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If you live in the NYC area, just go to a manned booth and have them transfer the balance of the damaged card onto another one. As long as it can be read by the swipe inside the booth, it can be done.
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Originally Posted by mbelsky
(Post 31130477)
My easy pay MetroCard has gotten worn and is asking me to swipe again more and more often. If I report it damaged online, it says my current card will immediately be deactivated.
That's dumb, as I cannot get a new card before my current one stops working, and continue to use my current card until the replacement arrives. I'm going to try calling when they open at 9, but am not super helpful. Isn't this a fairly common scenario that they should have planned for? There should be an option to get a new card that will only deactivate the old one once I either activate or use the new one.
Originally Posted by FlyinHawaiian
(Post 31130592)
If you live in the NYC area, just go to a manned booth and have them transfer the balance of the damaged card onto another one. As long as it can be read by the swipe inside the booth, it can be done.
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Interesting to re-read this old thread. I subsequently had the same thing happen to me as gfunkdave a couple of years ago, for exactly the same reason, but I did not recall this thread at the time. I called, did not have to wait on hold long, and got a competent and straightforward agent who knew exactly what the problem was, and even had "comebacks" for my complaints - "Why didn't you contact me when the card was declined?" "You opted out of email communications" (To be fair, I think I just didn't opt in, and don't even know if that was an option when I first signed up for this). "How can I avoid this in the future?" "Just put a backup payment method in your account online".
Of course a couple of months ago, my card was suspended again - my Transit Check card balance fell after purchasing an Amtrak ticket and a 10-trip LIRR pass for the summer season, and coincidentally I had cancelled the credit card I put in for backup. :eek: So I knew how to fix it (I got the email notification as well!), but it was definitely annoying having to wait 24-48 hours for the card to re-activate. And yes - agree that the agents in the booths can't do diddly squat with these cards (even when the message at the turnstyle is "see agent" when the card is deactivated). |
The issue is the read-write process the MetroCard uses. When you see "Swipe again at this turnstile" the amount of money has been deducted from your card but the write process didn't finish to the card with the time and turnstile number. The only difference with a booth is the way the card reader is a dip like a bus instead of swipe so the read-write is more secure and may work better. Also, turnstiles only update the station computer and station computer only updates the mainframe every 6 minutes (that's where you get the 18 minutes for multiple use) when everything is working correctly and the booth doesn't have the "Computer Down" on the dry marker board.
Most station agents after a single attempt will just hand you the form to mail in the card http://web.mta.info/metrocard/pdfs/form.pdf I go with the debit card for my Transit Check and eat the dollar if I want to replace a card that isn't expiring. |
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