View Single Post
  #26   Report Post  
Old December 29th 17, 09:49 PM posted to uk.transport.london
Recliner[_3_] Recliner[_3_] is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity at LondonBanter: Oct 2014
Posts: 2,990
Default TfL to make half of Berkshire wheelchair accessible

Paul Corfield wrote:
On Thursday, 28 December 2017 20:02:45 UTC, Clank wrote:

I know you hate them, but I'm genuinely baffled why. I suspect
that the man who introduced them plays an undue influence.

I was on the 38 yesterday, and thought it was genuinely excellent.
As a tall person I find the upper deck much better than
'traditional' London double deckers (insomuch as I don't whack my
head on the roof trying to find a seat), and the rear stairs &
door are much more convenient than "fighting with passengers on
the way up when you want to get off" that is normal in a regular
London double decker.

Oh, and the climate was fine.

What is your problem with them? On the two days a year that
London experiences warm weather I never found the existing bus
stock particularly wonderful, so I'm not buying "they're
sometimes warm"...


The simple answer is that they make me ill. Don't know why specifically
but I have ended up feeling exhausted and having a thumping headache when
using them in the early days. I am not prone to headaches so if I get one
it's an unusual event. The weather was not exceptional on any day in
question. No other bus in the *world* (and I've travelled on plenty) has
the same effect. Heck I even survived crossing the Channel twice in one
day in very stormy conditions without being seasick and I loathe ferry
travel. To my mind that pretty much proves I am not prone to travel
sickness so why the NB4L affects me physically I don't know but it does.

The fact that so much money was splashed on something that is a
reflection of Boris's monstrous ego certainly doesn't help my opinion of
them but it is not the main reason why I refuse to travel on NB4Ls. Why
would I use a bus that makes me ill? Simple answer - I don't and it's
one reason why my bus use and visits to Central London have declined
markedly. I await the day when they start being withdrawn and are
replaced with something decent. I know that's at least a decade away and
that's fine. I know people like them and others hate them - that's fine too.


Paul,

I'm sure you'll be thrilled at this bit of news:

"William Wright, of Ballymena-based Wrightbus - the company behind the new
London Routemaster double-decker - is knighted for services to the economy
and bus industry."

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-42504660