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#1
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"Matthew Dickinson" wrote in message
First Great Western will accept Oyster Pay As You Go at all stations between Paddington and West Drayton or Greenford from the 21st September, according to a leaflet I picked up at Ealing Broadway yesterday. The fares and peak periods will be the same as for the tube. As a matter of interest, how do you get charged on a pre-pay Oyster card if the journey involves both NR and LE, with an out of barrier change -- eg, if you take FGW from, say, Ealing Broadway to Paddington, then change to the Circle from Paddington to, say, Baker Street? Is it treated as a single zone 1-3 journey, or a zone 1-3 plus a zone 1 journey? And, presumably, the same rule applies with other operators, such as Chiltern or even London Overground? |
#2
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![]() On 21 Sep, 15:30, "Recliner" wrote: "Matthew Dickinson" wrote: First Great Western will accept Oyster Pay As You Go at all stations between Paddington and *West Drayton or Greenford from the 21st September, according to a leaflet I picked up at Ealing Broadway yesterday. The fares and peak periods will be the same as for the tube. As a matter of interest, how do you get charged on a pre-pay Oyster card if the journey involves both NR and LE, with an out of barrier change -- * eg, if you take FGW from, say, Ealing Broadway to Paddington, then change to the Circle from Paddington to, say, Baker Street? *Is it treated as a single zone 1-3 journey, or a zone 1-3 plus a zone 1 journey? *And, presumably, the same rule applies with other operators, such as Chiltern or even London Overground? I presume that "LE" is a typo for LU. In scenarios such as that which you describe, you are only charged once for the whole journey - the segment from Paddington to Baker Street is merely counted as a continuation of your journey. This applies at locations where there are out-of-station interchanges (OOSI - we have sometimes referred to them here as 'outerchanges'!), though that term is potentially confusing when one doesn't actually leave the station, one just exits through an automatic gate, crosses a concourse, drops down some stairs and then enters another gate. It does remain possible that journeys on NR routes might be charged at different different rates to the LU fare scale - in such a hypothetical scenario what one pays for a combined NR and LU journey would be open to question - however, thankfully, thus far all the TOCs who have adopted Oyster PAYG have also adopted the LU fare scale as well. |
#3
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Mizter T wrote:
On 21 Sep, 15:30, "Recliner" wrote: "Matthew Dickinson" wrote: First Great Western will accept Oyster Pay As You Go at all stations between Paddington and West Drayton or Greenford from the 21st September, according to a leaflet I picked up at Ealing Broadway yesterday. The fares and peak periods will be the same as for the tube. They accepted mine from Ealing Broadway on Heathrow Connect on Thursday. The guard had a reader to confirm I had some credit on the card. As a matter of interest, how do you get charged on a pre-pay Oyster card if the journey involves both NR and LU, with an out of barrier change -- eg, if you take FGW from, say, Ealing Broadway to Paddington, then change to the Circle from Paddington to, say, Baker Street? .... In scenarios such as that which you describe, you are only charged once for the whole journey - the segment from Paddington to Baker Street is merely counted as a continuation of your journey. This applies at locations where there are out-of-station interchanges (OOSI - we have sometimes referred to them here as 'outerchanges'!), though that term is potentially confusing when one doesn't actually leave the station, one just exits through an automatic gate, crosses a concourse, drops down some stairs and then enters another gate. And it works. £2.50 charge shown on exit at Paddington; no extra charge for continuation to Westminster. Colin McKenzie -- No-one has ever proved that cycle helmets make cycling any safer at the population level, and anyway cycling is about as safe per mile as walking. Make an informed choice - visit www.cyclehelmets.org. |
#4
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![]() On 21 Sep, 23:19, Colin McKenzie wrote: Mizter T wrote: On 21 Sep, 15:30, "Recliner" wrote: "Matthew Dickinson" wrote: First Great Western will accept Oyster Pay As You Go at all stations between Paddington and *West Drayton or Greenford from the 21st September, according to a leaflet I picked up at Ealing Broadway yesterday. The fares and peak periods will be the same as for the tube. They accepted mine from Ealing Broadway on Heathrow Connect on Thursday. The guard had a reader to confirm I had some credit on the card. FGW (and Heathrow Connect) have accepted Oyster PAYG for journeys between Greenford, Ealing Broadway and Paddington since May - but *not* at intermediate stations on the Greenford line, nor at stations any further west than Ealing Broadway. See Mr Dickinson's post here from the time: http://groups.google.co.uk/group/uk....60143b1829fb83 (Incidentally, before FGW started accepted Oyster PAYG for journeys to/ from Paddington, they were accepting it for journeys between Greenford and Ealing Broadway but not at intermediate stations). So with regards to your journey from Ealing B'way to Paddington, Oyster PAYG acceptance is nothing brand new (though it is relatively new). As a matter of interest, how do you get charged on a pre-pay Oyster card if the journey involves both NR and LU, with an out of barrier change -- * eg, if you take FGW from, say, Ealing Broadway to Paddington, then change to the Circle from Paddington to, say, Baker Street? .... In scenarios such as that which you describe, you are only charged once for the whole journey - the segment from Paddington to Baker Street is merely counted as a continuation of your journey. This applies at locations where there are out-of-station interchanges (OOSI - we have sometimes referred to them here as 'outerchanges'!), though that term is potentially confusing when one doesn't actually leave the station, one just exits through an automatic gate, crosses a concourse, drops down some stairs and then enters another gate. And it works. £2.50 charge shown on exit at Paddington; no extra charge for continuation to Westminster. Just as it should. This is no different from the situation if one arrives by NR train at Euston from (say) Harrow & Wealdstone, or at Marylebone from (say) Amersham, or Liverpool Street from Stratford, or Kings Cross from Finsbury Park etc etc - in all of these cases (and many others) where one must exit and re-enter through gates the Oyster system merely counts it as a continuation of the original journey. (And I'm pretty sure that Marylebone NR and Baker Street LU are tied together as being a valid OOSI, and I think this is also the case with regards to Fenchurch Street NR and Tower Hill LU - though annoyingly Paddington NR and Lancaster Gate LU is not an OOSI.) |
#5
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On Sep 21, 11:57*pm, Mizter T wrote:
On 21 Sep, 23:19, Colin McKenzie wrote: Mizter T wrote: On 21 Sep, 15:30, "Recliner" wrote: "Matthew Dickinson" wrote: First Great Western will accept Oyster Pay As You Go at all stations between Paddington and *West Drayton or Greenford from the 21st September, according to a leaflet I picked up at Ealing Broadway yesterday. The fares and peak periods will be the same as for the tube. They accepted mine from Ealing Broadway on Heathrow Connect on Thursday.. The guard had a reader to confirm I had some credit on the card. FGW (and Heathrow Connect) have accepted Oyster PAYG for journeys between Greenford, Ealing Broadway and Paddington since May - but *not* at intermediate stations on the Greenford line, nor at stations any further west than Ealing Broadway. See Mr Dickinson's post here from the time:http://groups.google.co.uk/group/uk....g/4760143b1829... (Incidentally, before FGW started accepted Oyster PAYG for journeys to/ from Paddington, they were accepting it for journeys between Greenford and Ealing Broadway but not at intermediate stations). So with regards to your journey from Ealing B'way to Paddington, Oyster PAYG acceptance is nothing brand new (though it is relatively new). As a matter of interest, how do you get charged on a pre-pay Oyster card if the journey involves both NR and LU, with an out of barrier change -- * eg, if you take FGW from, say, Ealing Broadway to Paddington, then change to the Circle from Paddington to, say, Baker Street? .... In scenarios such as that which you describe, you are only charged once for the whole journey - the segment from Paddington to Baker Street is merely counted as a continuation of your journey. This applies at locations where there are out-of-station interchanges (OOSI - we have sometimes referred to them here as 'outerchanges'!), though that term is potentially confusing when one doesn't actually leave the station, one just exits through an automatic gate, crosses a concourse, drops down some stairs and then enters another gate. And it works. £2.50 charge shown on exit at Paddington; no extra charge for continuation to Westminster. Just as it should. This is no different from the situation if one arrives by NR train at Euston from (say) Harrow & Wealdstone, or at Marylebone from (say) Amersham, or Liverpool Street from Stratford, or Kings Cross from Finsbury Park etc etc - in all of these cases (and many others) where one must exit and re-enter through gates the Oyster system merely counts it as a continuation of the original journey. This kind of progress and integration more and more shows up the unfairness and illogic of buses still charging per vehicle instead of per journey. After 1900 and at the weekends I can make a journey across London on three different systems: NR, LU and DLR, that is cheaper than catching two buses, let alone how many it would take to cover the same distance in a slower and less comfortable way. |
#6
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![]() MIG wrote [...] Kings Cross from Finsbury Park etc etc - in all of these cases (and many others) where one must exit and re-enter through gates the Oyster system merely counts it as a continuation of the original journey. This kind of progress and integration more and more shows up the unfairness and illogic of buses still charging per vehicle instead of per journey. After 1900 and at the weekends I can make a journey across London on three different systems: NR, LU and DLR, that is cheaper than catching two buses, let alone how many it would take to cover the same distance in a slower and less comfortable way. Given the £3.00 Bus cap this isn't a big deal. However the problem will be rather more visible when tube 9:30-16:00 counts as Off-peak from January 2009 : == http://www.london.gov.uk/view_press_...eleaseid=18677 Visitors and Londoners on lower incomes will also benefit from the introduction of a new daytime off-peak and reduced fare on the Tube, from 9.30am to 4.00pm Monday to Friday. == but it's difficult to fix without requiring bus interchangers to touch out and/ or effectively charging extra when a bus journey took more than 60 minutes or you didn't touch in on another within 30 minutes. Using a "2 hour for the journey" rule like the tube have be much the same problem given the large variance in timing for journeys by bus. -- Mike D |
#7
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On 22 Sep, 16:32, "Michael R N Dolbear" wrote:
MIG wrote * * * * [...] Kings Cross from Finsbury Park etc etc - in all of these cases (and many others) where one must exit and re-enter through gates the Oyster system merely counts it as a continuation of the original journey. This kind of progress and integration more and more shows up the unfairness and illogic of buses still charging per vehicle instead of per journey. After 1900 and at the weekends I can make a journey across London on three different systems: NR, LU and DLR, that is cheaper than catching two buses, let alone how many it would take to cover the same distance in a slower and less comfortable way. Given the £3.00 Bus cap this isn't a big deal. It's currently double the price for the slow, uncomfortable journey, when the quick and easy version is £1.50. I am often in the situation where I've had to make a DLR/LU journey in the morning peak, with no chance of hitting the peak cap, and make the return by two buses if it's before 1900, but much quicker by LU/DLR if it's after 1900, saving 30p each time (and potentially up to £1.50 a day, depending on how many buses). It soon adds up. (And the buses I have to use before 1900 are generally more overcrowded than the trains I'd be using otherwise.) However the problem will be rather more visible when tube 9:30-16:00 counts as Off-peak from January 2009 : ==http://www.london.gov.uk/view_press_release.jsp?releaseid=18677 Visitors and Londoners on lower incomes will also benefit from the introduction of a new daytime off-peak and reduced fare on the Tube, from 9.30am to 4.00pm Monday to Friday. == *but it's difficult to fix without requiring bus interchangers to touch out and/ or effectively charging extra when a bus journey took more than 60 minutes or you didn't touch in on another within 30 minutes. Using a "2 hour for the journey" rule like the tube have be much the same problem given the large variance in timing for journeys by bus. There certainly are problems, particularly now that the pay per vehicle rule is imbedded, but there are systems around the world that deal with it, and also integrate bus and metro systems as part of a single journey. There are plenty of excuses for how it currently works, but they don't make it fair or logical. |
#8
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"Mizter T" wrote in message
On 21 Sep, 15:30, "Recliner" wrote: "Matthew Dickinson" wrote: First Great Western will accept Oyster Pay As You Go at all stations between Paddington and West Drayton or Greenford from the 21st September, according to a leaflet I picked up at Ealing Broadway yesterday. The fares and peak periods will be the same as for the tube. As a matter of interest, how do you get charged on a pre-pay Oyster card if the journey involves both NR and LE, with an out of barrier change -- eg, if you take FGW from, say, Ealing Broadway to Paddington, then change to the Circle from Paddington to, say, Baker Street? Is it treated as a single zone 1-3 journey, or a zone 1-3 plus a zone 1 journey? And, presumably, the same rule applies with other operators, such as Chiltern or even London Overground? I presume that "LE" is a typo for LU. Yes, sorry, I did mean LU. In scenarios such as that which you describe, you are only charged once for the whole journey - the segment from Paddington to Baker Street is merely counted as a continuation of your journey. This applies at locations where there are out-of-station interchanges (OOSI - we have sometimes referred to them here as 'outerchanges'!), though that term is potentially confusing when one doesn't actually leave the station, one just exits through an automatic gate, crosses a concourse, drops down some stairs and then enters another gate. Thanks, that's what I hoped, but hadn't got round to trying it for myself yet. |
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