(10 Jun 2014, 2:02 pm)Dan wrote [ -> ]Of course they won't know the model of the bus, but they will be able to differentiate between a heavy weight bus and a light weight bus on the simple basis of one being more comfortable and having less rattles - their passenger experience is massively enhanced by having heavy weight vehicles.
Although I don't think passengers will be able to recognise a bus as a Mercedes, Go North East and other operators have marketed bus services in the past by including 'Take the Mercedes' and such, as Mercedes is obviously somewhat iconic for being a more upmarket brand, as well as providing superior quality and comfort to other manufacturers.
Because they make the profit back later in the day (perhaps even on the return journey). For example, I know that a number of the X85s run with very few passengers (and as such will probably make a loss), but their return journeys in the opposite direction carry more than sufficient passengers to break-even and in most cases, make a profit.
This can only be done to a certain point, and this is when operators withdraw certain runs as they're not commercially viable.
Surprised you resisted the urge to reply about the Fuel Duty Rebate as mentioned in citaro5284's post! Haha!
So the are operator is self subsidising quiet runs, with takings from busier ones?
Exactly the sort of the thing they can do on some services they decide to have nowt to do with on an evening or night.
Unless of course, the margin percentages aren't good enough, they can reduce costs or they don't have the staff to drive the vehicles?
Appreciate we are in an SNE thread, but seeing as others have brought GNE up...
The 4 makes GNE money.
More than enough money to justify a 10min frequency, using the expensive vehicles you mention (smooth journey, wasted on uncomfortable seats, driven extremely fast by the drivers*) - of which a handful run off/onto the profitable 922.
Yet despite all of that, GNE don't/won't/can't afford to run the service through the evening (an extra 3hrs).
The same can be said for the x1, which has also seen reductions on an evening.
Going back to the 4, Nexus refused to be held to ransom (just as they did with the 493 a few years back) and subsidise an evening service extension from Fallowfield Way to Houghton, but did extend the 79 to a certain village not too far from Houghton.
The section of the 4, which does still run on an evening, tends to carry very few passengers (as it has done historically). With the amount of passes it takes and lack of bums on seats, it can't make a profit at all. If it does, it will be negligible.
Coincidentally, Fallowfield Way, fits in just nice as a terminus, with minimal layover time before the return journey. Houghton doesn't...
*the words of Ma Constantopolous