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#121
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On 24 Nov, 12:00, Tim Woodall wrote:
You can't get a refund unless you use the tube within a certain number of days (8 weeks?). So if you're abroad/in another bit of the country and not planning to visit London for a few months then TfL will eat the refund and there's nothing you can do. I was in exactly this situation and thought I'd lost the money, but at the end of the 7 days (while I was still abroad) they emailed asking to choose a date and station to try again with (it was an automatic refund due to an "operational error" at Bank, and they'd chosen a refund station for me). Which appears to be a good faith effort to not "eat the refund". (I've no idea if there's an actual point in time when they do give up trying to refund and keep the money) U |
#122
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On 24 Nov, 11:40, Tim Woodall wrote:
On Sun, 23 Nov 2008 06:40:41 -0800 (PST), * * Mr Thant wrote: On 23 Nov, 14:23, "tim....." wrote: And what rule is it that makes this method of "top up" un-refundable if you don't use it? Auto top-up triggers whenever the balance falls below £5. Thus your balance is always in the £5-£25 range, never below. The loophole I'm suggesting is to add cash before each journey to keep it in the £5-£10 range, but what you can't ever do with a card with auto top-up enabled is spend the last £5. You can still have the card refunded of course, but then you have no Oyster Card. The topup triggers when you ENTER a station with your balance below 5GBP. So you should top you your card before every journey to 5.10 and then the topup won't trigger. There are a handful of journeys where your card balance can actually go negative if you plan it right (but the deposit will be more than the negative balance) Presumably only before your last ever journey on that card, or it really would defeat the whole object. |
#123
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On Mon, 24 Nov 2008 04:26:41 -0800 (PST),
MIG wrote: On 24 Nov, 11:40, Tim Woodall wrote: On Sun, 23 Nov 2008 06:40:41 -0800 (PST), * * Mr Thant wrote: On 23 Nov, 14:23, "tim....." wrote: And what rule is it that makes this method of "top up" un-refundable if you don't use it? Auto top-up triggers whenever the balance falls below £5. Thus your balance is always in the £5-£25 range, never below. The loophole I'm suggesting is to add cash before each journey to keep it in the £5-£10 range, but what you can't ever do with a card with auto top-up enabled is spend the last £5. You can still have the card refunded of course, but then you have no Oyster Card. The topup triggers when you ENTER a station with your balance below 5GBP. So you should top you your card before every journey to 5.10 and then the topup won't trigger. There are a handful of journeys where your card balance can actually go negative if you plan it right (but the deposit will be more than the negative balance) Presumably only before your last ever journey on that card, or it really would defeat the whole object. Don't know about last ever journey - just last journey before you leave London for months. Last time my parents were in London (August IIRC) I helped them get PAYG oyster cards and we arranged it so that their balance would be zero when they left London (couldn't be negative because they were only making Z1 journeys). Given that they would only ever arrive at Euston and they walk to their hotel (mostly they walk around London but we were going to a prom which is a bit too far to walk) they've got ample opportunity to put more money on their card next time they arrive and they can find a convenient station with no queue. And, if next time they decide to try a different hotel they can (I think) set up a topup online that they will pick up at Euston station[1] so they won't need to queue to topup their cards before they travel. Tim. [1] When I used my oyster card maybe a dozen times a year I decided I'd still like to have autotopup. One day I was going to be taking the tube to work instead of cycling so I arranged it so I could enable the autotopup at Euston. Unfortunately, when I got to Euston there was some sort of alert and I wasn't allowed into the underground and so I went to work via Euston Square. So the autotopup expired uncollected. -- God said, "div D = rho, div B = 0, curl E = - @B/@t, curl H = J + @D/@t," and there was light. http://www.woodall.me.uk/ |
#124
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![]() "Andrew Heenan" wrote in message ... "tim....." wrote ... None of this helps us provincials who use perhaps a tenner a year on PAYG. That being the case, what on Earth are you doing even considering auto top-up. That's insane. No it's not. It's just as much a PITA having to feed three quid cash onto my card each time I want to make a return tube journey than it is to feed thirty quid for a week's travel. But if you use 'a tenner a year', why not top up a tenner a year? because I still have to keep track of whether I have enough for "today's" journey tim |
#125
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![]() wrote in message ... In article , (Andrew Heenan) wrote: And how you think an 'auto' system could conceivably function *without* registration beats me! Why does the system need to know more than which /card/ is being topped up? Because I'm sure that the owner of card number 6786 5678 3467 6789 would be awfully ****ed off if I asked TfL to use his card to top up my Oyster without any checks tim |
#126
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On Fri, Nov 21, 2008 at 03:45:27PM -0800, MIG wrote:
On Nov 21, 11:19=A0pm, Richard wrote: On Fri, 21 Nov 2008 07:37:59 -0800 (PST), Mr Thant wrote: On 21 Nov, 15:17, David Cantrell wrote: Bus usage is reasonably heavy here too, but TfL doesn't seem to care. People who use the busses a lot are *forced* by the penalty cash fares to either have a Travelcard (which we can get from the local railway station) or an Oyster card. How inconvenient Oyster is doesn't matter, it seems. Auto top-up, yo. Exactly. It's inconvenient, but only once, or less if you have internet access and buy on-line. And you have to sign up with full details, to be electronically tagged. No thanks. I too object to that. However, I'd probably hold my nose and do it anyway *if* there wasn't one other big problem with Oyster. That is that when it goes wrong it goes badly wrong. And it goes badly wrong in two ways: First of all, to even know it's gone wrong you either have to keep a running total in your head (and I have lots of other things to remember) so you can spot when more money has been taken from your card than you expected, or you have to religiously check the web site the day after every journey so that you can compare the journeys it thinks you made with the journeys you actually made. There's no real fix for this, other than them SMSing me as soon as possible after every transaction with my current pre-pay balance, or something of that ilk. Second, to fix the problem you either need to phone an expensive 08 number or visit a tube station. The first is Wrong because I don't see why I should pay to fix TfL's screw-ups*; the second is Wrong because it's damnably inconvenient. They *must* introduce an 020 number for the Oyster helpline, or they *must* make it possible to fix Oyster problems at every railway station in London. * even if, strictly speaking, I screwed up, I still blame TfL, because I wouldn't have screwed up if they hadn't designed such an over-complex system. Certainly if *I* designed a system as complex at work with so many weird edge cases and complex conditions that the users were regularly making mistakes, I'd have a great deal of explaining to do if I wanted to keep my job. -- David Cantrell | http://www.cantrell.org.uk/david I don't do .INI, .BAT, or .SYS files. I don't assign apps to files. I don't configure peripherals or networks before using them. I have a computer to do all that. I have a Macintosh, not a hobby. -- Fritz Anderson |
#127
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On Sun, Nov 23, 2008 at 11:28:31PM -0000, Andrew Heenan wrote:
"tim....." wrote : Assuming you are referring to the bit that you left, he is saying that it is only possible to "initiate" your top up by visiting a tube station and actually making a TUBE journey, something which not everybody will want to do. If you don't want to travel, why, for God's sake, would you want to top-up your oyster, auto, manually or any other way? It simply does not make sense. Perhaps you are unaware that there are other methods than tube by which one can travel. Bus, for example. Why should one have to make a TUBE journey when all you want to do is travel by BUS. -- David Cantrell | Hero of the Information Age In this episode, R2 and Luke weld the doors shut on their X-Wing, and Chewbacca discovers that his Ewok girlfriend is really just a Womble with its nose chopped off. |
#128
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On 24 Nov, 18:29, David Cantrell wrote:
There's no real fix for this, other than them SMSing me as soon as possible after every transaction with my current pre-pay balance, or something of that ilk. You should be able to check the cost as you go on the screens on readers. Every gate and standalone reader has a screen that shows you your balance and the amount being deducted. There seems to be two types of gates - one shows the numbers on the post next to the gate (where the green arrow lights up) on both entry and exit. The other has an LCD as part of the Oyster pad, but only on the pad you use when exiting, meaning you don't get shown your balance on the way in on this type. U |
#130
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On Sun, 23 Nov 2008, wrote:
In article , (Andrew Heenan) wrote: wrote: None of this helps us provincials who use perhaps a tenner a year on PAYG. That being the case, what on Earth are you doing even considering auto top-up. That's insane. I think I was slightly confusing auto with online top-up which has similar issues. Fair 'nuff. Online top up really is a pain, especially for small amounts. But it's pretty well the only option if you live in the USA. People who live in the USA aren't really part of the target demographic for Oyster. Unless the Crossrail plans have changed radically since i last looked. tom -- Tomorrow has made a phone call to today. |
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