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-   -   Heritage Routemaster routes announced (https://www.londonbanter.co.uk/london-transport/3150-heritage-routemaster-routes-announced.html)

Neil Williams June 29th 05 10:43 PM

Heritage Routemaster routes announced
 
On Wed, 29 Jun 2005 23:39:04 +0100, Colin McKenzie
wrote:

And it wouldn't take an enormous change in the relative costs of fuel
and labour for RMs to be more economical per passenger mile than heavy
modern buses.


Perhaps - but in such circumstances couldn't a modern, lightweight OPO
bus be designed? Crew operation isn't really relevant to that
question, surely?

Neil

--
Neil Williams in Milton Keynes, UK
When replying please use neil at the above domain
'wensleydale' is a spam trap and is not read.

Colin McKenzie June 29th 05 10:49 PM

Heritage Routemaster routes announced
 
Helen Deborah Vecht wrote:

"Ian F." typed
"umpston" wrote in message
groups.com...


Does this mean the existing 9 and 15 routes will remain, with a higher
frequency but that every 2nd or 3rd bus will be a RM in the central
area? Or will the heritage services have new route numbers?


I'll hazard a guess at H9 and H15.

Ummm... H9 already exists; it's the H10 doing the loop 'backwards'.


I'd vote for 9A and 15A - or perhaps 9H and 15H to stop people being
disappointed when they encounter the 77A!

I believe there was a time when a few route number suffix letters got
up to and beyond H.

Colin McKenzie


Clive June 30th 05 12:05 AM

Heritage Routemaster routes announced
 
In message . 170,
Adrian writes
Yep and some regularly end up dieing.

Please explain?
--
Clive

Adrian June 30th 05 07:34 AM

Heritage Routemaster routes announced
 
Neil Williams ) gurgled happily, sounding
much like they were saying :

couldn't a modern, lightweight OPO bus be designed?


It would seem not.

A modern double decker is about 150% the weight of an RM.
A bloatibus is about 250% the weight.

Crew operation isn't really relevant to that question, surely?


It's one of the excuses being used.

Adrian June 30th 05 07:35 AM

Heritage Routemaster routes announced
 
Clive ) gurgled happily, sounding much like they
were saying :

In message . 170,
Adrian writes
Yep and some regularly end up dieing.

Please explain?


I would, but I didn't say it.
Robert Woolley ) did.

Bill Hayles June 30th 05 08:20 AM

Heritage Routemaster routes announced
 
On Wed, 29 Jun 2005 23:49:24 +0100, Colin McKenzie
wrote:



I believe there was a time when a few route number suffix letters got
up to and beyond H.



Not since the Bassom era. Certainly, post-war, the highest was
406F, and that only ran on Derby Day. Plenty of D suffixes, a few
"E" and that single "F".


--
Bill Hayles

http://billnot.com

Clive June 30th 05 10:21 AM

Heritage Routemaster routes announced
 
In message , Bill Hayles
writes
Not since the Bassom era. Certainly, post-war, the highest was 406F,
and that only ran on Derby Day. Plenty of D suffixes, a few "E" and
that single "F".

I remember an H1 flat fare bus in Harrow in the early seventies.
--
Clive

Mrs Redboots June 30th 05 10:59 AM

Heritage Routemaster routes announced
 
Neil Williams wrote to uk.transport.london on Wed, 29 Jun 2005:

On Wed, 29 Jun 2005 23:39:04 +0100, Colin McKenzie
wrote:

And it wouldn't take an enormous change in the relative costs of fuel
and labour for RMs to be more economical per passenger mile than heavy
modern buses.


Perhaps - but in such circumstances couldn't a modern, lightweight OPO
bus be designed? Crew operation isn't really relevant to that
question, surely?

In many ways it is, since dwell times at stops are a great deal shorter,
and also, a conductor can help someone on to a bus (say, someone with
poor sight, or who can walk, but with difficulty) in a way that a driver
cannot.
--
"Mrs Redboots"
http://www.amsmyth.demon.co.uk/
Website updated 23 May 2005



Adrian June 30th 05 11:11 AM

Heritage Routemaster routes announced
 
Clive ) gurgled happily, sounding much like they
were saying :

of bus route suffixes
Not since the Bassom era. Certainly, post-war, the highest was 406F,
and that only ran on Derby Day. Plenty of D suffixes, a few "E" and
that single "F".


I remember an H1 flat fare bus in Harrow in the early seventies.


Umm, that's a prefix, not a suffix.

Clive June 30th 05 11:33 AM

Heritage Routemaster routes announced
 
In message . 170,
Adrian writes
Umm, that's a prefix, not a suffix.

My mistake, not reading posts carefully enough.
--
Clive


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