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#1
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Has the PVR been reduced when the 205 was re-tendered? It was always
a busy route, but it seems to have got far worse since ELBG took over. Is it just that the Scanias have less capacity, so more end up standing? (They don't look like they do). Neil |
#2
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On Thu, 17 Dec 2009 19:12:08 +0000, Paul Corfield
wrote: A quick check shows the Scanias are longer than the typical buses that Metroline used. Metroline used standard and longer versions of Volvos or Tridents which had between 60-66 seats. The Scanias seat 63. The total capacity should be at least 80 passengers to meet TfL's spec. Thanks. The potential loss of 3 seats might well be noticeable, though the legroom is good (it was on the Volvos as well). The Scanias are nice buses, though they do have the problem you note. Not as bad as the newest Wrights, though, which appear to waste about a foot and a half of space (one row of seats, then) at the back of the upper deck as well. (Or are they hybrids, in which case the space is taken by a battery pack or something?) Were it not for Boris's silly scheme, I'd suggest it as a good route to bendify, though. Strangely successful for a route that originated from the hourly Stationlink! Neil -- Neil Williams Put my first name before the at to reply. |
#3
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![]() "Neil Williams" wrote: Has the PVR been reduced when the 205 was re-tendered? It was always a busy route, but it seems to have got far worse since ELBG took over. Interesting. My perception is that waits for the 15 have got longer since Stagecoach East London became ELBG. Almost as though they were sneakily turning out two or three buses less each day, in the hope nobody would notice. Given that Stagecoach - a pretty efficient business - decided that there wasn't a sufficient profit margin for them in TfL tendered services, I wonder if Macquarie are making cuts in naughty ways? Someone from TfL should be despatched to Strand to count buses. The 15H still runs very well, but with a PVR of 5 (I think), any cuts would be obvious. Chris |
#4
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On Thu, 17 Dec 2009 20:23:05 -0000, "Chris Read"
wrote: Interesting. My perception is that waits for the 15 have got longer since Stagecoach East London became ELBG. Almost as though they were sneakily turning out two or three buses less each day, in the hope nobody would notice. Given that Stagecoach - a pretty efficient business - decided that there wasn't a sufficient profit margin for them in TfL tendered services, I wonder if Macquarie are making cuts in naughty ways? I'm not sure of that. ELBG looks like a "busman's bus company" these days. I doubt Macquarie have much to do with its day to day running, though if they're cutting costs I suppose maintenance and thus reliability may suffer. Neil -- Neil Williams Put my first name before the at to reply. |
#5
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On Thu, 17 Dec 2009 20:21:33 +0000, Neil Williams wrote:
Strangely successful for a route that originated from the hourly Stationlink! what was the original route then? Just Paddington to Liverpool St then? |
#6
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On 17 Dec, 22:53, Martin Petrov
wrote: what was the original route then? Just Paddington to Liverpool St then? Of the 205, it was Padd-Mile End. Stationlink was a loop serving most of (all?) the mainline termini once an hour, starting/finishing at Victoria Coach Station. It used single-decker buses with 4 wheelchair spaces, as it'd be unlikely that anyone *not* in a wheelchair would have chosen to use it given that it was hourly and excruciatingly slow. It was turned into the 205 in the north (which has thrived) and the 705 in the south (which didn't and was withdrawn). Neil |
#7
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On Fri, 18 Dec 2009 19:51:13 +0000, Paul Corfield
wrote: Err I don't think so. It was originally Paddington - Whitechapel. The extension to Mile End followed later. I sit corrected ![]() The huge difference though was that the 205 was given a 10 minute frequency serving all stops every day of the week at main travel times while the 705 was half hourly only and limited stop and I'm not even sure it was a daily service. I think that if the 705 had been every 10 minutes serving all stops then it would have done equally as well. Valid point, but it (like the RV1) would still have been quite slow - an advantage of the 205 is that it's basically just straight up the Euston/City Roads so there isn't much weaving about to be done, unlike Sarf ov da Rivva. But I guess the RV1 in a way *is* part of the southern Stationlink - it certainly links Fenchurch St with Waterloo, at which you can take a Red Arrow to Victoria (I think)... Neil -- Neil Williams Put my first name before the at to reply. |
#8
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On Sat, 19 Dec 2009 11:14:07 +0000, Paul Corfield
wrote: Fair enough - I think the RV1 was really a tourist route by design but it seems to have grown into something else again. Your comments about commuter flows were a surprise to me but they make sense if you think about the places the route serves. Yep. So far as I can see, it's become the main way (other than walking) to get from Waterloo and London Bridge to the Tower Bridge part of the City, and tends to get quite busy. Which makes it all the more of a joke when First put those tiny, nasty little Dennis Darts on it rather than the Citaros. But I think the demand has increased to the point that deckers are necessary, and they do fit as I've seen one in service on that route before. Neil -- Neil Williams Put my first name before the at to reply. |
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