Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London. |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#11
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 13 Sep 2006 04:08:44 -0700, "sweek"
wrote: Neil Williams wrote: sweek wrote: An Oyster is a little card that you touch in and touch out the gates with. On buses, you only touch in. Get a PAYG one and you do not have to worry about how much it costs. It will be the cheapest way for you to get around. A trip will cost you 1 pound on the bus, and one fifty on the tube. Put enough money on the card to make sure you can travel around. You can check your balance at every station using the machine. This is roughly the level it needs to be at, yes, though I think you may be intending to be ironic. It needs to be put above the ticket machines (or before you reach them) in tube stations to prevent the 4 quid rip-off occurring, and in several languages. Next, you need to make it easier to obtain an Oyster by having it sold from several machines pre-credited, rather than having to queue for ages at the ticket office. (Note: many tourists will want to avoid the ticket office as the language barrier may be an issue, let alone the invariably long queue). Neil No I wasn't being ironic. Just trying to keep it very simple, and ignore the things that probably won't affect tourists in the first place. I was just thinking that something about getting to Heathrow and Camden Town costing more should be in there, since those are the only tourist destination outside of zone 1 that I think people might go to. Greenwich. Which is likely to be accessed by rail. Oops... If you're a tourist in a place you don't know I think you're actually way more likely to go to the ticket counter anyway, but yes, machines that show you everything clearly would be nice. I tend to use machines abroad, as a) many of them speak something resembling English b) you can play with the options to find a suitable product on offer. I've had completely blank looks when I've asked at ticket offices for an all-day ticket in cities which actually use 24 hour tickets (which are not quite the same thing), but with machines you can have a guess at what a "24 oer fhfbwfblwfwfbwfw" or "1 taaaage-kaaart" option might be able to sell you. One thing I've noticed abroad is that sometimes day passes have special names, which can be tricky. "One day travelcard" offers a clue, "24 hour ticket" is explict, but some places offer "superdooper mega saver ticket", with no clue as to what they actually let you do. I've found that my knowledge of foreign lingo is now rather focused on "valid for two adults and a dog on weekends and bank holidays", and stuff from beer mats. -- Arthur Figgis Surrey, UK |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
TfL 2007 fares now on the web | London Transport | |||
London Fares and Product Changes from 2nd January 2005 (LONG) | London Transport | |||
Interesting changes to NR Fares | London Transport | |||
Interesting changes to NR Fares | London Transport | |||
Interesting changes to NR Fares | London Transport |