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On Sun, 25 Jan 2009 08:58:47 -0800 (PST), Mizter T
wrote this gibberish: On 25 Jan, 16:02, MarkVarley - MVP wrote: I've had a particularly busy week traveling around London and have noticed I'm being asked for my ticket by various badge-flashing folks hovering behind the barriers rather more than usual. maybe it's my using the gates rather than barriers some days due to carrying a rucksack with light stands tied to the side, or maybe I'm rushing through barriers in a shifty-looking-way, or is it the last few months of the financial year and revenue protection have to get their quota-up. am I noticing an increase because there is one or am I making myself a target somehow? It's the ultimate irony that my rushing and being late seems to attract this attention and delay me! I'm guessing that when you say you are using the gates as opposed to the barriers you mean the manual side gate (opened on request by staff) rather than the automatic barriers, but you're not entirely clear on this and there is a danger of getting things very confused with regards to different interpretations of the terminology in use! I should have seen the potential for confusion there! By 'barriers' I refer to the automated double-flappy-things 'automated ticket gate'. This week I've been using more the manually operated side gates (when there was someone there to operate it) also the big two-way automatic gates presumerably for push-chairs, wheelchairs, mad-men-with-entire-studios-tied-to-their-backs. I shall elaborate - on London Underground AIUI the official term for an automated ticket barrier is an "automatic ticket gate" (or something very similar), often referred to as just an "automatic gate" or even just a "gate" (which will forms part of a "gateline"). Meanwhile the side gate through which one can pass with bulky luggage, pram, wheelchair or child etc is called a "manual gate" to distinguish it from the automatic gates. On the big railway (i.e. National Rail) the term "ticket barrier" does not necessarily refer to an automated system whatsoever - it can simply mean the barrier through which one must pass and present one's ticket to a member of railway staff. This kind of ticket check is much less common these days than it used to be, which is a result of the so- called 'open station concept' - nonetheless it still exists, for example at Euston before boarding a Virgin intercity train, or alternatively at local stations when a Revenue Protection team turns up once in awhile. Because of this historical usage of the term "ticket barrier", the automated ticket barriers often seem to be referred to as "automatic barriers" on National Rail, as opposed to "automatic gates" on LU. Confused yet? If you are using a manual gate (i.e. side gate) then one can obviously be expected to show your ticket or alternatively touch your Oyster / Freedom Pass / VTCS card on the Oyster pad. In such cases I tap my wallet on the pad next to the gate as I walk past, without pausing, it beeps and off I go, until stopped by someone who didn't hear the beep... If you have been stopped having gone through a ticket gate then I would think it most likely that it's just a routine check - sometimes RPIs (Revenue Protection Inspectors) may only be targeting people using Oyster cards to check they are not misusing them, for example. That said, it may be the case that they were only pulling some people over for a double-check and your light stand arrangement on your backpack was rather out of the ordinary I wouldn't worry about it if all that's happened is an extra ticket-check - I've experienced similar. Wide-load catches the eye and I'm chosen at random it seems. As long as I'm remembering which-way-up to touch my wallet on the pads so the right oyster is used for the trip then alls well, don't think I've mucked it up yet! (VCTS is free travel and I only use it for personal journeys, I consider it unsporting to use it for business travel so there is an oyster on the other side of the wallet (behind the work ID so I remember which way around it goes). -- Mark Varley MarkVarleyPhoto.co.uk TwistedPhotography.co.uk London, England. |
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