Like you were (wrongly) accusing someone else of doing?
That's it...I'm out.
Like you were (wrongly) accusing someone else of doing?
Interesting that they refer to the National Conditions of Travel, which don't exist
They do seem almost ATB sized, which is quite good as it allows for details to be printed more clearly.
I'm heading down south in a few weeks and was thinking I might buy my tickets from somebody who is using the new machines then see what response I get all over the place.
Interesting that they refer to the National Conditions of Travel, which don't exist![]()
Would that make the ticket invalid?
Or will the machines issue Travelcards and tickets to London Zones?
Not in a format that TfL deem to be acceptable, no.
They look quite good, I think. Interesting that they are using the BR Rail Alphabet font - maybe that's an anti-forgery feature.
Ironic, then, that my only problem with them will be that they're so huge they won't go into my existing ticket wallets. My Oyster card, Southern Key and other ITSO cards, Railcard, pink photocard and current stack of tickets already all live in the same place. Alas one of these will not fit. Knowing me, that means I'll probably lose one too.
I see. That is amusing. So perhaps if you requested a ticket to Chalfont & Latimer, the correct response would be to let the customer out of the gates and ask them to join the ticket office queue.
Tickets to or via LU destinations, including cross London transfers are - apparently - not allowed to be issued by these machines as LU won't recognise the ticket stock.
For this reason GWR and also Greater Anglia are, I believe, using a mixture of printers - printers which issue CCST on mag stripe cards as now on the mainline services, with paper roll stock on those further away which won't sell London tickets.
What would happen when you get to the LU gates if you did have a perfectly valid cross London ticket on paper stock remains to be seen.
I suspect the reason the rail industry has persisted in using credit card sized tickets for so long has much to do with exactly this point. In spite of the fact that it has restricted the ability to put very much useful information on the ticket.
Well, they did used to have those airline style tickets which never used to fit anywhere (except for Ladies' handbags).
Strangely enough many European railways use such tickets for their own domestic journeys allowing reservations and other useful information to be in one place. Are we less capable than them of dealing with such articles? Or is it a case of "they're incompatible with standard gate equipment (specification largely dictated by London Underground) so we can't have them".
Well, they've always been incompatible with the gates. But then again they could easily fit the reservation data on the back of a magna ticket above the stripe so the ticket fits into the gates and your wallet (afterall, that's pretty much the only necessary information that couldn't be fitted in the traditional ticket layout).
Perhaps it's our gates that have it wrong. How do Eurostar or airport gates cope?
Perhaps it's our gates that have it wrong. How do Eurostar or airport gates cope? As for using the reverse of the current tickets you'll be lucky to fit more than 2 lines reliably. Plenty of journeys need more than that. If we can manage to carry our smartphones without leaving them behind all the time I'm sure that taking suitable care of larger tickets is within the capabilities of the cast majority of people. In fact larger tickets might even be more difficult to forget.
....The "correct" solution would be to issue a part fare with an instruction to obtain an excess from someone with a suitable machine....
....And I'm sure the TOCs will make sure to refresh their staff in excess procedures.....:roll:
They do seem almost ATB sized, which is quite good as it allows for details to be printed more clearly.
Ironic, then, that my only problem with them will be that they're so huge they won't go into my existing ticket wallets. My Oyster card, Southern Key and other ITSO cards, Railcard, pink photocard and current stack of tickets already all live in the same place. Alas one of these will not fit. Knowing me, that means I'll probably lose one too.
Would be useful if they were used for Advance tickets, but since they will only be used for walk-up tickets there isn't really any more detail needed.
I wonder how well the guard's scanner will read the 2D barcode where the ticket has been folded and the fold goes through the barcode
Why would the guard need to scan the ticket?
They're even bigger than they look!!!
Who was it said about the £5 note?![]()
They've managed to get the odd wording on the back too. The paper is a touch thin. It's not as bad as it could have been and better than Sportis. However you are going to need at least 4 creases per ticket really.
Also I've really got to wonder why 'railcard' needed to be all caps.
Why would the guard need to scan the ticket?
They've managed to get the odd wording on the back too. The paper is a touch thin. It's not as bad as it could have been and better than Sportis. However you are going to need at least 4 creases per ticket really.
Also I've really got to wonder why 'railcard' needed to be all caps.