railfan99
Established Member
Watching the excellent West Somerset Railway railcams, the travelling ticket examiners seem to be quick to open a car door for passengers to alight or board.
In a forthcoming UK tour, I will have a ticket every time I travel on a heritage railway (of course!) but wondered how proficient do you find the TTEs in checking tickets of passengers joining from termini and at every intermediate station?
Do TTEs usually carry a paper fare chart so they know the shorter distance fares, if the preserved railway offers these?
Do all such railways only accept cash if one boards initially at an intermediate unstaffed stataion (such as Doniford Halt on WSR), or do some heritage railways equip TTEs with a portable ticket machine of some type?
I assume almost all TTEs are volunteers not paid staff.
Is it typical for some TTEs on the busier heritage lines to issue a few tickets each trip or do the vast majority of passengers already have one?
In a forthcoming UK tour, I will have a ticket every time I travel on a heritage railway (of course!) but wondered how proficient do you find the TTEs in checking tickets of passengers joining from termini and at every intermediate station?
Do TTEs usually carry a paper fare chart so they know the shorter distance fares, if the preserved railway offers these?
Do all such railways only accept cash if one boards initially at an intermediate unstaffed stataion (such as Doniford Halt on WSR), or do some heritage railways equip TTEs with a portable ticket machine of some type?
I assume almost all TTEs are volunteers not paid staff.
Is it typical for some TTEs on the busier heritage lines to issue a few tickets each trip or do the vast majority of passengers already have one?