When you say the car three back, do you mean a group of cars all in the same order, just that the lead car is sorting the order out?
So: if placing more than one separate order in a car, DO NOT in any way indicate you're moving on to the next order unless you are completely certain you're done placing the first one. It really messes things up, likely for you as well as for the employees. BUT also be sure to mention that you intend to place multiple orders sometime *before* finishing the first one, so that they can be marked onscreen as being together.
Separate cars are always separate, though you're welcome to pay for the one behind you if you wish.
Why can't service plazas that regularly get "hit" by buses (which have to be on some sort of schedule - so why not have a shift overlap for when the bus is due?) - or the pub in GT's case, have one server dedicated to people who are NOT part of the large group?
(It's truly a mess when a bus needs to all pay on a single order, but each person order separately. It quickly becomes impossible to tell what's been made, what's been picked up, etc., and then they'll hit one or another of the limits in the register and it will lock up. For example, on the now-outdated PC-POS software, there was a hard limit of, I think, 18 total modifiers and condiments per order. As in, if one person says "no mayo" (2), the next "only onions and mustard" (3) and the next "extra ketchup no cheese" (4) that's nine right there, half the total allowed. Also, no more than 99 of any one item and no more than $999.99 total, though those were much harder to hit.)
And then, if there's any change at the window, it's a waste of cups, soda, and time. There's a point where automation is too automated.
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