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-   -   Taxi insurance for multiple people? (https://www.londonbanter.co.uk/london-transport/10480-taxi-insurance-multiple-people.html)

Tom Anderson February 27th 10 01:01 AM

Taxi insurance for multiple people?
 
On Fri, 26 Feb 2010, wrote:

On 26.02.10 18:30, Steve Fitzgerald wrote:
In message
,
Mizter T writes

Agreed to some extent, as setting down is so much slower as there is a
financial transaction to perform. Another way of reducing the impact
of this might perhaps be for taxis to accept Oyster PAYG?

Err, see what started this thread - giving shifty minicab drivers the
ability to devour your Oyster PAYG credit probably ain't a winning
idea.

I should get round to offer the counterpoint to the above, if only to
balance things out.


I'm sure someone will be along shortly to point out that a Taxi driver
isn't a 'shifty minicab driver'.

Apples and Oranges innit?


Some Taxi drivers themselves are extremely shifty.


Not the ones who drive automatics, though.

tom

--
Nothing endures but change. -- Heraclitus

Mizter T February 27th 10 01:20 AM

Taxi insurance for multiple people?
 

On Feb 27, 2:01*am, Tom Anderson wrote:

On Fri, 26 Feb 2010, wrote:

On 26.02.10 18:30, Steve Fitzgerald wrote:


Mizter T writes


Agreed to some extent, as setting down is so much slower as there
is a financial transaction to perform. *Another way of reducing the
impact of this might perhaps be for taxis to accept Oyster PAYG?


Err, see what started this thread - giving shifty minicab drivers the
ability to devour your Oyster PAYG credit probably ain't a winning
idea.


I should get round to offer the counterpoint to the above, if only to
balance things out.


I'm sure someone will be along shortly to point out that a Taxi driver
isn't a 'shifty minicab driver'.


Apples and Oranges innit?


Some Taxi drivers themselves are extremely shifty.


Not the ones who drive automatics, though.


Very good - and indeed most drive automatics I believe. So how many
shifty Taxi drivers are there out there?

[email protected] February 27th 10 10:28 AM

Taxi insurance for multiple people?
 
In article
,
(Mizter T) wrote:

black cabs (proper Taxis, whatever you want to call them).


ITYM "Hackney Carriages". HTH, HAND, etc.

--
Colin Rosenstiel

Paul Terry[_2_] February 27th 10 04:01 PM

Taxi insurance for multiple people?
 
In message , Ian Jelf
writes

In message . li, Tom
Anderson writes


On Fri, 26 Feb 2010, wrote:


On 26.02.10 18:30, Steve Fitzgerald wrote:
Some Taxi drivers themselves are extremely shifty.


Not the ones who drive automatics, though.


Can we now expect a clutch of comments like this?


I had hoped the topic was exhausted ...
--
Paul Terry

Steve Dulieu February 27th 10 07:17 PM

Taxi insurance for multiple people?
 

"Paul Terry" wrote in message
...
In message , Ian Jelf
writes

In message . li, Tom
Anderson writes


On Fri, 26 Feb 2010, wrote:


On 26.02.10 18:30, Steve Fitzgerald wrote:
Some Taxi drivers themselves are extremely shifty.


Not the ones who drive automatics, though.


Can we now expect a clutch of comments like this?


I had hoped the topic was exhausted ...


Nah, not even out of first gear yet...
--
Cheers, Steve.
Change jealous to sad to reply.


Neil Williams February 28th 10 05:34 PM

Taxi insurance for multiple people?
 
On Fri, 26 Feb 2010 09:55:42 -0800 (PST), Mizter T
wrote:

Err, see what started this thread - giving shifty minicab drivers the
ability to devour your Oyster PAYG credit probably ain't a winning
idea.


I was referring more to black cab drivers.

Neil

--
Neil Williams
Put my first name before the at to reply.

Neil Williams February 28th 10 05:39 PM

Taxi insurance for multiple people?
 
On Fri, 26 Feb 2010 18:30:12 +0000, Steve Fitzgerald
] wrote:

I'm sure someone will be along shortly to point out that a Taxi driver
isn't a 'shifty minicab driver'.

Apples and Oranges innit?


It can be elsewhere as well. In Milton Keynes, I find that there are
far more "bad apples" among the hackney carriage drivers[1] than the
private hire ones.

[1] By no means all, by no means even the majority. But it does seem
that if you get in a hackney carriage late at night from the centre
that you have to insist on the use of the meter, and some even refuse
then. During the day they seem to be fine, though, and while the
private hire cars don't use meters, the fares are extremely consistent
(I think they're zonal, but I'm not sure).

Neil

--
Neil Williams
Put my first name before the at to reply.

[email protected] February 28th 10 08:43 PM

Taxi insurance for multiple people?
 
In article ,
(Neil Williams) wrote:

On Fri, 26 Feb 2010 18:30:12 +0000, Steve Fitzgerald
] wrote:

I'm sure someone will be along shortly to point out that a Taxi driver
isn't a 'shifty minicab driver'.

Apples and Oranges innit?


It can be elsewhere as well. In Milton Keynes, I find that there are
far more "bad apples" among the hackney carriage drivers[1] than the
private hire ones.

[1] By no means all, by no means even the majority. But it does seem
that if you get in a hackney carriage late at night from the centre
that you have to insist on the use of the meter, and some even refuse
then. During the day they seem to be fine, though, and while the
private hire cars don't use meters, the fares are extremely consistent
(I think they're zonal, but I'm not sure).


Interesting. In Cambridge they all use the meter for journeys within the
City. But then most taxi firms also operate hire cars.

Refusing to use the meter within the Borough boundary is a criminal
offence and should be reported to the police. Take the cab and driver's
badge numbers.

--
Colin Rosenstiel

Paul Terry[_2_] March 1st 10 07:02 AM

Taxi insurance for multiple people?
 
In message ,
writes

Interesting. In Cambridge they all use the meter for journeys within the
City. But then most taxi firms also operate hire cars.

Refusing to use the meter within the Borough boundary is a criminal
offence and should be reported to the police. Take the cab and driver's
badge numbers.


Whereas in London it is an offence for a licensed PHV to be fitted with
a meter.

--
Paul Terry

Mike Hughes[_2_] March 1st 10 12:16 PM

Taxi insurance for multiple people?
 
In message ,
writes
In article ,
(Neil Williams) wrote:

On Fri, 26 Feb 2010 18:30:12 +0000, Steve Fitzgerald
] wrote:

I'm sure someone will be along shortly to point out that a Taxi driver
isn't a 'shifty minicab driver'.

Apples and Oranges innit?


It can be elsewhere as well. In Milton Keynes, I find that there are
far more "bad apples" among the hackney carriage drivers[1] than the
private hire ones.

[1] By no means all, by no means even the majority. But it does seem
that if you get in a hackney carriage late at night from the centre
that you have to insist on the use of the meter, and some even refuse
then. During the day they seem to be fine, though, and while the
private hire cars don't use meters, the fares are extremely consistent
(I think they're zonal, but I'm not sure).


Interesting. In Cambridge they all use the meter for journeys within the
City. But then most taxi firms also operate hire cars.

Refusing to use the meter within the Borough boundary is a criminal
offence and should be reported to the police. Take the cab and driver's
badge numbers.

Not strictly true. You can agree a fare *lower* than the maximum
permitted on the fare chart and they would not have to put the meter on.
Having said that how could you prove that the agreed fare is lower
unless you put the meter on?

In practice what happens in the (rare?) cases that such an agreement is
reached most drivers (at least in London) will run the meter up to the
agreed amount then stop it. They will then continue the journey with the
meter not set - all perfectly legal.

(I do this in the early hours of the morning if I get someone who wants
to go to Heathrow at around the same time I want to go home, offering
them a discount off the normal fare. I then stop the meter and take a
print out which records the start time, finish time, distance travelled
and the fare. That is my proof of what was on the meter?

Some drivers are not so honest. This does seem to be more prevalent
outside London as getting a badge doesn't take 3 years and isn't valued
by the drivers as much.

--
Mike Hughes
A Taxi driver licensed for London and Brighton
at home in Tarring, West Sussex, England
Interested in American trains real and model?
Look here
http://mikehughes627.fotopic.net/


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