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#52
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On Fri, 9 Apr 2021 15:51:06 +0100
Graeme Wall wrote: On 09/04/2021 14:41, wrote: On 9 Apr 2021 12:21:24 GMT Marland wrote: Anna Noyd-Dryver wrote: In any case, it's not uncommon for different routes to have different fleets in any case, even if they're not branded differently - eg in my area the 'prime' pair of routes (direct to the city centre) have always had newer vehicles than the routes which meander through less salubrious parts of town on their way to the centre. As more operators purchase battery electric buses they seem to be allocating them to specific routes which makes sense, it is the 21st The flat routes presumably. I can't imagine many electric buses would last long - in the sense of running time - in dales or hills even with regen braking. Work fine in Guildford. Guildford isn't exactly big. |
#53
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On Fri, 9 Apr 2021 14:40:42 -0000 (UTC)
Recliner wrote: wrote: I wouldn't be surprised if induction charging points end up being spread around the countryside and perhaps some cities for electric buses in the future, because with the best will in the world, battery tech for large vehicles isn't up to the job yet on the longer distance routes. It's claimed to have a 300km range, more than enough to run all day on urban routes. It gets a four hour overnight charge in Willesden bus garage. BYD designed and developed the 10.2m long vehicles to TfL specifications which feature air conditioning, seats for 54 passengers and space for 27 standing passengers. https://www.metroline.co.uk/blog/pro...mission-electr ic-double-decker I suspect those ranges are just as optimistic as electric car ones. You can probably halve it in slow traffic in winter when regen braking is ineffective and the heating is on full blast. Regardless, its pathetic the way the Chinese have just leapfrogged all the european bus manufacturers who appear to have been caught with their pants down. And I can't imagine National Express have done much flicking through electric bus brochures yet. No, not yet. They may have hydrogen-powered buses before battery electric ones. Hydrogen power is an enviromental dead end. I wish politicians would realise. |
#55
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#56
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wrote:
On Fri, 9 Apr 2021 15:51:06 +0100 Graeme Wall wrote: On 09/04/2021 14:41, wrote: On 9 Apr 2021 12:21:24 GMT Marland wrote: Anna Noyd-Dryver wrote: In any case, it's not uncommon for different routes to have different fleets in any case, even if they're not branded differently - eg in my area the 'prime' pair of routes (direct to the city centre) have always had newer vehicles than the routes which meander through less salubrious parts of town on their way to the centre. As more operators purchase battery electric buses they seem to be allocating them to specific routes which makes sense, it is the 21st The flat routes presumably. I can't imagine many electric buses would last long - in the sense of running time - in dales or hills even with regen braking. Work fine in Guildford. Guildford isn't exactly big. For places like Guildford ,and there are many such provincial towns and cities of similar size the battery electric powered buses now being introduced are probably the first time they have had the opportunity to have emission free at the point of use public transport. They were and are highly likely to remain too small to build tram ,light rail and trolleybus systems. A handful like Taunton had for a short time Edwardian era trams often on a single route only a couple of miles long, they tended to be early casualties and again using Taunton as an example its short line closed after only 16 years of operation in 1921 when unable to agree on a price for electricity with the corporation power supply found its cars stranded when the supply was turned off, horses towed them back to the depot. Many places like Exeter only ran one generation of tram closing in the 1930’s replacing with the now reasonably developed motor bus. It was only the big places like London ,Leeds, Sheffield ,Glasgow that could afford to stay with electric power and replace the first generation of vehicles . The Guildfords, Salisburys and Chichesters have been using noisy polluting vehicles for a 100 years now, its time they got some clean ones. The effect in such places of battery buses may be more marked than in bigger conurbations. GH |
#57
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On 09/04/2021 21:16, Marland wrote:
wrote: On Fri, 9 Apr 2021 15:51:06 +0100 Graeme Wall wrote: On 09/04/2021 14:41, wrote: On 9 Apr 2021 12:21:24 GMT Marland wrote: Anna Noyd-Dryver wrote: In any case, it's not uncommon for different routes to have different fleets in any case, even if they're not branded differently - eg in my area the 'prime' pair of routes (direct to the city centre) have always had newer vehicles than the routes which meander through less salubrious parts of town on their way to the centre. As more operators purchase battery electric buses they seem to be allocating them to specific routes which makes sense, it is the 21st The flat routes presumably. I can't imagine many electric buses would last long - in the sense of running time - in dales or hills even with regen braking. Work fine in Guildford. Guildford isn't exactly big. For places like Guildford ,and there are many such provincial towns and cities of similar size the battery electric powered buses now being introduced are probably the first time they have had the opportunity to have emission free at the point of use public transport. They were and are highly likely to remain too small to build tram ,light rail and trolleybus systems. A handful like Taunton had for a short time Edwardian era trams often on a single route only a couple of miles long, they tended to be early casualties and again using Taunton as an example its short line closed after only 16 years of operation in 1921 when unable to agree on a price for electricity with the corporation power supply found its cars stranded when the supply was turned off, horses towed them back to the depot. Many places like Exeter only ran one generation of tram closing in the 1930’s replacing with the now reasonably developed motor bus. It was only the big places like London ,Leeds, Sheffield ,Glasgow that could afford to stay with electric power and replace the first generation of vehicles . The Guildfords, Salisburys and Chichesters have been using noisy polluting vehicles for a 100 years now, its time they got some clean ones. The effect in such places of battery buses may be more marked than in bigger conurbations. Unfortunately it's only a fleet of 9 buses in Guildford at the moment, theoretically dedicated to serving the 4 park and rides. However one of the car parks has been doing duty as a drive in Covid testing station for the last year so the electric buses are making guest appearances on the university services. Good for me as they pass the end of my road on their way into town. -- Graeme Wall This account not read. |
#58
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On Thu, 08 Apr 2021 18:56:33 -0500, Christopher A. Lee
wrote: On Thu, 8 Apr 2021 21:35:31 +0100, "NY" wrote: "Graeme Wall" wrote in message ... Reading buses go in for different liveries for different routes. Some said that at one time the York Park&Ride buses used have different liveries for the different routes, depending on which P&R car-park they went to/from. But by the time I used them, they were a standard livery - the same as the non-P&R buses (*) - and distinguished only by the LED display with the number and the route name (I think it alternated between the colour-name of the route and the name of the car-park). What is always amusing is if a bus company has temporarily borrowed a few buses from another company: there's something a bit weird getting on a bus in York which has bus-company or place-of-interest adverts for Sheffield or Leeds. I think the furthest afield was one that was from the Exeter area. That's a hell of a long way to transport a bus that you've borrowed ;-) When I lived im Manchester, we had Pacers which were withrawn from Cornwall because the curves were too tigh. These still had Cornish ads and wers till painted chocolate and cream )their only redeeming feature). We also had ex- Glasgoe Class 303 units, still painted in Strathclyde livery, with Glasgow adverts and maps. The company down the road from me which used to supply school-sports ground transport to Harrow never bothered to remove any of the adverts from its buses resulting in several of them bimbling around advertising various things in Crosville-land. |
#59
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On Fri, 09 Apr 2021 08:01:36 -0500, Christopher A. Lee
wrote: On Thu, 8 Apr 2021 23:20:42 +0100, Roger Lynn wrote: On 08/04/2021 13:16, Sam Wilson wrote: I haven’t noticed it so much recently, but Edinburgh used to have quite a lot of dedicated buses with the route number included in the livery as well as on the indicator blinds. Stagecoach do that a lot (at least in some areas). At weekends it's common to see buses on the wrong routes. Back when it was still all London Transport, did red buses ever appear on green (country) routes or vice versa, where the two systems overlapped? They used to turn up if there wasn't one of the right colour available due to accidents, overhauls etc. although RLH low height buses seemed to never get a repaint from green when permanently transferred to the 230 route around Harrow. |
#60
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On Fri, 09 Apr 2021 23:50:21 +0100, Charles Ellson
wrote: On Fri, 09 Apr 2021 08:01:36 -0500, Christopher A. Lee wrote: On Thu, 8 Apr 2021 23:20:42 +0100, Roger Lynn wrote: On 08/04/2021 13:16, Sam Wilson wrote: I haven’t noticed it so much recently, but Edinburgh used to have quite a lot of dedicated buses with the route number included in the livery as well as on the indicator blinds. Stagecoach do that a lot (at least in some areas). At weekends it's common to see buses on the wrong routes. Back when it was still all London Transport, did red buses ever appear on green (country) routes or vice versa, where the two systems overlapped? They used to turn up if there wasn't one of the right colour available due to accidents, overhauls etc. although RLH low height buses seemed to never get a repaint from green when permanently transferred to the 230 route around Harrow. The RLH buses I remember on the 230 were all red. I grew up in Harrow and don't remember seeing any in green. |
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