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London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London. |
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[x-posted to uk.transport.london]
On Jan 25, 12:07*pm, "John Clausen" wrote: On Saturday I travelled around London on tubes and National Rail using my Oyster card instead of a paper travelcard. My advice to others thinking of doing the same is: don't bother. Instead of capping at £7.00 it kept charging me until there was no credit left, over £17 in total. Some credit has been put back but I have still been charged £14.60. There were three of us travelling together and we all got print outs at Victoria in the afternoon. Various parts of the journey were ignored including a trip to Harrow on the Hill where we touched out and back in again at Marylebone and the same at Harrow. So the system thought we had made a journey from Paddington to Vauxhall taking 95 minutes which is over the time limit. The bloke at Victoria suggested that we hadn't been touching in and out properly but then how would the gates have opened? The fact that three of us had the same problem suggests that it is system failure rather than user error. Has anyone else had similar problems? I will not be using Oyster as a travelcard again in the near future. If you were willing to provide the details of your journeys, then we might be able to untangle what happened. I think the thing that's at the root of such Oyster problems is the out-of-station interchange (OSI) issue (which we're currently discussing in another current utl thread). The kinda ironic thing is that it's supposed to be beneficial for passengers - in essence what happens is that Oyster automatically combines journeys together, so say a Clapham Junction to Victoria journey on NR would be combined with the subsequent Tube journey from Victoria to Kings Cross, which could then be combined with a Kings Cross to Alexandra Palace NR journey - in other words the whole thing would be treated as one through journey for charging purposes. That's great, however the problems surface because the system assumes someone is making a through journey when they touch-in at an OSI location (e.g. at Waterloo Underground station) within a certain time period from touching-out (e.g. at Waterloo NR station). If they're making a straightforward journey then that's fine. If however that passenger spends a period of time doing something else - leaving the station, getting some food, whatever - then the problem can be that the overall journey 'times out', i.e. it the maximum journey time that the system allows for the journey (which varies) is exceeded. It's at this point that things go skew-whiff, and the system applies the 'maximum charge' which exists to discourage misuse (the exact mechanism is a bit more complex, but that's a summary). I've a feeling that since Oyster's coverage expanded onto NR in London we're going to be hearing a lot more of this here (on these groups) and also elsewhere. I dare suggest that it's more likely to hit rail enthusiasts making atypical journeys, but it can snag others too. |