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Old February 12th 05, 01:36 PM posted to uk.railway,uk.transport.london
tim tim is offline
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First recorded activity at LondonBanter: Oct 2004
Posts: 36
Default Future of CDRs and NR season tickets in TfL zones?


"Stephen Osborn" wrote in message
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tim wrote:
"Nick" wrote in message
...

"Dave Arquati" wrote in message
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...

The National Rail fares system is a complicated mess at the moment, and
hardly sets a good example for London to revert to.

...

Apart from a few anomalies, it isn't that complicated at all



It's complicated in the sense that all journeys are individually
priced. It is thus impossible for someone to sell you a ticket


Every can of beans / newspaper / magazine / item of clothing / etc you buy
is individually priced and you cope with that don't you.


It's not a question of coping, it's a question of costs of
distribution/sale. When buying a tangible item there is inherently
a cost of distribution in getting the goods on the shelf. adding to this
cost by having to this stick a little price sticker does not make much
difference. A travel ticket has no cost of distribution other than
that of calculating the price, making the price calcualtion more
difficult makes a bigger difference.

from A to B without them having a complete database (thick
book or computer disk) of fares from every A to every B. To
be able to sell tickes for a zonal system all you need is a map
on the wall.

Effectively, this means that to buy a ticket for my journey I
have to queue up at the station. Were a complete zonal system
in operation accross all modes, I could just go and buy a ticket
from my local newsagents (as I could for LT journeys).

tim


1. Assumption that there will be a queue at the station and not at the
newsagents.


so go to another news agents.

Whenever I buy a ticket (an extension as I have a Z1-3 annual) I do so
off-peak and almost invariably there is no queue.


aren't you lucky.

tim