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[email protected] November 19th 15 08:36 AM

"Hybrid" buses
 
I road on a Boris BUs a while back and was underwhelmed by its supposed
Hybrid-ness. I took the 125 bus yesterday which is also a hybrid but not
a routemaster and it suffered exactly the same issues - the engine went off
at each stop and about 3-4 secs after moving away from the stop on electric
power the engine came back on again and stayed on until the next stop even
in slow moving traffic. Rince and repeat. Which IMO somewhat defeats the whole
point of having a hybrid. I think "electric assisted" would be rather closer
to the truth. In fairness it was somewhat faster up the hills than a diesel
bus but that seemed to be its only advantage.

--
Spud


Basil Jet[_4_] November 19th 15 10:28 PM

"Hybrid" buses
 
On 2015\11\19 09:36, d wrote:
I road on a Boris BUs a while back and was underwhelmed by its supposed
Hybrid-ness. I took the 125 bus yesterday which is also a hybrid but not
a routemaster and it suffered exactly the same issues - the engine went off
at each stop and about 3-4 secs after moving away from the stop on electric
power the engine came back on again and stayed on until the next stop even
in slow moving traffic. Rince and repeat. Which IMO somewhat defeats the whole
point of having a hybrid. I think "electric assisted" would be rather closer
to the truth. In fairness it was somewhat faster up the hills than a diesel
bus but that seemed to be its only advantage.


That's pretty important on the 125 route!


[email protected] November 20th 15 08:52 AM

"Hybrid" buses
 
On Thu, 19 Nov 2015 23:28:46 +0000
Basil Jet wrote:
On 2015\11\19 09:36, d wrote:
I road on a Boris BUs a while back and was underwhelmed by its supposed
Hybrid-ness. I took the 125 bus yesterday which is also a hybrid but not
a routemaster and it suffered exactly the same issues - the engine went off
at each stop and about 3-4 secs after moving away from the stop on electric
power the engine came back on again and stayed on until the next stop even
in slow moving traffic. Rince and repeat. Which IMO somewhat defeats the

whole
point of having a hybrid. I think "electric assisted" would be rather closer
to the truth. In fairness it was somewhat faster up the hills than a diesel
bus but that seemed to be its only advantage.


That's pretty important on the 125 route!


Well true. Certainly the old diesel buses would crawl up the hills at less
than 20mph but they were woefully underpowered. HGVs had no problems.
However even on the flat the diesel engine in these "hybrids" is almost always
running so I really wonder just how much fuel they actually save.

--
Spud


Roland Perry November 20th 15 09:26 AM

"Hybrid" buses
 
In message , at 09:52:48 on Fri, 20 Nov
2015, d remarked:
I road on a Boris BUs a while back and was underwhelmed by its supposed
Hybrid-ness. I took the 125 bus yesterday which is also a hybrid but not
a routemaster and it suffered exactly the same issues - the engine went off
at each stop and about 3-4 secs after moving away from the stop on electric
power the engine came back on again and stayed on until the next stop even
in slow moving traffic. Rince and repeat. Which IMO somewhat defeats the

whole
point of having a hybrid. I think "electric assisted" would be rather closer
to the truth. In fairness it was somewhat faster up the hills than a diesel
bus but that seemed to be its only advantage.


That's pretty important on the 125 route!


Well true. Certainly the old diesel buses would crawl up the hills at less
than 20mph but they were woefully underpowered. HGVs had no problems.
However even on the flat the diesel engine in these "hybrids" is almost always
running so I really wonder just how much fuel they actually save.


If it manages to keep the engine running only at its most economic
speed, rather than constantly varying up and down, that should save
fuel.
--
Roland Perry

[email protected] November 20th 15 09:51 AM

"Hybrid" buses
 
On Fri, 20 Nov 2015 10:26:15 +0000
Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 09:52:48 on Fri, 20 Nov
2015, d remarked:
I road on a Boris BUs a while back and was underwhelmed by its supposed
Hybrid-ness. I took the 125 bus yesterday which is also a hybrid but not
a routemaster and it suffered exactly the same issues - the engine went off
at each stop and about 3-4 secs after moving away from the stop on electric
power the engine came back on again and stayed on until the next stop even
in slow moving traffic. Rince and repeat. Which IMO somewhat defeats the
whole
point of having a hybrid. I think "electric assisted" would be rather

closer
to the truth. In fairness it was somewhat faster up the hills than a diesel
bus but that seemed to be its only advantage.

That's pretty important on the 125 route!


Well true. Certainly the old diesel buses would crawl up the hills at less
than 20mph but they were woefully underpowered. HGVs had no problems.
However even on the flat the diesel engine in these "hybrids" is almost always
running so I really wonder just how much fuel they actually save.


If it manages to keep the engine running only at its most economic
speed, rather than constantly varying up and down, that should save
fuel.


Sadly not. The engine speed seems to vary with road speed and it sounded like
it was changing gear too, so I suspect its a parallel hybrid on this particular
bus model rather than serial.

--
Spud



Robin9 November 21st 15 07:43 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Paul Corfield[_2_] (Post 151909)
Worth saying that the type of hybrid you seem to want is about to be
tried out on route 69. This is a hybrid Alexander Dennis E40 but with
the ability to recharge over induction plates at Walthamstow Central
and Canning Town bus stations. There's been a wobbly start to the
trial but there's only 1 bus at present. These buses are designed to
run 80% of the time on electric power with the small diesel just as
back up.

--
Paul C

I hope that trial is a big success because the 69 bus plods along
Leyton High Road; the Leyton High Road ruined by Waltham
Forest Council and TfL. It used to be a good road with minimal
congestion and minimal air pollution, and the 69 buses cruised along
smoothly. Not now! Many thanks TfL. Many thanks WFBC.


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