The Old Bloke Next Door Posted March 14 Posted March 14 lesapandre, danthecapriman and busmansholiday 3
The Old Bloke Next Door Posted March 14 Posted March 14 busmansholiday, lisbon_road, lesapandre and 2 others 5
SilverMachine Posted March 14 Posted March 14 On 14/03/2025 at 17:02, Yoss said: Does that Regent have air con? It only seems to have two small opening windows upstairs at the front. Even in Newcastle there would be a couple of days a year where that would not be sufficient. Expand is that not to recirculate the cigarette smoke so everyone can enjoy it? Yoss, LightBulbFun, High Jetter and 1 other 1 2 1
quicksilver Posted March 14 Posted March 14 On 14/03/2025 at 19:48, The Old Bloke Next Door said: Expand Is that a Mazda 1500 parked on the left? That must have been an even rarer sight than a BMMO C1. Spottedlaurel, lesapandre and The Old Bloke Next Door 2 1
lisbon_road Posted March 16 Posted March 16 Went for a short ride on this yesterday, 1929 Dennis G Toastrack with Southampton University. I've known it a while, including when a few of us took it to Helsinki, Riga and St Petersburg. lesapandre, The Old Bloke Next Door, 108 and 5 others 8
lesapandre Posted March 16 Posted March 16 LeBonCoin - €24,000. The Old Bloke Next Door, danthecapriman and jon.k 3
Inspector Morose Posted March 16 Posted March 16 On 16/03/2025 at 11:59, lesapandre said: LeBonCoin - €24,000. Expand FFN378, an ex East Kent park Royal bodied Guy Arab. Quite the survivor, that one. lesapandre 1
eifion Posted March 17 Posted March 17 This is the old coach that helped* me get my PSV licence. A crash gearbox with the gears all in there somewhere and a clutch so heavy that after the first day's training I got back in my car and thought that the clutch pedal had broken, so light was it by comparison. A Bedford something-or-other. I'm sure someone here will know what. Taken by Pontins in Prestatyn in late Spring 1994. danthecapriman, lisbon_road, The Old Bloke Next Door and 9 others 12
quicksilver Posted March 17 Posted March 17 Apart from the circus, the other target of today's trip to Milton Keynes was this. The Loop is a new circular service introduced to replace the unpopular demand-responsive MK Connect and serve areas that lost their regular bus service years ago and is the biggest change to the city's bus network in five years. The much-publicised 'new' bus, in typically high-quality Arriva MK fashion, turned out to be a 17-year old Solo with a vinyl wrap slapped on. There are actually two of them but the other one for some reason hasn't been used at all since it was wrapped, and with four buses required and only one in the special livery it rather defeats the point. The Old Bloke Next Door 1
clayts450 Posted March 17 Posted March 17 On 17/03/2025 at 20:13, quicksilver said: Apart from the circus, the other target of today's trip to Milton Keynes was this. The Loop is a new circular service introduced to replace the unpopular demand-responsive MK Connect and serve areas that lost their regular bus service years ago and is the biggest change to the city's bus network in five years. The much-publicised 'new' bus, in typically high-quality Arriva MK fashion, turned out to be a 17-year old Solo with a vinyl wrap slapped on. There are actually two of them but the other one for some reason hasn't been used at all since it was wrapped, and with four buses required and only one in the special livery it rather defeats the point. Expand Nottingham City have all but expired their last Solos with the intro of 48 Yutong electric buses in the last few months. What I love about NCT is that you can actually see what bus is on what route and, if they're in service, exactly where they are : https://www.nctx.co.uk/fleet-list The Old Bloke Next Door 1
High Jetter Posted March 17 Posted March 17 On 17/03/2025 at 15:26, eifion said: This is the old coach that helped* me get my PSV licence. A crash gearbox with the gears all in there somewhere and a clutch so heavy that after the first day's training I got back in my car and thought that the clutch pedal had broken, so light was it by comparison. A Bedford something-or-other. I'm sure someone here will know what. Taken by Pontins in Prestatyn in late Spring 1994. Expand Duple? Idk, just what my mind threw up. Interesting reg.
lisbon_road Posted March 18 Posted March 18 On 17/03/2025 at 15:26, eifion said: This is the old coach that helped* me get my PSV licence. A crash gearbox with the gears all in there somewhere and a clutch so heavy that after the first day's training I got back in my car and thought that the clutch pedal had broken, so light was it by comparison. A Bedford something-or-other. I'm sure someone here will know what. Taken by Pontins in Prestatyn in late Spring 1994. Expand Was it normal to have a crash box on something this young? I'd have thought not. Like the photo. eifion 1
83C Posted March 18 Posted March 18 On 18/03/2025 at 16:30, lisbon_road said: Was it normal to have a crash box on something this young? I'd have thought not. Like the photo. Expand Bedford tended to be basic but rugged, and if it wasn't factory fitted it wouldn't surprise me if a crash box found its way in because it was cheaper than buying a synchromesh box, or the old box was in the yard and happened to fit.
The Old Bloke Next Door Posted March 18 Posted March 18 From Facebook. Its long working life with Ipswich Corporation having finally ended, ADX 1 is being officially handed over to the ITS Preservation Section on 21st July 1973, ready for what has turned out to be an even longer period of active preservation. It will be 75 years since this veteran took to the streets of Ipswich this coming May. Photo by Mike Abbott, ITM Archive. All rea danthecapriman and Spottedlaurel 2
lisbon_road Posted March 18 Posted March 18 On 18/03/2025 at 16:50, 83C said: Bedford tended to be basic but rugged, and if it wasn't factory fitted it wouldn't surprise me if a crash box found its way in because it was cheaper than buying a synchromesh box, or the old box was in the yard and happened to fit. Expand I s'pose the synchro could be just totally shagged, another option.
Matty Posted March 18 Posted March 18 I thought a synchro less box was constant mesh? Isn't a crash box much older?
wesacosa Posted March 19 Posted March 19 On 17/03/2025 at 23:26, High Jetter said: Duple? Idk, just what my mind threw up. Interesting reg. Expand I think its a Plaxton bodied Bedford Elite We used to have them as our school buses. I remember then having a huge gearstick which the driver used to wave around trying to find a gear EDIT, could be a Supreme High Jetter and The Old Bloke Next Door 2
lisbon_road Posted March 19 Posted March 19 On 19/03/2025 at 08:54, wesacosa said: I think its a Plaxton bodied Bedford Elite We used to have them as our school buses. I remember then having a huge gearstick which the driver used to wave around trying to find a gear EDIT, could be a Supreme Expand It is a Bedford YRT with Plaxton Panorama Elite bodywork. They were just everywhere in the 70s. wesacosa and eifion 1 1
The Old Bloke Next Door Posted March 19 Posted March 19 After Walsall Fleetline number 1, the rest had a longer overhang and a single entrance only front door for one man operation. Pictured is 15L showing the revised front design, parked outside Wolverhampton's Park Lane Garage, 4/3/73. willswitchengage, Yoss and danthecapriman 3
SunnySouth Posted March 22 Posted March 22 On 19/03/2025 at 23:41, The Old Bloke Next Door said: After Walsall Fleetline number 1, the rest had a longer overhang and a single entrance only front door for one man operation. Pictured is 15L showing the revised front design, parked outside Wolverhampton's Park Lane Garage, 4/3/73. Expand Not a looker…
Inspector Morose Posted March 22 Posted March 22 On 19/03/2025 at 23:41, The Old Bloke Next Door said: After Walsall Fleetline number 1, the rest had a longer overhang and a single entrance only front door for one man operation. Pictured is 15L showing the revised front design, parked outside Wolverhampton's Park Lane Garage, 4/3/73. Expand Erm, not quite. The early Walsall short Fleetlines wee indeed a bit longer than No.1 but they still didn’t have a front doorway and looked like this :- Later batches wee different again and incorporated a front doorway, initially just for crew use but with the spreading of one man operation, was used as an entrance door. Still awake? Good. In 1969 Walsall was absorbed into the WMPTE and they saw the savings of OMO and sped up the roll out across its network, to the point of buying second hand buses from were one man capable, to replace home owned front engined stock. The problem was the early Walsall Fleetlines. Too young to get rid (and who would want a Fleetline that was not able to be run one man operated?), they contracted Lex to rebuild the lower front to slightly extend them to allow a similar front doorway to the later batch, the result being like the original photo. The resulting conversions, although pig ugly, turned the early Fleetlines into useful machines and the last of them were transferred to Wolverhampton, the last withdrawn in the early 80s. 15L was lost after a fire when it was working from Bilston street around 1975. SunnySouth, danthecapriman, willswitchengage and 3 others 5 1
SunnySouth Posted March 22 Posted March 22 On 22/03/2025 at 09:50, Inspector Morose said: Erm, not quite. The early Walsall short Fleetlines wee indeed a bit longer than No.1 but they still didn’t have a front doorway and looked like this :- Later batches wee different again and incorporated a front doorway, initially just for crew use but with the spreading of one man operation, was used as an entrance door. Still awake? Good. In 1969 Walsall was absorbed into the WMPTE and they saw the savings of OMO and sped up the roll out across its network, to the point of buying second hand buses from were one man capable, to replace home owned front engined stock. The problem was the early Walsall Fleetlines. Too young to get rid (and who would want a Fleetline that was not able to be run one man operated?), they contracted Lex to rebuild the lower front to slightly extend them to allow a similar front doorway to the later batch, the result being like the original photo. The resulting conversions, although pig ugly, turned the early Fleetlines into useful machines and the last of them were transferred to Wolverhampton, the last withdrawn in the early 80s. 15L was lost after a fire when it was working from Bilston street around 1975. Expand Having sorted the front entrance for OMO use, did they not panel over that enormous sliding side door to make better use of the space? Or was it retained as an exit? Also; why “15L” ?
calebaaront Posted March 22 Posted March 22 I got a “promotion” at work this week, I’m now on the QA Hospital Park & Ride rota full time. Due to length restrictions on the route they allocate WrightBus Streetlites. It’s not a bad route to do. It only takes 10 minutes to it in it’s entirety High Jetter 1
jon.k Posted March 22 Posted March 22 Went on this today. The owner asked me if I wanted to buy it, so if anyone is looking for one you heard it here first. danthecapriman, SunnySouth, Remspoor and 1 other 4
Inspector Morose Posted March 22 Posted March 22 On 22/03/2025 at 10:01, SunnySouth said: Having sorted the front entrance for OMO use, did they not panel over that enormous sliding side door to make better use of the space? Or was it retained as an exit? Also; why “15L” ? Expand Dual doored buses were commonplace during the early days of one man operation. Passenger flows are better with two doors so time at stops can be comparable with those using crew operated buses (known as dwell times). The front doorway on the Walsall Fleetlines was only ever single width (there simply wasn’t enough length to fit a full width doorway without lengthening the front overhang to such a degree that driving positions would have to be moved, etc. So the question is asked. Why did walsall order special short Fleetlines? Edgley-Cox was a professional Yorkshireman and he worked out that it was far cheaper for Walsall’s ratepayers to buy special short buses with their doorway in the same position as the forward entrance, front engined buses than to go to all of the expense of totally rebuilding the whole bus station for just part of the fleet, making the rest of the fleet harder to operate from the newly, and expensively rebuilt bus station. Final question, why an L in the fleetnumber? When WMPTE took over the fleets of the various corporations, there were duplications in the fleet numbers. To solve this, a suffix letter was added to the original number. Walsal(L), Wolverhampto(N), West Bromwic(H), and later Coventr(Y). Birminghams fleet numbers were never suffixed as this was the numbering scheme that was to be used, going forward and hey, it was the biggest so there, never mind that it was by far the largest loss making constituent of the newly formed WMPTE. SunnySouth 1
SunnySouth Posted March 23 Posted March 23 On 22/03/2025 at 18:49, myglaren said: Expand At least they put wheeltrims on it
SunnySouth Posted March 23 Posted March 23 On 22/03/2025 at 11:01, calebaaront said: I got a “promotion” at work this week, I’m now on the QA Hospital Park & Ride rota full time. Due to length restrictions on the route they allocate WrightBus Streetlites. It’s not a bad route to do. It only takes 10 minutes to it in it’s entirety Expand Christ, how many days of doing that does it usually take to become borderline suicidal?! calebaaront 1
calebaaront Posted March 23 Posted March 23 On 23/03/2025 at 17:18, SunnySouth said: Christ, how many days of doing that does it usually take to become borderline suicidal?! Expand As in the route or having to drive a Streetlite? 🤣It’s a nice route when the sun is out, does get a bit annoying when your shift is almost over though when you’re going up and down. SunnySouth 1
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