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London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London. |
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#1
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On 24/03/2012 11:10, Roland Perry wrote:
I'm only just catching up on the series, and watched the one about revenue inspectors yesterday. Doing some quick sums on the back of an envelope, it seems it costs them about as much to run the revenue inspectors as the fares they are failing to collect (£20m a year). In any event that's 1% of their turnover, and not the complete financial disaster they portray it as. Although I agree there's an element of "encouraging the others" so you have to been seen to be doing *something*. It spoilt what's otherwise a very good show which I think gives a good insight into what it's like from the inside (even if some of the staff play to the cameras a bit). Meanwhile, there was some speculation earlier about exactly how the chap was misusing his Oyster. They showed him touching in then out again (but staying in) which tricked the card into not registering the start of a journey. What they didn't show was how he was touching-in at a station closer to his destination, in order to be able to touch out (at a lower fare) at the destination without incurring a penalty for an unresolved journey. If I touch in twice at a National Rails station with my Oyster, will it be registered as a start of journey? |
#2
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On Sat, 24 Mar 2012 22:57:41 +0000, Tony Dragon
wrote: On 24/03/2012 11:10, Roland Perry wrote: I'm only just catching up on the series, and watched the one about revenue inspectors yesterday. Doing some quick sums on the back of an envelope, it seems it costs them about as much to run the revenue inspectors as the fares they are failing to collect (£20m a year). In any event that's 1% of their turnover, and not the complete financial disaster they portray it as. Although I agree there's an element of "encouraging the others" so you have to been seen to be doing *something*. It spoilt what's otherwise a very good show which I think gives a good insight into what it's like from the inside (even if some of the staff play to the cameras a bit). Meanwhile, there was some speculation earlier about exactly how the chap was misusing his Oyster. They showed him touching in then out again (but staying in) which tricked the card into not registering the start of a journey. What they didn't show was how he was touching-in at a station closer to his destination, in order to be able to touch out (at a lower fare) at the destination without incurring a penalty for an unresolved journey. If I touch in twice at a National Rails station with my Oyster, will it be registered as a start of journey? If you mean twice on entry then IIRC there has to be a minimum time between touches for the second one to count as it is an expected event for this to happen if e.g. a gate jams or someone thinks there has been no response to the touch. Unfortunately it isn't among the combination of touches dealt with in this FOI request :- http://www.whatdotheyknow.com/reques..._card_more_tha A quick Google suggests that, at least with buses, a second touch gives a signal to the driver (who will hopefully have seen it has been in the same person's hand on both occasions) but does not incur an extra charge. That seems to match my personal experience when the validator on a bus was either "dumb" or was overpowered by background noise. What happens at stations seems to depend on whether or not they are gated so I'll let someone else answer that. |
#3
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In message , at 05:18:08 on
Sun, 25 Mar 2012, Charles Ellson remarked: If I touch in twice at a National Rails station with my Oyster, will it be registered as a start of journey? If you mean twice on entry then IIRC there has to be a minimum time between touches for the second one to count as it is an expected event for this to happen if e.g. a gate jams or someone thinks there has been no response to the touch. Unfortunately it isn't among the combination of touches dealt with in this FOI request :- http://www.whatdotheyknow.com/reques..._card_more_tha A quick Google suggests that, at least with buses, a second touch gives a signal to the driver (who will hopefully have seen it has been in the same person's hand on both occasions) but does not incur an extra charge. That seems to match my personal experience when the validator on a bus was either "dumb" or was overpowered by background noise. What happens at stations seems to depend on whether or not they are gated so I'll let someone else answer that. If a station is gated, then the second touch won't work, because it's a measure to prevent "pass-back fraud", in other words handing your Oyster over the barriers to a friend so they can "share" it. If the station isn't gated, then pass-back fraud isn't an issue, but Oyster cards can't be shared (even legitimately) by two concurrent travellers, and more to the point the validators are two-way, so the rule of "Touch in at a validator then touch out at a [the same] validator" would apply. (see question 4 of the above FOI enquiry). viz: "Within two minutes of touching in .... it is not possible to touch out on a validator. The validator will perform a Continuation Entry, leaving the card with an open journey and the Entry Charge (maximum Oyster fare)." -- Roland Perry |
#4
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On 25/03/2012 09:44, Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 05:18:08 on Sun, 25 Mar 2012, Charles Ellson remarked: If I touch in twice at a National Rails station with my Oyster, will it be registered as a start of journey? If you mean twice on entry then IIRC there has to be a minimum time between touches for the second one to count as it is an expected event for this to happen if e.g. a gate jams or someone thinks there has been no response to the touch. Unfortunately it isn't among the combination of touches dealt with in this FOI request :- http://www.whatdotheyknow.com/reques..._card_more_tha A quick Google suggests that, at least with buses, a second touch gives a signal to the driver (who will hopefully have seen it has been in the same person's hand on both occasions) but does not incur an extra charge. That seems to match my personal experience when the validator on a bus was either "dumb" or was overpowered by background noise. What happens at stations seems to depend on whether or not they are gated so I'll let someone else answer that. If a station is gated, then the second touch won't work, because it's a measure to prevent "pass-back fraud", in other words handing your Oyster over the barriers to a friend so they can "share" it. If the station isn't gated, then pass-back fraud isn't an issue, but Oyster cards can't be shared (even legitimately) by two concurrent travellers, and more to the point the validators are two-way, so the rule of "Touch in at a validator then touch out at a [the same] validator" would apply. (see question 4 of the above FOI enquiry). viz: "Within two minutes of touching in .... it is not possible to touch out on a validator. The validator will perform a Continuation Entry, leaving the card with an open journey and the Entry Charge (maximum Oyster fare)." The reason I ask is because of the following list of events. I use the lift a my local station, the lift lobby has a sliding door that is controlled remotely (by video) from the normal gate line (in a different part of the station). There is a Oyster reader by this door. If the door is open I just touch in as normal. If I touch in & then have to alert them to open the door I sometimes am requested to touch in again (if the place is busy this might take a while) On occasions I get charged the maximum charge (no touch in). Is this because of the double touch in? I now make sure that I don't touch in until the door is open. For certain on on occasion when I touched in & the lift was not working, by the time I had walked back to the ticket office, struggled up the stairs, touched in at the normal gateline (they would not let me through otherwise) I got charged the maximum fare. A phone call allays got the excess refunded. |
#5
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Sorry, all, but does anybody know where I could see Channel 4's
"Dispatches" documentary about the Tube? Thanks in advance. |
#6
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In message , at 10:43:33 on Sun, 25 Mar
2012, " remarked: Sorry, all, but does anybody know where I could see Channel 4's "Dispatches" documentary about the Tube? Should be: http://www.channel4.com/programmes/dispatches/4od but it doesn't seem to have been selected for archiving. -- Roland Perry |
#7
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On Sun, 25 Mar 2012 11:43:38 +0100, Roland Perry
wrote: In message , at 10:43:33 on Sun, 25 Mar 2012, " remarked: Sorry, all, but does anybody know where I could see Channel 4's "Dispatches" documentary about the Tube? Should be: http://www.channel4.com/programmes/dispatches/4od but it doesn't seem to have been selected for archiving. alt.binaries.multimedia on Astraweb |
#8
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![]() "Roland Perry" wrote in message ... In message , at 10:43:33 on Sun, 25 Mar 2012, " remarked: Sorry, all, but does anybody know where I could see Channel 4's "Dispatches" documentary about the Tube? Should be: http://www.channel4.com/programmes/dispatches/4od but it doesn't seem to have been selected for archiving. It'll find it's way to More4 - 23 times tim |
#9
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![]() wrote in message ... Sorry, all, but does anybody know where I could see Channel 4's "Dispatches" documentary about the Tube? Thanks in advance. www.thebox.bz |
#10
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In message , at 10:30:45 on
Sun, 25 Mar 2012, Tony Dragon remarked: If I touch in twice at a National Rails station with my Oyster, will it be registered as a start of journey? If you mean twice on entry then IIRC there has to be a minimum time between touches for the second one to count as it is an expected event for this to happen if e.g. a gate jams or someone thinks there has been no response to the touch. Unfortunately it isn't among the combination of touches dealt with in this FOI request :- http://www.whatdotheyknow.com/reques..._card_more_tha A quick Google suggests that, at least with buses, a second touch gives a signal to the driver (who will hopefully have seen it has been in the same person's hand on both occasions) but does not incur an extra charge. That seems to match my personal experience when the validator on a bus was either "dumb" or was overpowered by background noise. What happens at stations seems to depend on whether or not they are gated so I'll let someone else answer that. If a station is gated, then the second touch won't work, because it's a measure to prevent "pass-back fraud", in other words handing your Oyster over the barriers to a friend so they can "share" it. If the station isn't gated, then pass-back fraud isn't an issue, but Oyster cards can't be shared (even legitimately) by two concurrent travellers, and more to the point the validators are two-way, so the rule of "Touch in at a validator then touch out at a [the same] validator" would apply. (see question 4 of the above FOI enquiry). viz: "Within two minutes of touching in .... it is not possible to touch out on a validator. The validator will perform a Continuation Entry, leaving the card with an open journey and the Entry Charge (maximum Oyster fare)." The reason I ask is because of the following list of events. I use the lift a my local station, the lift lobby has a sliding door that is controlled remotely (by video) from the normal gate line (in a different part of the station). There is a Oyster reader by this door. If the door is open I just touch in as normal. If I touch in & then have to alert them to open the door I sometimes am requested to touch in again (if the place is busy this might take a while) On occasions I get charged the maximum charge (no touch in). Is this because of the double touch in? You'll have to ask TfL what the exact mechanism is, but it sounds like you are exceeding the 2-minute window mentioned in the FOI response (even though no double touch-in scenarios are included in the answer). I now make sure that I don't touch in until the door is open. For certain on on occasion when I touched in & the lift was not working, by the time I had walked back to the ticket office, struggled up the stairs, touched in at the normal gateline (they would not let me through otherwise) I got charged the maximum fare. Again, more than two minutes. -- Roland Perry |