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London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London. |
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#1
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On Nov 30, 4:28 pm, wrote:
So basically that is the end of the old London taxi. The iconic design has been around since I dont know when. I am surprised that there has not been any fuss about it like the end of the routemaster. Because the current LTI vehicle is overpriced and is an awful underpowered retro pastiche that looks like it should have Noddy at the wheel. I doubt anyone will miss it. B2003 |
#2
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On Dec 1, 9:34*am, Boltar wrote:
On Nov 30, 4:28 pm, wrote: So basically that is the end of the old London taxi. *The iconic design has been around since I dont know when. *I am surprised that there has not been any fuss about it like the end of the routemaster. Because the current LTI vehicle is overpriced and is an awful underpowered retro pastiche that looks like it should have Noddy at the wheel. I doubt anyone will miss it. B2003 If that's fair, does it not also apply to the Routemaster, hence the poster's question? |
#3
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On Dec 1, 10:01 am, MIG wrote:
If that's fair, does it not also apply to the Routemaster, hence the poster's question? The routemaster isn't a pastiche , its the real thing. And while its looks might be old fashioned they don't look as plain daft as the current LTI taxi. Having said that the only good thing about the routemaster IMO is the hop on/off ability. Apart from that its too small and too cramped to be a realistic bus for todays crowds. B2003 |
#4
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On Dec 1, 10:29*am, Boltar wrote:
On Dec 1, 10:01 am, MIG wrote: If that's fair, does it not also apply to the Routemaster, hence the poster's question? The routemaster isn't a pastiche , its the real thing. And while its looks might be old fashioned they don't look as plain daft as the current LTI taxi. Having said that the only good thing about the routemaster IMO is the hop on/off ability. Apart from that its too small and too cramped to be a realistic bus for todays crowds. B2003 I am not criticising or praising the Routemaster, but by 1969 or so it was an updated version of a design that was going out of date in the 1950s, and certainly not exactly overpowered. |
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#6
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#7
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Adrian wrote:
gurgled happily, sounding much like they were saying: It has not been beaten since in a number of areas, most notably that most modern buses weigh half as much again (or double in the case of bendies). A chunk more than that... An RM is about 7.5t ULW. A Citaro bendy is about 18t ULW. With substantially higher capacity, nearly twice as much. I still don't get why people compare RMs with bendies all the time - the former is the ultimate traditional London bus from an age where you could afford large amounts of labour, the latter is a cheap tram, brought in quickly to cope with rising demand before proper electrically powered rail based solutions could be developed. However, the mass per passenger is a lot more (in the range of about 40-50%), but if you compare bendy against conventional double decker it's rather closer and if you compare bendy against bendy replacement single decker the bendy wins on weight (and indeed on pretty much every other ground - the rigid option has more buses, more cumulative length of bus, more drivers and more risk to cyclists) This is important because the replacement for bendies on two of the first three routes will be rigid single deckers - they were never RM routes. I can't wait for the spin on that one. So why are modern buses heavier? Partly, I suspect, for the same reasons modern trains are heavier - for many years the commercial incentives in what is now a competitive market were around minimising initial cost, maintenance and downtime (which translates as 'stick a bit of extra metal on it and don't waste time optimising for weight or it'll be late to market and uncompetitive on price') and people have got bigger - the RM is a bit narrower and a lot shorter than a modern bus, which are usually 2550mm wide. Free markets don't lead to optimised design, since design quality is one of a number of conflicting requirements in product design in a competitive environment. I'm not sure a convinced Thatcherite like Boris necessarily understands this, considering how he keeps going on about value for money. Tom |
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