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Neil Williams wrote:
On Thu, 6 Oct 2005 09:10:01 +0100, Roland Perry wrote: New York subways also have a mag-stripe card which you can load with money for several journeys. One disadvantage for the infrequent traveller (and tourist) is that the credit expires after a year. ISTR that a Dutch Strippenkaart expires after two fare increases (or something similar). The Dutch Strippenkaart system makes Oyster seem easy! Never could work them out. 1 strip or 2? How long does it last for, where's the cheapest place to buy them etc. -- Paul |
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In message , at 10:18:50
on Fri, 7 Oct 2005, Paul remarked: The Dutch Strippenkaart system makes Oyster seem easy! Never could work them out. 1 strip or 2? How long does it last for, where's the cheapest place to buy them etc. I was advised I needed two for a tram journey of about half a mile. So perhaps that's the minimum. I walked. Like you, I have a blind spot when it comes to knowing where to buy them. -- Roland Perry |
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On Thu, 06 Oct 2005 22:13:28 GMT, Chris Tolley
wrote: Incidentally, I don't find the idea of ripping off tourists and non-Londoners (which has been mentioned as a target) remotely acceptable. Tourists from abroad get offered all sorts of attractive travelcard options that we never hear about. |
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On Fri, 7 Oct 2005 09:25:11 +0100, "TKD" wrote:
And finally the people in London but on National Rail routes who claim to be excluded. What rubbish - are you telling me you never use the bus? Get an Oyster card and you can start saving when you do. You don't even pay tube level fares when you do use the train. Point to point fares are often much less than zonal fares. Those routes that are charged at LUL rates are the same routes that went over to Oyster prepay in the first place anyway. And why focus your anger at TfL or Ken like the Evening Standard or the Daily Mail instructed you to? Lobby the train companies!! Indeed. I am served by NR and by Underground. But the Underground is a 15 minute walk away, the NR station is served by a 'bus. Returning late in the evening I am reluctant to take the walk, through a somewhat unsafe area. So I cannot use Oyster as a one-day card, I must buy a paper ticket. |
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Neil Williams wrote:
[1] I fail to see how anyone can consider, in itself, gbp3 as a reasonable fare for a short-distance Tube single. I don't think that a cash fare of GBP3 is intended to be seen as reasonable. It is set at that level to encourage people to use alternative methods of payment. -- John Ray, London UK. |
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On Thu, 06 Oct 2005 18:48:52 +0100, asdf
wrote: I have a friend who won't get an Oyster card because she doesn't want "them" to know where she's been and what she's been doing. Not even an unregistered pre-pay card... Presumably she's on benefit and working, What a ridiculous statement. No. That would be a logical reason. Sort of. Otherwise it's just sheer paranoia (or bloody-mindedness). |
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On Thu, 06 Oct 2005 11:14:10 +0100, James Farrar
wrote: And the price of 12 single journeys using PrePay is twelve times the price of one. Unless a number of them are on the same day. |
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