RJ
Established Member
Anything longer than 9m with a single door is rare nowadays - I think they're only found on Arriva's B routes around Bexleyheath, the 386 and X26. Less than 9m is common, lots of backstreet routes use them.
Last week I was in the Ian Allan bookshop in Waterloo. At £4 I treated myself to a reprinted London bus map dated 11th June 1939. I don't confess to know many route numbers but looking at it for North West London, I recognised 222 Hounslow to Uxbridge, 607 (trolleybus then) Uxbridge to Shepherds Bush, now White City, and 142 Watford Junction to Kilburn, now Brent Cross, being very similar. Not forgetting the 24 which I read earlier, is the oldest route.
Now 76 years later, there must be still other similar route numbers.
Not bad they've survived all this time.
Last week I was in the Ian Allan bookshop in Waterloo. At £4 I treated myself to a reprinted London bus map dated 11th June 1939. I don't confess to know many route numbers but looking at it for North West London, I recognised 222 Hounslow to Uxbridge, 607 (trolleybus then) Uxbridge to Shepherds Bush, now White City, and 142 Watford Junction to Kilburn, now Brent Cross, being very similar. Not forgetting the 24 which I read earlier, is the oldest route.
Now 76 years later, there must be still other similar route numbers.
Not bad they've survived all this time.
The 16 is still pretty similar to what it was in horse bus days.
Didn't the 38 have a bus every minute at peak times after conversion from bendies to double deckers?
There are still plenty of people using the 25 today to make journeys that can be made by tube - I suspect that as long as it's charging half what Crossrail does, modal shift will be minimal.
Seem to remember it was basically every two minutes, with occasional one minute gaps, but it's certainly the most frequent we've seen in decades and likely to remain that way: the 25 might justify similar, but only until Crossrail steals some of its longer-distance passengers.
The 521 is 30 bph during the 'super peak' at Holborn, so there are some one minute gaps at either termini. I've seen them at London Bridge, they just fill up and go, one after the other. Very efficient operation.
The 16 was the last London route to have a frequency to have a frequency of one per minute, on the Victoria to Cricklewood (Crown) section back around 1960. Actually, that is not strictly true, the peak interval was shown as 1-2 minutes, so probably two buses every three minutes. In those days, some buses extended beyond Cricklewood to Neasden (Dog Lane) and a few more to Sudbury Town Station, these being later replaced by the 245.
I have an October 1955 schedule book (repro) to hand which shows the peak frequency on the 16 as a mere 36 buses per hour between Cricklewood and Victoria in the am peak (10 per hour started at Sudbury, 10 bph started at Neasden)
The most frequent I can find are the 101 (53 buses per hour at peak times between East Ham Town Hall and Royal Albert Dock) and 109 (52 buses per hour at peak between Brixton and Kennington Park (where the route divided - some going via Blackfriars and some via Westminster)
I believe that both the 101 and 109 were at or slightly over 60 buses per hour at the absolute height of the post-war peak. The 101 had an allocation of 64 buses in 1954 but only 53 in Oct 1955, similarly the 109 had 88 buses allocated in 1951 but this was down to 82 by Oct 1955.
Seem to remember it was basically every two minutes, with occasional one minute gaps, but it's certainly the most frequent we've seen in decades and likely to remain that way: the 25 might justify similar, but only until Crossrail steals some of its longer-distance passengers.
Longer distance passengers may still prefer the bus. At certain hours it seems to be heavily used by e.g. cleaners at city firms where cost will be a major factor.
25 is an odd route as well - it terminates in quite a few places, so it's not unusual to need to change / wait for the next service which means that frequency varies across the route. I also find it quite clumpy - you'll get two or three buses together and then long gaps.
I'm well aware that under the current tendering system a western allocation is not possible - so alter the tendering system, get two operators in and compare their performance, the only way that operation by private companies can be justified.
At the moment the companies are given a target and paid compared to whether they meet it or not. I'm not sure how having two companies running would improve that. They'd have difficulty sorting out headway between buses of different companies (who should alter their buses if there's a big gap?).
At the moment the companies are given a target and paid compared to whether they meet it or not.
"Performance targets are set by TfL through Quality Incentive Contracts (QICs) to encourage the provision of punctual and high quality service. Operators receive bonus payments when targets are met and are penalised for poor performance."
Are there not significant benefits to companies in garages at each end of the route? For example, it can remove a lot of dead mileage (although, for instance, if the garage is at the outer end of a route it's probably going to be the most rational place for buses to start/finish with respect to peak hours etc. The N91 is an example which is run 50/50 between PB and HT.
Lothian operated some services on a split depot basis but they tended to be one depot running the service most of the time and another running peak extras.
There was one case outwith London a few years ago where company A ran the Mon-Sat service and company B the Sunday service. On a particular holiday, company A declared it to be a Sunday and company B a Monday service, so no buses ran!
What is the longest distance one can travel from Central London on a through TfL service these days ? Would hazard a guess at the 113 as it takes you from Marble Arch to the edge of the green belt.
What is the longest distance one can travel from Central London on a through TfL service these days ? Would hazard a guess at the 113 as it takes you from Marble Arch to the edge of the green belt.
Not a straight answer to your question, but longest TIMEWISE is the 25 Oxford Circus to Ilford. Night services are another matter!
The Hendon Way is usually a tad quicker than the Mile End Road.
You can travel from Trafalgar Square out to Slade Green and Erith on the N89 and St Mary Cray on the N47.
Not a straight answer to your question, but longest TIMEWISE is the 25 Oxford Circus to Ilford. Night services are another matter!
The Hendon Way is usually a tad quicker than the Mile End Road.
Which London bus route has the longest dead mileage from its garage to take up the route? I was thinking of something like the 181 or 284 from Grove Park which Metrobus run from their Orpington Garage which is around 7 miles, but I am sure there are others which are longer.