Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London. |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#15
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Apr 20, 6:39*pm, Paul Corfield wrote:
On Sun, 19 Apr 2009 15:40:02 -0700 (PDT), Mizter T wrote: On Apr 19, 8:06*pm, martin wrote: When a tube station or line is closed for planned work (or there's other unplanned disruption), and TfL advise that tube tickets will be accepted on local buses, how does the Oyster PAYG system cope? Nothing changes. Not necessarily true. *There is a concept of "continuation" so that if people are forced to exit a station and use a bus to reach their end point the gate or validator will set an appropriate "bit" in the card which will then flag any subsequent bus journey as a continuation and therefore to be refunded or waived. *It's more to deal with a serious incident where a tube service is suspended and people are forced to leave the train service and continue via other means. Wood Green tube's closed this weekend, so instead of walking to the station, I'm taking a bus to Turnpike Lane. While the cost of two PAYG singles already take me beyond the z1-3 cap (with a 16-25 railcard), I'm curious to know what would happen to the bus fare I didn't reach the cap. In truth I'd think that trying to devise a procedure whereby passengers were not charged for travelling on regular local bus services in such situations would be nightmarishly complex and fraught with untold potential problems. It might be complex but it has been thought of. *In addition stations can "alias" for one that might be closed. For example if St Johns Wood was closed for some reason Baker Street could be to be its alias and thus Travelcards valid to Zone 2 but not Zone 1 would be accepted by the gates. PAYG charging would be based to Zone 2 levels (for those travelling from the north of St Johns Wood). *This can also be used when stations are closed post event e.g. Hyde Park Corner and people are advised to enter the system elsewhere. Rail replacement bus services are however effectively free to holders of Oyster cards. Correct but if there is a rail replacement bus on a section of a line where it joins tube services at both ends then the stations at each end of the suspension will become OSIs and will recognise the exit from the station where people boarded buses as part of a continued journey. Upon final exit a new charge is not created - the gate looks back through the journey history to the original entry point to determine the fare due. I know this because I referred an issue from a query on another group to someone in LUL who followed up with the Oyster Control Centre to see if the correct settings had been reached the gates at each end of the rail replacement service. Is the continuation affected by what you do in between, eg does it require a touch on the replacement bus ... is it discontinued if you touch on something else, like a regular bus? I know it is fashionable for people to say Oyster is a load of old crap but there are some very sophisticated functionality inside it. *It will become much more complex when it has to deal with NR PAYG later this year. *And I regret I cannot take up the cudgels for anyone who feels the system has not worked as described before you all post your complaints in response to this explanation! I think it seems to pretty much work as designed, but I would question some of the deliberate implementation decisions that have been made and, more importantly, parallel decisions regarding cash fares. |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
In the Oyster age, what does "Tickets valid on local buses" mean? | London Transport | |||
Validity of Local Authority "Over 60s" free bus passes ? | London Transport | |||
Local paper "Save Our Seats" (Met) campaign | London Transport | |||
Local/Express bus routes | London Transport |