Japan Railway & Transport Review No. 54 • Dec 009 Photostory Advances in Ticketing Systems In-station Ticket Sales and Multi-Access Reservation System (MARS) Seating ledger booking turntable (JR Systems) As more passengers wanted reserved seats, this turntable was devised to make allocation easier. It consisted of a 4-m, motor-operated circular part holding seating ledgers, surrounded by a 50-cm wide desk with telephones. Operators who allocated reserved seats sat at the fixed desk. Ledgers in each section covered 8 days of train departures (eight volumes covering that day’s departure to the same day of the following week). Operators removed the ledger for the train and day to be booked, and replaced the ledger after booking the seats as the turntable came around again. Seating Ledger Turntable Birth of MARS1: Tokyo Station Counter in 1965 MARS1 host computer (JR Systems) The number of reserved seat bookings increased in line with the rapidly growing Japanese economy and manual booking was reaching its limits. To solve the problem, the MARS1 prototype was constructed to make computerized reserved seat allocation practical. Reserved seat allocation started in June 1959 for some trains. The scale of MARS1 allowed it to handle 4000 seat bookings/day using 13 networked terminals. With the opening of the shinkansen in October 1964, the number of reserved seat bookings topped 100,000 seats/
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�Japan Railway & Transport Review No. 54 • Dec �009
Photostory
Advances in Ticketing SystemsIn-station Ticket Sales and Multi-Access Reservation System (MARS)
Seating ledger booking turntable (JR Systems)
As more passengers wanted reserved seats, this
turntable was devised to make allocation easier. It
consisted of a 4-m, motor-operated circular part holding
seating ledgers, surrounded by a 50-cm wide desk with
telephones. Operators who allocated reserved seats
sat at the fixed desk. Ledgers in each section covered
8 days of train departures (eight volumes covering that
day’s departure to the same day of the following week).
Operators removed the ledger for the train and day to
be booked, and replaced the ledger after booking the
seats as the turntable came around again.
Seating Ledger Turntable
Birth of MARS1: Tokyo Station Counter in 1965
MARS1 host computer (JR Systems)
The number of reserved seat bookings increased in line with
the rapidly growing Japanese economy and manual booking
was reaching its limits.
To solve the problem, the MARS1 prototype was
constructed to make computerized reserved seat allocation
practical. Reserved seat allocation started in June 1959 for
some trains. The scale of MARS1 allowed it to handle 4000
seat bookings/day using 13 networked terminals.
With the opening of the shinkansen in October 1964, the
number of reserved seat bookings topped 100,000 seats/
� Japan Railway & Transport Review No. 50 • Sep �008� Japan Railway & Transport Review No. 54 • Dec �009
Photostory
day. A networked real-time ticketing system was operated
from February 1964 to process everything from managing
seat allocation to automatic issuing of reserved seat tickets,
allowing efficient management of the increased volume of
reserved seats.
Tokyo Station ticket booking counter in 1965 (JR Systems)
The number of train tickets including reserved
seats increased annually due to expansion
of the shinkansen network and the huge
increase in the number of limited expresses.
In these circumstances, the MARS105
system entered service in September 1972
to handle the increasing volumes and to
connect with counter terminals automatically
issuing basic-fare tickets and non-reserved
seat, limited-express tickets.
Evolution of MARS105
About 500 MARS terminals for issuing automatic tickets
were installed at shinkansen stations and other main
stations in October 1965, increasing the speed of reserved
seat sales.
MARS105 system in machine room (JR Systems)
4Japan Railway & Transport Review No. 54 • Dec �009
Photostory
Advances in Ticketing Systems In-station Ticket Sales and Multi-Access Reservation System (MARS)
Continued on page 49
MARS ticket sales continued growing year-
on-year, with daily sales of about 1.6 million
tickets in 2002. Operations were switched to
MARS501 in July 2002 to process the huge
workload securely and quickly. The new
system was a well-balanced combination of
mainframe and servers.
A migration to counter terminals that
could handle high speeds and a large variety
of tickets was also made.
State of the Art MARS501
MARS105 was expanded soon after it
came into operation. By October 1974, it
could process 1 million reserved seats/day,
encompassed 1650 terminals, and handled
daily sales of 540,000 tickets.
New terminals that came into use with
MARS105 could print 192 characters.
Although the number of sections and
types of tickets increased greatly, station
counters with the new terminals did not
need ticket boxes holding tickets with
pre-printed sections, routes, prices and
other information, offering a tidier counter
environment and slashing the time needed
to service customers.
Tokyo Station ticket booking counter in 1974 (JR Systems)
MARS501 system in machine room at JR Systems (JR Systems)
49 Japan Railway & Transport Review No. 50 • Sep 200849 Japan Railway & Transport Review No. 54 • Dec 2009
Photostory
Photostory
Advances in Ticketing SystemsOnboard Supplementary Ticket Terminals
Need for ChangesAdvances in automated sales and checking of tickets onboard
trains have been far behind ticketing services at stations, and all
onboard work was—for many years until recently—performed
manually in the traditional manner since railways first started.
Conductors required a long time to write special supplementary
tickets by hand. To save time, some sections used special
tickets (opposite) with pre-printed station names and fares and
the conductor simply punched holes for required items.
In addition, conductors checked tickets and fares with
devices such as quick reference matrixes, causing careless
mistakes. The conductor also had to tabulate ticket sales
after arriving, check figures against collected money, prepare
a ledger, and present everything to the conductors’ office,
where other staff had to double-check everything again,
requiring a huge amount of extra work.
However, technology advances at the time of the
establishment of JR East allowed ticketing devices to be
more compact, lightweight and portable. As a result, onboard
ticket terminals were introduced to speed-up onboard sales,
and lighten the burden of tabulation, statistics preparation,
reporting, and auditing.
1G Terminal Development started in 1988 and about 700 portable terminals
had been introduced on a limited basis for some sections
and stations in 1990. The terminals weighed 690 g with tickets
printed on thermal paper. Because conductors in Greater Tokyo
were used to map-type supplementary tickets, stations were
input using a map-type panel. A system was created where
sales data was consolidated via POS terminals at crew offices
and transmitted to the station income management system.
Ticket Printer Onboard supplementary ticket terminals at stations also
needed to handle magnetic tickets following the introduction
of automatic wickets. Because many tickets were for long-