johnneyw
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« Reply #15 on: April 09, 2023, 14:50:56 » |
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My personal favourite is Trainsplit which I've always seemed to get the best results from for split and advanced tickets.
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AMLAG
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« Reply #16 on: April 09, 2023, 15:24:51 » |
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There is no doubt more and more people are buying (usually unnecessarily) tickets on line in advance for local journeys (ie with no financial savings ) for journeys they plan to undertake in the coming days, only to subsequently cancel or change their plans due various non rail related reasons, eg a day to the seaside turns out wet, a person becomes unwell etc etc. They don’t seek a refund because that would, at eg £10, cost more than the cost of the unused ticket. Rail companies, or rather the Govt. DfT» /Treasury are coining in money for tickets purchased but never used. It has been reported that TfL» gets £millions each year for Oyster▸ cards which are never fully used for journeys.
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paul7575
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« Reply #17 on: April 09, 2023, 15:42:12 » |
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I firmly believe that the original purpose of Advance fares has been lost. Selling them online 10 mins before the service leaves, for short distance local journeys where people are used to just getting on any train, is almost like setting a trap for the unwary.
There seem to be recent cases in the disputes section of railuk forums where people have tried to buy on the platform for their local journey, but the trainline App has allegedly only offered Advance fares for the next but one train. They’ve then been accused of travelling too early.
Is it a way of TOCs▸ such as Northern getting 100% of the revenue by limiting Advances to their own branded services?
I remember 10 years ago SWT▸ didn’t even offer advance fares for most of their possible journeys, only longer distances, (such as west of Brockenhurst to Waterloo on the mainline), had them available.
Paul
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ChrisB
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« Reply #18 on: April 09, 2023, 16:53:12 » |
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There is no doubt more and more people are buying (usually unnecessarily) tickets on line in advance for local journeys (ie with no financial savings ) for journeys they plan to undertake in the coming days, only to subsequently cancel or change their plans due various non rail related reasons, eg a day to the seaside turns out wet, a person becomes unwell etc etc. They don’t seek a refund because that would, at eg £10, cost more than the cost of the unused ticket. Rail companies, or rather the Govt. DfT» /Treasury are coining in money for tickets purchased but never used.
Please show where you have seen RECENT research on this, as I believe it is no longer the case, evenif it was previously. It has been reported that TfL» gets £millions each year for Oyster▸ cards which are never fully used for journeys. Again, this is ancient. Over 95% are using touch-in, touch-out cards these days, not PAYG▸ on Oyster.
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Timmer
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« Reply #19 on: April 09, 2023, 16:54:58 » |
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Who would want to buy from train line?
considering that they charge an admin charge if you want to make a claim on a delayed service.
Don’t they also charge a booking fee as well? I remember they used to also charge a credit card fee before that was banned. It’s a shame, that these fees can be avoided by simply booking on a train company website. I know, easy for those of us who follow all things rail to know this.
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ChrisB
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« Reply #20 on: April 09, 2023, 17:06:32 » |
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I firmly believe that the original purpose of Advance fares has been lost. Dead right…originally used to fill (long distance) seats that otherwise wouldn’t have sold. [quote¥Is it a way of TOCs▸ such as Northern getting 100% of the revenue by limiting Advances to their own branded services?[/quote] TOCs can only sell advances on services that they runthemselves. So TOCs will invent Advance fares to sell on their own seevices if the flow is priced by a differet TOC. Of course, any retailer can sell an Advance fare once it exists & is made available
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PhilWakely
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« Reply #21 on: April 09, 2023, 21:49:24 » |
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What shocks me is the number of folk that purchase split ticket Advances for journeys such as Totnes to London Paddington split at Tiverton Parkway, Castle Cary and Newbury, then visit the ticket office to change their tickets as their plans have changed. So, in the above example, the customer will have as many as eight tickets covering their return journey. The Ts and Cs for Advances identify a £10 charge PER TICKET to change - so the customer ends up with a potential charge of £80 plus whatever the difference in the various fares is! So it is often cheaper to just buy a new ticket - particularly if the customer is in possession of a Railcard.
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ChrisB
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« Reply #22 on: April 09, 2023, 21:52:48 » |
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Don’t use Trainline, so can’t comment on what warnings they give about those amendment charges, but TrainSplit are VERY clear each ticket costs at least £10 to amend
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Bmblbzzz
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« Reply #23 on: April 09, 2023, 22:33:39 » |
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Quote from: infoman on Today at 03:36:57 am Who would want to buy from train line?
Good question - though I suspect it may have been rhetorical (not intended for answer) 1. Because they makes it easy (or easier) 2. Because they have strong marketing and advertising 3. Because they have a big, trusted name that's global across the whole UK▸ 4. Because others have failed to achieve 1. and 2. and 3. all together
I have answered "why people buy from Trainline" and not "why do people WANT to buy from Trainline", mind you. They don't necessarily want to buy from there - it may be the best or most obvious choice rather than a positive desire to give their business to that particular ticket seller.
I have just tried to search "train tickets" on three different search engines. All tried to self-fill the search dialogue box "trainline" before I finished typing those words in, and two out of the three had Trainline as the top search result, the third having it second after Chiltern Railways (?). For comparison I also tried "Taxi" to see if I got Uber - but did not. Then again I think Uber is now considered a separate product. 7 Uber has successfully marketed itself as Not A Taxi ever since it launched. I struggle to see any way in which it is different frin any other private hire taxi, but the general public perceives it otherwise.
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Waiting at Pilning for the midnight sleeper to Prague.
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grahame
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« Reply #24 on: April 09, 2023, 22:36:25 » |
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There was a time a few months ago when a traffic accident caused my bus to arrive too late at Totnes railway station to use my advanced ticket. The GWR▸ ticket office staff there were very understanding and stamped a note requesting the Train Manager on the following Cross Country service to accept my ticket, advising me to check this with him before I boarded. The train despatch chap on the platform helpfully ensured that I found the TM‡ who himself said, without hesitation, that it was okay to board. ...
Excellent customer service - and typical rail staff do really want to be helpful and are. Having said which, if your trip was through ticketed on a virtual branch, the risk of a missed connection due to congestion caused by an accident should be on the ticket provider whether the delayed leg is road, or rail, or ferry to Dartmouth. It always strikes me as odd that a First Group local train connecting into a London Express offers fallback to the next service if the connection is delayed, but a First Group local bus connecting into a London Express does not.
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Coffee Shop Admin, Chair of Melksham Rail User Group, TravelWatch SouthWest Board Member
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johnneyw
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« Reply #25 on: April 09, 2023, 23:49:40 » |
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Excellent customer service - and typical rail staff do really want to be helpful and are. Having said which, if your trip was through ticketed on a virtual branch..........
Interesting, it hadn't occurred to me to buy a through ticket, even though I was on a virtual branch. This prompted me to look at prices for said through tickets and how they would compare to just getting the bus ticket on the bus. The GWR▸ app doesn't yet recognise my virtual branch line destination (Salcombe) and the same goes for Trainline. Trainsplit does recognise the destination but repeatedly gives an error message to the effect that no tickets are available, so for the time being at least, it looks like I'll still be purchasing my tickets on the bus.
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