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Using other operators during delays

MatthewE707

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I'm pretty sure the answer to this is yes, but I just want to check in case

If you're reserved on an Avanti service from, say, Crewe to Liverpool Lime Street, which is cancelled, do you have to travel on the next Avanti service (and not London Northwestern) to Liverpool, even if that would result in missing your connection in Liverpool. What if you were booked on that specific train out of Liverpool - presumably you just have to get the next train by that operator there as well, but the delays could easily add up.
 
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jfollows

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If you have an advance ticket, yes, unless acceptance by a different operator is formally granted, usually during major disruption.
If you have a different ticket, you can travel according to the terms of the ticket, which will probably be to allow you to use any operator.

Delay Repay is the “solution” when delays add up, paid by the first operator to delay you.

Avanti and others also allow you to travel on the previous train in case of cancellation, of course you might not know about the cancellation early enough to take advantage of this.
 

MatthewE707

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So if the two segments of the journey were bought as separate tickets, the first one on an Avanti train, and the second on another operator, say EMR, and the delay of the Avanti train caused you to miss the EMR train, all the delay repay comes from Avanti?
 

jfollows

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So if the two segments of the journey were bought as separate tickets, the first one on an Avanti train, and the second on another operator, say EMR, and the delay of the Avanti train caused you to miss the EMR train, all the delay repay comes from Avanti?
Yes
 

MatthewE707

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Thank you!

== Doublepost prevention - post automatically merged: ==

Having looked more closely on the booking site, it is an off-peak day single from Crewe to Liverpool Lime Street. I've selected an Avanti train, but is this valid on London Northwestern services too? The ticket restrictions don't specify.
 
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Watershed

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Thank you!

== Doublepost prevention - post automatically merged: ==

Having looked more closely on the booking site, it is an off-peak day single from Crewe to Liverpool Lime Street. I've selected an Avanti train, but is this valid on London Northwestern services too? The ticket restrictions don't specify.
If it's routed "Avanti only" then it is only valid on Avanti. This should be shown if you look under the ticket details. If it's routed "not via Manchester" then it's valid on either operator.

The "Avanti only" ticket generally costs just 10p less so it really shouldn't exist. It's a blatant trap for the unwary brought in to raise money for Avanti (at the expensive of WMT) in the pre-Covid era when each franchise tried to maximise its own income.
 

MatthewE707

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If it's routed "Avanti only" then it is only valid on Avanti. This should be shown if you look under the ticket details. If it's routed "not via Manchester" then it's valid on either operator.

The "Avanti only" ticket generally costs just 10p less so it really shouldn't exist. It's a blatant trap for the unwary brought in to raise money for Avanti (at the expensive of WMT) in the pre-Covid era when each franchise tried to maximise its own income.
Thank you - it does say "not via Manchester" so that's good to know it's more flexible than I was expecting
 

jfollows

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Isn't the 10p more expensive ticket also valid on Avanti as it's not operator-restricted?
Yes.
I get the same at Wilmslow; Virgin & Avanti used to offer a genuine saving on tickets restricted to their trains (say 25% off or more) but now they just try and trick people into paying 10p less, when the unrestricted “any permitted” ticket for 10p more is by far a better deal for a return ticket anyway.

The reason they do it is because they get 100% of the “Avanti only” fare whereas they only get a percentage of the “any permitted” fare, say 25%, based on service frequency. 100% of £10 is more than 25% of £10.10; the exact figures are different because I made them up.

I used to pay their ~75% fare but they got greedy and I’m not stupid, so I always buy the +10p ticket valid for all trains now.
 
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MatthewE707

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If you have an advance ticket booked on a specific train, how long before the train will the ticket barriers accept the ticket? I know (at least at my local station) the barriers don't accept off-peak tickets until after the last peak train has departed
 

Watershed

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If you have an advance ticket booked on a specific train, how long before the train will the ticket barriers accept the ticket? I know (at least at my local station) the barriers don't accept off-peak tickets until after the last peak train has departed
For paper tickets, the booked train isn't encoded on the magnetic stripe so the barriers either accept or reject the ticket depending on how the station operator has configured the barriers. Most just accept them, but GTR reject them as a rule.

For eTickets, where the barcode payload contains the details of the booked trains, it again varies depending on the operator but I would expect it to be in the range of 15-45 minutes before departure.
 

jfollows

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If you have an advance ticket booked on a specific train, how long before the train will the ticket barriers accept the ticket? I know (at least at my local station) the barriers don't accept off-peak tickets until after the last peak train has departed
It’s stupid but I believe it’s a local implementation, I think I recall Coventry doing this in the past. It’s similar to ticket machines refusing to sell off-peak tickets until 09:31 when there’s a 09:31 departure on which they’re valid. The railways are happy to say that people need to take responsibility for having a valid railcard yet they implement these stupid restrictions.

I mean, if I want to get to the station an hour before my advance ticket departure time, why not?
 

trainophile

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My tickets kept rejecting at the barrier of a TfW station, and I asked why, and was told that with an Advance they need to manually check it to make sure it's for the right time. I'd have thought the barriers could be programmed to do that.
 

jfollows

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My tickets kept rejecting at the barrier of a TfW station, and I asked why, and was told that with an Advance they need to manually check it to make sure it's for the right time. I'd have thought the barriers could be programmed to do that.
In general, I think the barriers can be set to reject certain types of tickets, eg advance tickets, so that they can be checked by a “trained“ human, but I’m not convinced the barriers can be trained to do the same.
 

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