have been a better bet. 2 of the others were to Central London and we went to a couple of museums and went on to eat before we went home. In neither case was the itinerary planned in detail beforehand. I made about 4 Tube and 1 or 2 bus journeys on each trip. The 4th journey took me to Tulse Hill and back. So maybe an Oyster might be useful. But, to be frank, I had always assumed it was for people living /in/ London and I had no clue on how to get one in Reading and I never bothered to find out. Now I know! Thanks everyone. But it is yet another thing I have to manage, I would use it at the most once a month, so, on balance, I think I will stay with the Travelcard at the moment. Of, course, if the pricing changes dramatically, then it may well be worthwhile getting an Oyster. I am still amazed at the depth of knowledge posters to this group possess. -- Robert |
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