That's basically the way I plan it. If people share,they can split the fare between them, or each pays on alternate days. I want to make it the same as if you are taking you kids to their baseball game, using your own car.
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I would agree with Jerry if things stay as they are now. However, I think we have not really estimated the kind of world we are coming into.
Today, most people would not go far out of their way to save % cents per mile. That is not the kind of world I grew up in.
We were recovering from the 1929 depression when I was young
2 trout hooks cost one cent, and lots of times my parents were hard pushed to give me that penny. How many people do you know now that would dive into cold water to retrieve a hook of that value.
This may come again, when people realize that, in hard times, every nickle counts. I really hope it doesn't get that bad, but it could, if governments keep giving money to people who invent hardly anything
useful, and ignore those of us who are trying to make a difference.
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Received: Saturday, May 30, 2009, 5:55 AM |
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I would agree with Jerry if things stay as they are now. However, I think we have not really estimated the kind of world we are coming into.
Today, most people would not go far out of their way to save % cents per mile. That is not the kind of world I grew up in.
We were recovering from the 1929 depression when I was young
2 trout hooks cost one cent, and lots of times my parents were hard pushed to give me that penny. How many people do you know now that would dive into cold water to retrieve a hook of that value.
This may come again, when people realize that, in hard times, every nickle counts. I really hope it doesn't get that bad, but it could, if governments keep giving money to people who invent hardly anything
useful, and ignore those of us who are trying to make a difference.
> As far as charging for length of the trip that's really tricky. That's the
> way customers were charged for long distance phone calls in the past. That's
> all changed, and call distance doesn't matter much any longer.
That is a non-problem if the user is required to swipe a credit or fare
card at each end of the trip. That part has been used by the Washington, DC
subway system for years. Furthermore, the problem of charging more for
added passengers can easily be handled by also adding a charge for the total
amount of electrical power used during the trip. Metering the input power
to the vehicle is not a technical problem nor is adding that charge to the
user's charge. That is the plan that we expect to employ for the eventual
fully automated versions of both our MegaRail® and MicroRail systems.
Kirston Henderson
MegaRail®
----- Original Message -----From: Jerry RoaneSent: Saturday, May 30, 2009 8:01 AMSubject: [t-i] Re: a fair fare...
| Dennis - the reason long distance calls now are free of charge is because it really doesn't cost any more to make a long distance connection than it does to make a local one. Actually moving a vehicle does cost more the farther you go, so there needs to be some kind of mileage charge. --- On Fri, 5/29/09, Dennis Manning <john.m...@comcast.net> wrote: |
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To: transport-...@googlegroups.com |
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| Why would you hold a vehicle at all? Either the entire party is there and ready to board or the next person in line takes the pod. |
--- On Sat, 5/30/09, gary13 <garyd...@gmail.com> wrote: |
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That looks OK to me, Gary. If I can take a 50-cent PRT ride and get a free $1.50 newspaper I would consider it a bonus.
Jack Slade |
----- Original Message -----From: Jack Slade
Pricing is not a simple issue. Someone should reimburse not only current energy costs, but also costs of building, maintaining and operating the all scheme. In reality PRT pricing would probably be influenced by rivaling transit systems and their pricing methods
and by tough negotiations with vested interests that will resist a new transit system. I believe the price of building and maintaining PRT system should be loaded on the additional value of real estate close to the system, and the current costs on the customers. Oded Roth, "Dennis Manning" wrote:
The basic issue of how to charge for PRT
is important. For my 2 cents I rather favor the system that puts the fare charge on whomever commands the vehicle and that they be charged by the energy the trip uses. The obvious problem here is that the exact fare won't be known until the energy consumed is recorded. So why not figure out a way to pay based on energy consumed? Dennis
----- Original Message -----From: Richard GronningSent: Sunday, May 31, 2009 7:05 AMSubject: [t-i] Re: a fair fare...
I suspect that the interpretation of what is "fair" would vary a bit,
depending on ownership. And, just like buses and streetcars today,
there would be numerous fares for different people, times of day,
etc. and maybe even some fare-evasion problems and ticket machines
that don't work.
>I agree with modern billing for mobility. It should be totally
>seamless, wireless and comprehensive billing information to show you
>the comparison to all the other options for movement. In the modern
>age this auto billing is easier than less sophisticated techniques
>to collect money like outdated tickets or tokens.
I don't know what proportion of people do not pay their credit card
bills or just make minimum payments, but I wonder if that might be a
problem. Just sending people a periodic bill (monthly, in the mail?)
doesn't mean that they will pay it promptly. Another example is
parking tickets. My impression is that a lot of people don't pay them.
>If a city buys a system from one of us suppliers then the budget
>surplus would go to city projects. If the government wants to do a
>public/private partnership then the surplus would be divided in some
>inherently unfair way. If the toll road/guideway is strictly
>private then who knows how much the fare will be. It has to be less
>than gasoline or diesel but that is a lot of money if the fare is a
>cost match with SOV diesel/gasoline ICE cars.
I would expect any owners to be interested in profit maximization or
subsidy minimization. And the fares probably would have to be
competitive with or less than the costs of alternative travel
options. it would be a very complex calculation and would have to be
adjusted periodically as the cost/revenue and market share
proportions work themselves out over time.
- Jerry Schneider -
Innovative Transportation Technologies
http://faculty.washington.edu/jbs/itrans
I have it simplified more than that. I am goilg to start with 10 cents per vehicle mile, and adjust it upwards only if that fare is not covering O&M,
cleaning, maintenance fund, company costs, and profit.
If there a requirement to repay construction costs, then that is included in company costs.
As for newspapers blocking doors, I wonder why anybody would need to reserve a vehicle in a system where there is no waiting time to catch a different vehicle. However, it is realistic to think that some people might actually fall asleep during their ride, and I can think of ways to wake them up.
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To: transport-...@googlegroups.com |
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| If you block the door open you are headed to jail and a nice big fine for vandalism and suspicion of terrorism. In other words, leaving anything in the pod or in any way willfully impeding the system is unlawful. Think of it sort of like holding an elevator door open - only with bigger penalties. At best, you are being rude. At worst, you may be up to something. The way the system works is the pod calls central when the door refuses to close. Central uses the on-board and station cams to scope out the problem. If they can't unjam the door, then they call the cops who meet you upon your return and at the very least issue you a very big fine. I still fail to see why anyone would want to hold a particular pod. If it is a "less used station", then the same pod is likely to be there waiting. If someone has taken 'your' pod, then the system will call another one as soon as it senses you entering the station - assuming it hasn't already replaced the pod with a convenient empty. |
--- On Sat, 5/30/09, gary13 <garyd...@gmail.com> wrote: |
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To: "transport-innovators" <transport-...@googlegroups.com> |
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| --- On Sun, 5/31/09, Dennis Manning <john.m...@comcast.net> wrote: |
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To: transport-...@googlegroups.com |
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| Law enforcement is summoned by the people at Central Control. It is not automatic. After a few minutes central is notified that a particular pod has an issue. Central then looks at the video footage. |
--- On Sun, 5/31/09, gary13 <garyd...@gmail.com> wrote: |