NorwichRailFan
Member
Hi guys. Just wondering out of interest. what's the the cheapest double decker bus to buy new?
Absolutely, there are just so many variables. Spec is a big one, but also how many are you buying - a single bus, a batch of vehicles or a multi-year commitment? Also are the vehicles being financed, leased with option to buy or purchased outright? Is the vehicle a custom build or a "stock" vehicle?The price also depends a lot on the spec
As far as I know most operators don't buy vehicles outright, nearly all are on some kind of finance, be it HP, some kind of operating lease etc
Having said that, I do not understand why Go-Ahead London buy Streetlites (which presumably have a lower list price) than a better bus, for example the E200MMC.
Possibly but I would expect the cost of the lease to be based partly on the price as well.If on a lease, would the leasing cost of a mid-spec bus be similar to a low spec bus due to better residual values?
Having said that, I do not understand why Go-Ahead London buy Streetlites (which presumably have a lower list price) than a better bus, for example the E200MMC.
They have purchased them. But now TfL have said operators can't buy diesel single decks from newIf on a lease, would the leasing cost of a mid-spec bus be similar to a low spec bus due to better residual values?
Having said that, I do not understand why Go-Ahead London buy Streetlites (which presumably have a lower list price) than a better bus, for example the E200MMC.
Possibly but I would expect the cost of the lease to be based partly on the price as well.
Isnt there contract hire, where the manufacturer gets the fianance, and then rents the buses out to the operator. The manufacturer just has to say they will have x buses available start of each day. maintenance is the manufacturers problem. the operator just puts in fuel and a driver.
Isnt there contract hire, where the manufacturer gets the fianance, and then rents the buses out to the operator. The manufacturer just has to say they will have x buses available start of each day. maintenance is the manufacturers problem. the operator just puts in fuel and a driver.
Hopefully any reputable operator also taxes and insures the bus as wellthe operator just puts in fuel and a driver
Yes Volvo seemed to go courting the industry at various times, the Badgerline deal was something new back then when Volvo wanted to establish a presence in the bus side of the PSV market.It was tried by Badgerline at Weston shortly after privatisation, and First toyed with it in a couple of places.
Very rare in the bus industry. I believe much more prevalent in the HGV world. It was tried by Badgerline at Weston shortly after privatisation, and First toyed with it in a couple of places. But generally irrespective of whether HP or Operating Lease, the operator takes responsibility for maintenance.
You can have a standard lease but be responsible for the maintenance, or you can have a full op lease with contract maintenance forming part of it.
It was also done by National Bus Co with the Green Line fleet in the late 1970s. They leased AEC Reliances (RP/RS class) via Kirkby Kingsforth IIRC, around 1977/78 with them returning off lease in 1983/4. The first ones returned were replaced by Tigers with ECW and Duple bodies and I think the latter may also have leased on a five year term, being returned to Kirkby in 1988.
The lease aspect can take on a number of different forms, of course. You can have a standard lease but be responsible for the maintenance, or you can have a full op lease with contract maintenance forming part of it. I seem to recall, and readily accept I may be wrong, but did North Western close their depot in Wigan and open up a new base in Haydock with a load of new Scanias that were on a contract maintenance/lease deal?
The maintenance was down to the individual operating company which in some cases was better than others!Surely the Green Line coaches were still maintained by LCBS though? I have no knowledge, but it would have been extraordinarily revolutionary at the time if Kirby’s had done it!
The maintenance was down to the individual operating company which in some cases was better than others!
The maintenance was down to the individual operating company which in some cases was better than other