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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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.... The Headline Boris Couldn't Risk.
Some of London's buses would have had problems getting out this morning, but the central area was pretty clear early on, on all major routes, and still is at 8pm. And yet Boris allowed a couple of dozen bendies to sit in a yard at Waterloo all day, rather than have them working shuttles in the central area. Even working their 'official' routes (Red Arrows), they's have made life easier for a lot of Londoners; with a bit of imagination, they could have also worked a straight central area East-west shuttle, and maybe a north-south. But the thought of Bendies being useful was a step too far for Boris. Will they sit in the yard all week? we'll see. -- Andrew "If A is success in life, then A = x + y + z. Work is x; y is play; and z is keeping your mouth shut." ~ Albert Einstein |
#2
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Andrew Heenan wrote:
... The Headline Boris Couldn't Risk. Some of London's buses would have had problems getting out this morning, but the central area was pretty clear early on, on all major routes, and still is at 8pm. And yet Boris allowed a couple of dozen bendies to sit in a yard at Waterloo all day, rather than have them working shuttles in the central area. Even working their 'official' routes (Red Arrows), they's have made life easier for a lot of Londoners; with a bit of imagination, they could have also worked a straight central area East-west shuttle, and maybe a north-south. But the thought of Bendies being useful was a step too far for Boris. Will they sit in the yard all week? we'll see. I'm not actually aware of any bendy routes operating today, except the 29 and that was rumoured to be with double-deckers. I'd love to know the truth of what happened there. IIRC Southwark was one of the councils rumoured to be less than stellar with the gritting. Westminster was OK. Obviously to run a route you need all intervening points dealt with, which is why you need a *plan*. http://www.tfl.gov.uk/corporate/medi...hive/4146.aspx t |
#3
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![]() I'm not actually aware of any bendy routes operating today, except the 29 and that was rumoured to be with double-deckers. I'd love to know the truth of what happened there. The N73 was operating this afternoon.. |
#4
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On Mon, 02 Feb 2009 20:21:27 +0000, Tom Barry
wrote this gibberish: Andrew Heenan wrote: ... The Headline Boris Couldn't Risk. Some of London's buses would have had problems getting out this morning, but the central area was pretty clear early on, on all major routes, and still is at 8pm. And yet Boris allowed a couple of dozen bendies to sit in a yard at Waterloo all day, rather than have them working shuttles in the central area. Even working their 'official' routes (Red Arrows), they's have made life easier for a lot of Londoners; with a bit of imagination, they could have also worked a straight central area East-west shuttle, and maybe a north-south. But the thought of Bendies being useful was a step too far for Boris. Will they sit in the yard all week? we'll see. I'm not actually aware of any bendy routes operating today, except the 29 and that was rumoured to be with double-deckers. I'd love to know the truth of what happened there. IIRC Southwark was one of the councils rumoured to be less than stellar with the gritting. Westminster was OK. Obviously to run a route you need all intervening points dealt with, which is why you need a *plan*. http://www.tfl.gov.uk/corporate/medi...hive/4146.aspx t I photographed a brace of 38's in the clapton depot today, in the same parking areas were the staff cars, which seem to have managed to make it into work ok.... I'm very disappointed to see that the busses were kept off the roads leaving people to struggle to make their journeys on foot, all manner of delivery vehicles were out working. -- Mark Varley MarkVarleyPhoto.co.uk TwistedPhotography.co.uk London, England. |
#5
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On Feb 2, 8:21*pm, Tom Barry wrote:
I'm not actually aware of any bendy routes operating today, except the 29 and that was rumoured to be with double-deckers. *I'd love to know the truth of what happened there. As spotted he http://flickr.com/photos/nicohogg/3249362458/ |
#6
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On Thu, 5 Feb 2009, martin wrote:
On Feb 2, 8:21*pm, Tom Barry wrote: I'm not actually aware of any bendy routes operating today, except the 29 and that was rumoured to be with double-deckers. *I'd love to know the truth of what happened there. As spotted he http://flickr.com/photos/nicohogg/3249362458/ That's just round the corner from my house! tom -- GOLDIE LOOKIN' CHAIN [...] will ultimately make all other forms of music both redundant and unnecessary -- NTK |
#7
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#8
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"Adrian" wrote in :
I'm not that familiar with the Models used in London but Southampton had some a few years back. The type used there had their driven axle on the rear section,on one of the rare occasions that city got a smattering of snow one of these showed the weakness in that arrangement by colliding with a pub on a sharp corner. The middle set of wheels lost grip and the rear section carried on pushing causing the bus to jackknife in the middle. What makes that "weakness" rather than a "driver error" - I'm really not clear. It's like looking at a jack-knifed articulated lorry and writing off the whole breed, isn't it? -- Andrew |
#9
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wrote ...
Artic lorries don't have the driven wheels on the trailer ,the tractor unit pulls it. most artic jacknifes occur under braking. with the bendie buses the traction is at the back so on a slippery surface the effect is like trying to push a length of string. its very likely to bend. At the risk of being boring, bendies have managed perfectly well in Europe for 40 or 50 years; why is it that they don't have all these problems, if they are are 'design weaknesses'? Seems a little odd to me. -- Andrew |
#10
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On Mon, 2 Feb 2009 20:08:55 -0000, "Andrew Heenan"
wrote: ... The Headline Boris Couldn't Risk. Some of London's buses would have had problems getting out this morning, but the central area was pretty clear early on, on all major routes, and still is at 8pm. And yet Boris allowed a couple of dozen bendies to sit in a yard at Waterloo all day, rather than have them working shuttles in the central area. Even working their 'official' routes (Red Arrows), they's have made life easier for a lot of Londoners; with a bit of imagination, they could have also worked a straight central area East-west shuttle, and maybe a north-south. But the thought of Bendies being useful was a step too far for Boris. Will they sit in the yard all week? we'll see. yes but happens if the bus gets into a bit of a slide or cannot get traction going round corners, something some of the drivers don't seem to have mastered in dry weather ? |
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