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#11
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![]() "Stephen O'Connell" wrote in message ... 1506 wrote: The 1938 tube train looked perfect. Although ISTR in service these units ran with black roofs. The preserved one is all over red. IIRC they were a darkish Grey. (Which could be black!) The roofs certainly weren't red in my day anyway. However, that's only a minor nitpick. They are lovely trains to see around, especialy in a red livery. It brings back soooo many memories.. I always thought of them as the Routemaster of the tube world! |
#12
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![]() "Grumbling Appendix" wrote The 1938 tube train I always thought of them as the Routemaster of the tube world! I'd have said the RT. RMs were more the contemporaries of the 59 and 62 stock. Peter (old enough to have travelled to school on RFs and RTs) |
#13
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On Wed, 10 Jun 2009 12:15:58 +0100, "Tim Fenton"
wrote: "Peter Masson" wrote in message ... I always thought of them as the Routemaster of the tube world! I'd have said the RT. RMs were more the contemporaries of the 59 and 62 stock. Mind you, the RT was still in production in 1954 (paradoxically, some of these had OLD nnn numberplates). This was actually a pre-war design - you could recognise the pre-war from the post-war because the former had route-number boxes front and back but the latter only had them at the front or not at all. We used to see them occasionally on the local routes when I was a kid. Both the RT family (including RTL and RTW) and the RM family were long lived, rugged and reliable vehicles many of which had an extended life on provincial cities after withdrawal by London Transport. RMs were the mainstay of of many of the independents athat sprung up after deregulation. |
#14
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![]() "Tim Fenton" wrote There were two spells of RM operation in south Manchester, the second being with an independent. The RM was a good vehicle for Wilmslow Road, but needed a crew of two, and they were by now getting old. You do make me feel old. The RMs were billed as the replacement for trolleybuses, and I was disappointed when the Bexleyheath trolleys were replaced by RTs (on the 96, and by extending the 229 through to Woolwich by the 698 route). My earliest RM journeys were on Red Rovers, starting 161 Chislehurst to Woolwich (RT), Woolwich Ferry, and an RM (route 69?) from North Woolwich to Chingford. Peter |
#15
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On 10 June, 16:11, "Peter Masson" wrote:
"Tim Fenton" wrote There were two spells of RM operation in south Manchester, the second being with an independent. The RM was a good vehicle for Wilmslow Road, but needed a crew of two, and they were by now getting old. You do make me feel old. The RMs were billed as the replacement for trolleybuses, and I was disappointed when the Bexleyheath trolleys were replaced by RTs (on the 96, and by extending the 229 through to Woolwich by the 698 route). My earliest RM journeys were on Red Rovers, starting 161 Chislehurst to Woolwich (RT), Woolwich Ferry, and an RM (route 69?) from North Woolwich to Chingford. Peter I think it could well be the 69. I remember that we referred to the RMs on the 123 as "new buses". Although, that was only relative to RTs on other routes like the 144 as it was then. I don't suppose they were that new really. |
#16
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![]() "MIG" wrote in message ... On 10 June, 16:11, "Peter Masson" wrote: "Tim Fenton" wrote There were two spells of RM operation in south Manchester, the second being with an independent. The RM was a good vehicle for Wilmslow Road, but needed a crew of two, and they were by now getting old. You do make me feel old. The RMs were billed as the replacement for trolleybuses, and I was disappointed when the Bexleyheath trolleys were replaced by RTs (on the 96, and by extending the 229 through to Woolwich by the 698 route). My earliest RM journeys were on Red Rovers, starting 161 Chislehurst to Woolwich (RT), Woolwich Ferry, and an RM (route 69?) from North Woolwich to Chingford. Peter I think it could well be the 69. I remember that we referred to the RMs on the 123 as "new buses". Although, that was only relative to RTs on other routes like the 144 as it was then. I don't suppose they were that new really. I'm now feeling really old. In November 1952 the 227 was shared between old Scooters and new RFs. If both were lined up at Chislehurst Gordon Arms I'd insist on going on the RF, even if the Scooter was due out first. Peter |
#17
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![]() "Peter Masson" wrote in message ... "MIG" wrote in message ... On 10 June, 16:11, "Peter Masson" wrote: "Tim Fenton" wrote There were two spells of RM operation in south Manchester, the second being with an independent. The RM was a good vehicle for Wilmslow Road, but needed a crew of two, and they were by now getting old. You do make me feel old. The RMs were billed as the replacement for trolleybuses, and I was disappointed when the Bexleyheath trolleys were replaced by RTs (on the 96, and by extending the 229 through to Woolwich by the 698 route). My earliest RM journeys were on Red Rovers, starting 161 Chislehurst to Woolwich (RT), Woolwich Ferry, and an RM (route 69?) from North Woolwich to Chingford. Peter I think it could well be the 69. I remember that we referred to the RMs on the 123 as "new buses". Although, that was only relative to RTs on other routes like the 144 as it was then. I don't suppose they were that new really. I'm now feeling really old. In November 1952 the 227 was shared between old Scooters and new RFs. If both were lined up at Chislehurst Gordon Arms I'd insist on going on the RF, even if the Scooter was due out first. Peter The RF was a pleasure to drive, I drove them on the 712-713-714 out of Dorking and before that I had a go with the re-geared one at Reigate on the 727, that could really motor. |
#18
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On 10 June, 17:19, "Peter Masson" wrote:
"MIG" wrote in message ... On 10 June, 16:11, "Peter Masson" wrote: "Tim Fenton" wrote There were two spells of RM operation in south Manchester, the second being with an independent. The RM was a good vehicle for Wilmslow Road, but needed a crew of two, and they were by now getting old. You do make me feel old. The RMs were billed as the replacement for trolleybuses, and I was disappointed when the Bexleyheath trolleys were replaced by RTs (on the 96, and by extending the 229 through to Woolwich by the 698 route). My earliest RM journeys were on Red Rovers, starting 161 Chislehurst to Woolwich (RT), Woolwich Ferry, and an RM (route 69?) from North Woolwich to Chingford. Peter I think it could well be the 69. I remember that we referred to the RMs on the 123 as "new buses". Although, that was only relative to RTs on other routes like the 144 as it was then. *I don't suppose they were that new really. I'm now feeling really old. In November 1952 the 227 was shared between old Scooters and new RFs. If both were lined up at Chislehurst Gordon Arms I'd insist on going on the RF, even if the Scooter was due out first. Peter- Now I'm feeling young ... There was a local route with RFs that I did used to go on, which was the 254. I remember the climb to get in: it was like a single decker that only had a top deck and no bottom deck. I don't remember ever going on them anywhere else, but I think they persisted at Kingston for quite a long time. I always liked the look of them though. And the noise. |
#19
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On Jun 10, 4:38*am, "Stephen O'Connell" wrote:
hear the same. They were notoriously unreliable from the word go, Unreliable? Yet some of them are still operating on the Isle of Weight some 60 years after they were built! If that's unreliable, I hope I still am at that age!!! *:-) ![]() same as reliability. There may be a tenuous relationship in that something that has low reliability may have a shorter than planned service life if a point is reached where capital replacement is lower than maintenance (incl. overhauls). IOW is an artificial regime ... large fleet compared to traffic requirements, unintensive service, very small dedicated operators as well as engineers. -- Nick |
#20
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On Jun 10, 3:35*pm, "Tim Fenton" wrote:
Actually, many of the RTL and RTW (6RT and 7RT) got withdrawn at the end of the 1960s and were cut up, which was a bit of a waste, but then there had been over 4,000 built, and it wouldn't have been possible to find new owners Especially as double decker OMO became legal in 1968 (or thereabouts) so no sane domestic operator would want a fleet of them, and R/H drive second hand buses don't have huge export potential. Cue a long list of where exLT buses and trollies have gone ... but the sum total is not huge and extended over a long period. -- Nick |
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