Author: Matthew Wharmby
Publisher: Transport Systems Series
ISBN: 9781913870881
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 96
Book Description
London's bus routes are always changing. In this snapshot of 2021, this book captures routes 1-100 at their current physical extent and with their current operating company. Illustrated with over 180 photos, this unique volume gives an insight into what can be seen on each route every day.
London Bus Routes One by One
Author: Matthew Wharmby
Publisher: Transport Systems Series
ISBN: 9781913870881
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 96
Book Description
London's bus routes are always changing. In this snapshot of 2021, this book captures routes 1-100 at their current physical extent and with their current operating company. Illustrated with over 180 photos, this unique volume gives an insight into what can be seen on each route every day.
Publisher: Transport Systems Series
ISBN: 9781913870881
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 96
Book Description
London's bus routes are always changing. In this snapshot of 2021, this book captures routes 1-100 at their current physical extent and with their current operating company. Illustrated with over 180 photos, this unique volume gives an insight into what can be seen on each route every day.
London Buses in the 1970s
Author: Jim Blake
Publisher: Pen and Sword
ISBN: 1473887224
Category : Transportation
Languages : en
Pages : 325
Book Description
Using photographs from Jim Blake's extensive archives, this book examines the turbulent period in the history of London's buses immediately after London Transport lost its Country Buses and Green Line Coaches to the recently-formed National Bus Company, under their new subsidiary company, London Country Bus Services Ltd.The new entity inherited a largely elderly fleet of buses from London Transport, notably almost 500 RT-class AEC Regent double-deckers, of which replacement was already under way in the shape of new AEC MB and SM class Swift single-deckers.London Transport itself was in the throes of replacing a much larger fleet of these. At the time of the split, it was already apparent that the 36ft-long MB class single-deckers were not suitable for London conditions, particularly in negotiating suburban streets cluttered with cars, and were also mechanically unreliable. The shorter SM class superseded them but they were equally unreliable. January 1971 saw the appearance of London Transport's first purpose-built one-man operated double-decker, the DMS class. All manner of problems plagued these, too.Both operators were also plagued with a shortage of spare parts for their vehicles, made worse by the three-day week imposed by the Heath regime in 1973-4. London Transport and London Country were still closely related, with the latter's buses continuing to be overhauled at LT's Aldenham Works. Such were the problems with the MB, SM, and DMS types that LT not only had to resurrect elderly RTs to keep services going, but even repurchased some from London Country! In turn, the latter operator hired a number of MB-types from LT, now abandoned as useless, from 1974 onwards in an effort to cover their own vehicle shortages. Things looked bleak for both operators in the mid-1970s.This book contains a variety of interesting and often unusual photographs illustrating all of this, most of which have never been published before.
Publisher: Pen and Sword
ISBN: 1473887224
Category : Transportation
Languages : en
Pages : 325
Book Description
Using photographs from Jim Blake's extensive archives, this book examines the turbulent period in the history of London's buses immediately after London Transport lost its Country Buses and Green Line Coaches to the recently-formed National Bus Company, under their new subsidiary company, London Country Bus Services Ltd.The new entity inherited a largely elderly fleet of buses from London Transport, notably almost 500 RT-class AEC Regent double-deckers, of which replacement was already under way in the shape of new AEC MB and SM class Swift single-deckers.London Transport itself was in the throes of replacing a much larger fleet of these. At the time of the split, it was already apparent that the 36ft-long MB class single-deckers were not suitable for London conditions, particularly in negotiating suburban streets cluttered with cars, and were also mechanically unreliable. The shorter SM class superseded them but they were equally unreliable. January 1971 saw the appearance of London Transport's first purpose-built one-man operated double-decker, the DMS class. All manner of problems plagued these, too.Both operators were also plagued with a shortage of spare parts for their vehicles, made worse by the three-day week imposed by the Heath regime in 1973-4. London Transport and London Country were still closely related, with the latter's buses continuing to be overhauled at LT's Aldenham Works. Such were the problems with the MB, SM, and DMS types that LT not only had to resurrect elderly RTs to keep services going, but even repurchased some from London Country! In turn, the latter operator hired a number of MB-types from LT, now abandoned as useless, from 1974 onwards in an effort to cover their own vehicle shortages. Things looked bleak for both operators in the mid-1970s.This book contains a variety of interesting and often unusual photographs illustrating all of this, most of which have never been published before.
The London Bendy Bus
Author: Matthew Wharmby
Publisher: Pen and Sword
ISBN: 1473869439
Category : Transportation
Languages : en
Pages : 223
Book Description
Between 2002 and 2006 six of Londons bus companies put into service 390 articulated bendy buses on twelve routes for transport in London.rnrnDuring what turned out to be a foreshortened nine years in service, the Mercedes-Benz Citaro G buses familiar on the continent and worldwide earned an unenviable reputation in London; according to who you read and who you believed, they caught fire at the drop of a hat, they maimed cyclists, they drained revenue from the system due to their susceptibility to fare evasion, they transported already long-suffering passengers in standing crush loads like cattle and they contributed to the extinction of the Routemaster from frontline service. In short, it was often referred to as the bus we hated.rnrnThis account is an attempt by a long-time detractor of the bendy buses to set the vehicles in their proper context not quite to rehabilitate them, but to be as fair as is possible towards a mode of transport which felt about as un-British as could be.
Publisher: Pen and Sword
ISBN: 1473869439
Category : Transportation
Languages : en
Pages : 223
Book Description
Between 2002 and 2006 six of Londons bus companies put into service 390 articulated bendy buses on twelve routes for transport in London.rnrnDuring what turned out to be a foreshortened nine years in service, the Mercedes-Benz Citaro G buses familiar on the continent and worldwide earned an unenviable reputation in London; according to who you read and who you believed, they caught fire at the drop of a hat, they maimed cyclists, they drained revenue from the system due to their susceptibility to fare evasion, they transported already long-suffering passengers in standing crush loads like cattle and they contributed to the extinction of the Routemaster from frontline service. In short, it was often referred to as the bus we hated.rnrnThis account is an attempt by a long-time detractor of the bendy buses to set the vehicles in their proper context not quite to rehabilitate them, but to be as fair as is possible towards a mode of transport which felt about as un-British as could be.
The London DMS
Author: Matthew Wharmby
Publisher: Pen and Sword
ISBN: 1473869463
Category : Transportation
Languages : en
Pages : 602
Book Description
Vilified as the great failure of all London Transport bus classes, the DMS family of Daimler Fleetline was more like an unlucky victim of straitened times. Desperate to match staff shortages with falling demand for its services during the late 1960s, London Transport was just one organization to see nationwide possibilities and savings in legislation that was about to permit double-deck one-man-operation and partially fund purpose-built vehicles. However, prohibited by circumstances from developing its own rear-engined Routemaster (FRM) concept, LT instituted comparative trials between contemporary Leyland Atlanteans and Daimler Fleetlines.The latter came out on top, and massive orders followed. The first DMSs entering service on 2 January 1971.In service, however, problems quickly manifested. Sophisticated safety features served only to burn out gearboxes and gulp fuel. The passengers, meanwhile, did not appreciate being funnelled through the DMS's recalcitrant automatic fare-collection machinery only to have to stand for lack of seating. Boarding speeds thus slowed to a crawl, to the extent that the savings made by laying off conductors had to be negated by adding more DMSs to converted routes!Second thoughts caused the ongoing order to be amended to include crew-operated Fleetlines (DMs), noise concerns prompted the development of the B20 quiet bus variety, and brave attempts were made to fit the buses into the time-honored system of overhauling at Aldenham Works, but finally the problems proved too much. After enormous expenditure, the first DMSs began to be withdrawn before the final RTs came out of service, and between 1979 and 1983 all but the B20s were sold as is widely known, the DMSs proved perfectly adequate with provincial operators once their London features had been removed.OPO was to become fashionable again in the 1980s as the politicians turned on London Transport itself, breaking it into pieces in order to sell it off. Not only did the B20 DMSs survive to something approaching a normal lifespan, but the new cheap operators awakening with the onset of tendering made use of the type to undercut LT, and it was not until 1993 that the last DMS operated.
Publisher: Pen and Sword
ISBN: 1473869463
Category : Transportation
Languages : en
Pages : 602
Book Description
Vilified as the great failure of all London Transport bus classes, the DMS family of Daimler Fleetline was more like an unlucky victim of straitened times. Desperate to match staff shortages with falling demand for its services during the late 1960s, London Transport was just one organization to see nationwide possibilities and savings in legislation that was about to permit double-deck one-man-operation and partially fund purpose-built vehicles. However, prohibited by circumstances from developing its own rear-engined Routemaster (FRM) concept, LT instituted comparative trials between contemporary Leyland Atlanteans and Daimler Fleetlines.The latter came out on top, and massive orders followed. The first DMSs entering service on 2 January 1971.In service, however, problems quickly manifested. Sophisticated safety features served only to burn out gearboxes and gulp fuel. The passengers, meanwhile, did not appreciate being funnelled through the DMS's recalcitrant automatic fare-collection machinery only to have to stand for lack of seating. Boarding speeds thus slowed to a crawl, to the extent that the savings made by laying off conductors had to be negated by adding more DMSs to converted routes!Second thoughts caused the ongoing order to be amended to include crew-operated Fleetlines (DMs), noise concerns prompted the development of the B20 quiet bus variety, and brave attempts were made to fit the buses into the time-honored system of overhauling at Aldenham Works, but finally the problems proved too much. After enormous expenditure, the first DMSs began to be withdrawn before the final RTs came out of service, and between 1979 and 1983 all but the B20s were sold as is widely known, the DMSs proved perfectly adequate with provincial operators once their London features had been removed.OPO was to become fashionable again in the 1980s as the politicians turned on London Transport itself, breaking it into pieces in order to sell it off. Not only did the B20 DMSs survive to something approaching a normal lifespan, but the new cheap operators awakening with the onset of tendering made use of the type to undercut LT, and it was not until 1993 that the last DMS operated.
East London Buses: 1970s-1980s
Author: Malcolm Batten
Publisher: Amberley Publishing Limited
ISBN: 144568022X
Category : Transportation
Languages : en
Pages : 167
Book Description
A terrific range of previously unpublished images of East London buses, including Routemasters, during the 1970s-1980s.
Publisher: Amberley Publishing Limited
ISBN: 144568022X
Category : Transportation
Languages : en
Pages : 167
Book Description
A terrific range of previously unpublished images of East London buses, including Routemasters, during the 1970s-1980s.
London Open Guide
Author: OpenCityGuides Project
Publisher: Ledizioni
ISBN: 8867051490
Category : Travel
Languages : en
Pages : 97
Book Description
This is the London ebook guide realized by the OpenCityGuides Project. We realize user-friendly ebook extracting content from open sources on the world wide web. Why buying an awkward paper guide when you can have an easy and interactive one on your smartphone or tablet? Our guides are both cheap and complete, and offer a more advanced user experience compared with the traditional ones. And, last but not least, they are under an open content license.
Publisher: Ledizioni
ISBN: 8867051490
Category : Travel
Languages : en
Pages : 97
Book Description
This is the London ebook guide realized by the OpenCityGuides Project. We realize user-friendly ebook extracting content from open sources on the world wide web. Why buying an awkward paper guide when you can have an easy and interactive one on your smartphone or tablet? Our guides are both cheap and complete, and offer a more advanced user experience compared with the traditional ones. And, last but not least, they are under an open content license.
London's New Routemaster
Author: Tony Lewin
Publisher:
ISBN: 9781858946245
Category : Routemaster buses
Languages : en
Pages : 160
Book Description
Few things are as synonomous with London as its famous red buses, thousands of which carry millions of passengers a year on hundreds of separate routes. Yet since the withdrawl from service of the much loved Routemaster in the mid-2000s, noe of its replacements has succeeded in generating the same kind of affection among the travelling public. Now, however, the stylish, Thomas Hetherwick-designed New Routemaster looks set to recapture the imagination of Londoners and visitors alike. This book tells the story of the New Routemaster.
Publisher:
ISBN: 9781858946245
Category : Routemaster buses
Languages : en
Pages : 160
Book Description
Few things are as synonomous with London as its famous red buses, thousands of which carry millions of passengers a year on hundreds of separate routes. Yet since the withdrawl from service of the much loved Routemaster in the mid-2000s, noe of its replacements has succeeded in generating the same kind of affection among the travelling public. Now, however, the stylish, Thomas Hetherwick-designed New Routemaster looks set to recapture the imagination of Londoners and visitors alike. This book tells the story of the New Routemaster.
London
Author: Michael Leapman
Publisher: Penguin
ISBN: 0756669170
Category : Travel
Languages : en
Pages : 451
Book Description
Detachable col. fold-out map attached to flap of p. [3] of cover.
Publisher: Penguin
ISBN: 0756669170
Category : Travel
Languages : en
Pages : 451
Book Description
Detachable col. fold-out map attached to flap of p. [3] of cover.
Charles A. Gillig's new guide to London
Author: Charles Alvin Gillig
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : London (England)
Languages : en
Pages : 220
Book Description
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : London (England)
Languages : en
Pages : 220
Book Description
Motor Transport
Author:
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Commercial vehicles
Languages : en
Pages : 664
Book Description
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Commercial vehicles
Languages : en
Pages : 664
Book Description