Newcastle Clean Air Zone: services which need to be upgraded
Newcastle Clean Air Zone: services which need to be upgraded
(28 Sep 2021, 9:15 am)ne14ne1 The majority of bus users living on those three main corridors are riding into the city centre for work or leisure, because it’s cheaper and easier than taking their car into town - or more likely because they don’t owner a car, (Newcastle has a higher percentage of non-car owners than other areas).
You’re never going to persuade all of people shown in the image linked below who are sat in their private metal boxes to switch to public transport. They are contributing to congestion and pollution and delaying public transport further.
https://twitter.com/nelivetraffic/status...75050?s=21
Car is no longer king in cities and it’s about time public transport was prioritised. If you don’t try to improve public transport & make it a more attractive option then you risk losing current patronage, when the aim is to increase it.
(28 Sep 2021, 9:15 am)ne14ne1 The majority of bus users living on those three main corridors are riding into the city centre for work or leisure, because it’s cheaper and easier than taking their car into town - or more likely because they don’t owner a car, (Newcastle has a higher percentage of non-car owners than other areas).
You’re never going to persuade all of people shown in the image linked below who are sat in their private metal boxes to switch to public transport. They are contributing to congestion and pollution and delaying public transport further.
https://twitter.com/nelivetraffic/status...75050?s=21
Car is no longer king in cities and it’s about time public transport was prioritised. If you don’t try to improve public transport & make it a more attractive option then you risk losing current patronage, when the aim is to increase it.
(28 Sep 2021, 10:37 am)Storx Massive assumption there considering the Coast Road is the main road to head North, South and West from the likes of Byker aswell. How do you know these people aren't travelling to Team Valley, The Airport or elsewhere in the North East.
You can have 1 million buses going to Newcastle every 30 seconds along the Coast Road it's no use when you can't get a bus to Team Valley without a 15 minute walk.
Considering there's a traffic jam over the Tyne Bridge every morning Southbound suggests that the traffic infact isn't going nowhere near Newcastle especially when the traffic is heading towards the Central Motorway and not Haymarket / St Mary's Place where the majority of City Centre traffic would head towards.
There's a perfectly fine Metro system from the majority of areas on the Coast with proper interworking there's no reason why they should be on a bus along the Coast Road in the first place.
(28 Sep 2021, 10:37 am)Storx Massive assumption there considering the Coast Road is the main road to head North, South and West from the likes of Byker aswell. How do you know these people aren't travelling to Team Valley, The Airport or elsewhere in the North East.
You can have 1 million buses going to Newcastle every 30 seconds along the Coast Road it's no use when you can't get a bus to Team Valley without a 15 minute walk.
Considering there's a traffic jam over the Tyne Bridge every morning Southbound suggests that the traffic infact isn't going nowhere near Newcastle especially when the traffic is heading towards the Central Motorway and not Haymarket / St Mary's Place where the majority of City Centre traffic would head towards.
There's a perfectly fine Metro system from the majority of areas on the Coast with proper interworking there's no reason why they should be on a bus along the Coast Road in the first place.
(28 Sep 2021, 12:28 pm)ne14ne1 Note I was talking about bus users on those three corridors. I didn’t claim general traffic was all heading to the city centre.
Newcastle City Council is rightly prioritising buses so that bus passengers within the City of Newcastle (& no doubt beyond too) can have a quicker more reliable journey into the city centre where they are either heading to alight or connect to onwards travel.
In the wider region hundreds of millions has been spent in recent years on the Silverlink junction, Testos junction, A1 Team Valley to Metrocentre and now A1 Metrocentre to Great Park and A1 Team Valley to Coal House(?).
I don’t see why spending a little on bus priorities on three key bus commuter corridors within the city isn’t being welcomed, especially here on a bus enthusiast forum.
To say there shouldn’t be bus services on the Coast Rd is rather odd. Communities in Sandyford, North Heaton, High Heaton, Cochrane Park, Station Rd, Battle Hill, Norham Rd, Billy Mill, Preston Village etc aren’t all within walking distance to Metro stations, and therefore need buses along the Coast Rd. The same applies to communities along the West Rd and Great North Rd corridors.
(28 Sep 2021, 12:28 pm)ne14ne1 Note I was talking about bus users on those three corridors. I didn’t claim general traffic was all heading to the city centre.
Newcastle City Council is rightly prioritising buses so that bus passengers within the City of Newcastle (& no doubt beyond too) can have a quicker more reliable journey into the city centre where they are either heading to alight or connect to onwards travel.
In the wider region hundreds of millions has been spent in recent years on the Silverlink junction, Testos junction, A1 Team Valley to Metrocentre and now A1 Metrocentre to Great Park and A1 Team Valley to Coal House(?).
I don’t see why spending a little on bus priorities on three key bus commuter corridors within the city isn’t being welcomed, especially here on a bus enthusiast forum.
To say there shouldn’t be bus services on the Coast Rd is rather odd. Communities in Sandyford, North Heaton, High Heaton, Cochrane Park, Station Rd, Battle Hill, Norham Rd, Billy Mill, Preston Village etc aren’t all within walking distance to Metro stations, and therefore need buses along the Coast Rd. The same applies to communities along the West Rd and Great North Rd corridors.
(28 Sep 2021, 12:28 pm)ne14ne1 Note I was talking about bus users on those three corridors. I didn’t claim general traffic was all heading to the city centre.
Newcastle City Council is rightly prioritising buses so that bus passengers within the City of Newcastle (& no doubt beyond too) can have a quicker more reliable journey into the city centre where they are either heading to alight or connect to onwards travel.
In the wider region hundreds of millions has been spent in recent years on the Silverlink junction, Testos junction, A1 Team Valley to Metrocentre and now A1 Metrocentre to Great Park and A1 Team Valley to Coal House(?).
I don’t see why spending a little on bus priorities on three key bus commuter corridors within the city isn’t being welcomed, especially here on a bus enthusiast forum.
To say there shouldn’t be bus services on the Coast Rd is rather odd. Communities in Sandyford, North Heaton, High Heaton, Cochrane Park, Station Rd, Battle Hill, Norham Rd, Billy Mill, Preston Village etc aren’t all within walking distance to Metro stations, and therefore need buses along the Coast Rd. The same applies to communities along the West Rd and Great North Rd corridors.
(28 Sep 2021, 12:28 pm)ne14ne1 Note I was talking about bus users on those three corridors. I didn’t claim general traffic was all heading to the city centre.
Newcastle City Council is rightly prioritising buses so that bus passengers within the City of Newcastle (& no doubt beyond too) can have a quicker more reliable journey into the city centre where they are either heading to alight or connect to onwards travel.
In the wider region hundreds of millions has been spent in recent years on the Silverlink junction, Testos junction, A1 Team Valley to Metrocentre and now A1 Metrocentre to Great Park and A1 Team Valley to Coal House(?).
I don’t see why spending a little on bus priorities on three key bus commuter corridors within the city isn’t being welcomed, especially here on a bus enthusiast forum.
To say there shouldn’t be bus services on the Coast Rd is rather odd. Communities in Sandyford, North Heaton, High Heaton, Cochrane Park, Station Rd, Battle Hill, Norham Rd, Billy Mill, Preston Village etc aren’t all within walking distance to Metro stations, and therefore need buses along the Coast Rd. The same applies to communities along the West Rd and Great North Rd corridors.
(28 Sep 2021, 5:41 pm)stagecoachbusdepot Those road improvements (which actually delivered improved infrastructure and reduced journey times for all road users) weren't done at the detriment of others. If the bus priority measures meant an extra lane added which buses could whizz along with those who have to use them, I'd have no issue with it. The reality though will doubtless be some hairbrained half arsed attempt like the Felling bypass, which turns an already congested pollution hotspot into even more of one. A key issue is that these the bus priority measures are stated as being done to discourage cars. It is madness since, as you acknowledge, a proportion of those cars wont be heading to the City Centre so wouldn't switch anyway. Also makes something of a mockery of the Big Bus Conversation... if they really want to know what would make people get out of the car, maybe they shouldn't assume they already know the answer (I'd wager more will have said convenient links, direct services etc than bus priority measures).
(28 Sep 2021, 12:28 pm)ne14ne1 Note I was talking about bus users on those three corridors. I didn’t claim general traffic was all heading to the city centre.
Newcastle City Council is rightly prioritising buses so that bus passengers within the City of Newcastle (& no doubt beyond too) can have a quicker more reliable journey into the city centre where they are either heading to alight or connect to onwards travel.
In the wider region hundreds of millions has been spent in recent years on the Silverlink junction, Testos junction, A1 Team Valley to Metrocentre and now A1 Metrocentre to Great Park and A1 Team Valley to Coal House(?).
I don’t see why spending a little on bus priorities on three key bus commuter corridors within the city isn’t being welcomed, especially here on a bus enthusiast forum.
To say there shouldn’t be bus services on the Coast Rd is rather odd. Communities in Sandyford, North Heaton, High Heaton, Cochrane Park, Station Rd, Battle Hill, Norham Rd, Billy Mill, Preston Village etc aren’t all within walking distance to Metro stations, and therefore need buses along the Coast Rd. The same applies to communities along the West Rd and Great North Rd corridors.
(28 Sep 2021, 5:41 pm)stagecoachbusdepot Those road improvements (which actually delivered improved infrastructure and reduced journey times for all road users) weren't done at the detriment of others. If the bus priority measures meant an extra lane added which buses could whizz along with those who have to use them, I'd have no issue with it. The reality though will doubtless be some hairbrained half arsed attempt like the Felling bypass, which turns an already congested pollution hotspot into even more of one. A key issue is that these the bus priority measures are stated as being done to discourage cars. It is madness since, as you acknowledge, a proportion of those cars wont be heading to the City Centre so wouldn't switch anyway. Also makes something of a mockery of the Big Bus Conversation... if they really want to know what would make people get out of the car, maybe they shouldn't assume they already know the answer (I'd wager more will have said convenient links, direct services etc than bus priority measures).
(28 Sep 2021, 12:28 pm)ne14ne1 Note I was talking about bus users on those three corridors. I didn’t claim general traffic was all heading to the city centre.
Newcastle City Council is rightly prioritising buses so that bus passengers within the City of Newcastle (& no doubt beyond too) can have a quicker more reliable journey into the city centre where they are either heading to alight or connect to onwards travel.
In the wider region hundreds of millions has been spent in recent years on the Silverlink junction, Testos junction, A1 Team Valley to Metrocentre and now A1 Metrocentre to Great Park and A1 Team Valley to Coal House(?).
I don’t see why spending a little on bus priorities on three key bus commuter corridors within the city isn’t being welcomed, especially here on a bus enthusiast forum.
To say there shouldn’t be bus services on the Coast Rd is rather odd. Communities in Sandyford, North Heaton, High Heaton, Cochrane Park, Station Rd, Battle Hill, Norham Rd, Billy Mill, Preston Village etc aren’t all within walking distance to Metro stations, and therefore need buses along the Coast Rd. The same applies to communities along the West Rd and Great North Rd corridors.
(29 Sep 2021, 3:33 pm)Andreos1 I've mentioned it before and I'll mention it again. Team Valley. There's a very poor service down there and operators don't seem willing to do much about it.
Telling punters about alternative weekday peak services is a start. But it seems to be the easy option. Almost a quick fix. Except I don't think it's going to fix anything, cos there will still be queues of cars clogging up Kingsway and there will be the same old delays to the 93/94.
(29 Sep 2021, 3:33 pm)Andreos1 I've mentioned it before and I'll mention it again. Team Valley. There's a very poor service down there and operators don't seem willing to do much about it.
Telling punters about alternative weekday peak services is a start. But it seems to be the easy option. Almost a quick fix. Except I don't think it's going to fix anything, cos there will still be queues of cars clogging up Kingsway and there will be the same old delays to the 93/94.
(29 Sep 2021, 4:57 pm)deanmachine The thing is, where do you stop on services to Team Valley? When I went to college there about 10 years ago, I was completely fine getting the X34 from the Nook or going to Shields to get the Metro then swapping to the 94 to Kingsway. Do we give people a direct bus from Harton Nook? I had classmates from Burnopfield, Ryton, Whiteleas, Washington, East Herrington, I know a few people who work on the Valley too from random areas of the North East too, none of them had direct buses. Yet when I see the workers services they're only ever carrying half a dozen people so where do you run a service from? I honestly don't know how you would route buses to these places where people work that would actually tempt people who think travelling to Gateshead and changing was too much hassle for them. Most of them seem to travel around most of an area to get enough passengers to justify, and in doing so it turns people away because it's quicker for someone in Sunderland to get the Metro or X24 to Gateshead and switching onto a 94 rather than travelling slowly across most of the Sunderland area on the 939 before heading to the Valley.
I know there's other examples too where I know people locally work such as Quorum, Cobalt or Doxford Park. Apparently there used to be a South Shields GNE depot operated bus that went from Shields around some estates onto the A19 at Lindisfarne Roundabout straight to Doxy, would that type of service be justifiable in the current climate? I don't think so.
I'm hoping this new enhanced bus partnership means services like this could be brought back and maybe entice people out of their cars? I doubt it though, and commercial operators are certainly not going to introduce services like this any time soon. People like my mate who works at the Valley and lives in Harton would rather sit in traffic in his car than go anywhere near a bus. Moving to electric cars at least will reduce localised pollution but congestion is only going to get worse for everyone.
(29 Sep 2021, 4:57 pm)deanmachine The thing is, where do you stop on services to Team Valley? When I went to college there about 10 years ago, I was completely fine getting the X34 from the Nook or going to Shields to get the Metro then swapping to the 94 to Kingsway. Do we give people a direct bus from Harton Nook? I had classmates from Burnopfield, Ryton, Whiteleas, Washington, East Herrington, I know a few people who work on the Valley too from random areas of the North East too, none of them had direct buses. Yet when I see the workers services they're only ever carrying half a dozen people so where do you run a service from? I honestly don't know how you would route buses to these places where people work that would actually tempt people who think travelling to Gateshead and changing was too much hassle for them. Most of them seem to travel around most of an area to get enough passengers to justify, and in doing so it turns people away because it's quicker for someone in Sunderland to get the Metro or X24 to Gateshead and switching onto a 94 rather than travelling slowly across most of the Sunderland area on the 939 before heading to the Valley.
I know there's other examples too where I know people locally work such as Quorum, Cobalt or Doxford Park. Apparently there used to be a South Shields GNE depot operated bus that went from Shields around some estates onto the A19 at Lindisfarne Roundabout straight to Doxy, would that type of service be justifiable in the current climate? I don't think so.
I'm hoping this new enhanced bus partnership means services like this could be brought back and maybe entice people out of their cars? I doubt it though, and commercial operators are certainly not going to introduce services like this any time soon. People like my mate who works at the Valley and lives in Harton would rather sit in traffic in his car than go anywhere near a bus. Moving to electric cars at least will reduce localised pollution but congestion is only going to get worse for everyone.
(29 Sep 2021, 4:57 pm)deanmachine The thing is, where do you stop on services to Team Valley? When I went to college there about 10 years ago, I was completely fine getting the X34 from the Nook or going to Shields to get the Metro then swapping to the 94 to Kingsway. Do we give people a direct bus from Harton Nook? I had classmates from Burnopfield, Ryton, Whiteleas, Washington, East Herrington, I know a few people who work on the Valley too from random areas of the North East too, none of them had direct buses. Yet when I see the workers services they're only ever carrying half a dozen people so where do you run a service from? I honestly don't know how you would route buses to these places where people work that would actually tempt people who think travelling to Gateshead and changing was too much hassle for them. Most of them seem to travel around most of an area to get enough passengers to justify, and in doing so it turns people away because it's quicker for someone in Sunderland to get the Metro or X24 to Gateshead and switching onto a 94 rather than travelling slowly across most of the Sunderland area on the 939 before heading to the Valley.
I know there's other examples too where I know people locally work such as Quorum, Cobalt or Doxford Park. Apparently there used to be a South Shields GNE depot operated bus that went from Shields around some estates onto the A19 at Lindisfarne Roundabout straight to Doxy, would that type of service be justifiable in the current climate? I don't think so.
I'm hoping this new enhanced bus partnership means services like this could be brought back and maybe entice people out of their cars? I doubt it though, and commercial operators are certainly not going to introduce services like this any time soon. People like my mate who works at the Valley and lives in Harton would rather sit in traffic in his car than go anywhere near a bus. Moving to electric cars at least will reduce localised pollution but congestion is only going to get worse for everyone.
(29 Sep 2021, 4:57 pm)deanmachine The thing is, where do you stop on services to Team Valley? When I went to college there about 10 years ago, I was completely fine getting the X34 from the Nook or going to Shields to get the Metro then swapping to the 94 to Kingsway. Do we give people a direct bus from Harton Nook? I had classmates from Burnopfield, Ryton, Whiteleas, Washington, East Herrington, I know a few people who work on the Valley too from random areas of the North East too, none of them had direct buses. Yet when I see the workers services they're only ever carrying half a dozen people so where do you run a service from? I honestly don't know how you would route buses to these places where people work that would actually tempt people who think travelling to Gateshead and changing was too much hassle for them. Most of them seem to travel around most of an area to get enough passengers to justify, and in doing so it turns people away because it's quicker for someone in Sunderland to get the Metro or X24 to Gateshead and switching onto a 94 rather than travelling slowly across most of the Sunderland area on the 939 before heading to the Valley.
I know there's other examples too where I know people locally work such as Quorum, Cobalt or Doxford Park. Apparently there used to be a South Shields GNE depot operated bus that went from Shields around some estates onto the A19 at Lindisfarne Roundabout straight to Doxy, would that type of service be justifiable in the current climate? I don't think so.
I'm hoping this new enhanced bus partnership means services like this could be brought back and maybe entice people out of their cars? I doubt it though, and commercial operators are certainly not going to introduce services like this any time soon. People like my mate who works at the Valley and lives in Harton would rather sit in traffic in his car than go anywhere near a bus. Moving to electric cars at least will reduce localised pollution but congestion is only going to get worse for everyone.
(29 Sep 2021, 9:57 pm)stagecoachbusdepot Agree with all of this and especially the last point. Congestion is going to be made much worse by reducing car lanes (increasing congestion) to create bus priority measures, without fundamental changes to the way operators work (which is not going to happen when profit is king and providing a public service is secondary). Martijn has been clear in a recent briefing that the future for buses is on high usage, mass transit - so run from X to Y and if you happen to live in Z or A to W, tough/walk/change potentially multiple times or modes of transport. Improving journey times might result in marginal gains by tempting more people who live on or close to the X to Y route that is sufficiently profitable for the operator to service, but will do nothing for the majority - those people making the myriad other journeys which will continue to be made in the car, just crammed into one lane instead of two. The danger is the extent to which this stupid approach of making the bus more attractive relative to the car only really by deliberately worsening car journey times is pushed, risks breaking the entire transport system (so-called public, as well as private).
(29 Sep 2021, 9:57 pm)stagecoachbusdepot Agree with all of this and especially the last point. Congestion is going to be made much worse by reducing car lanes (increasing congestion) to create bus priority measures, without fundamental changes to the way operators work (which is not going to happen when profit is king and providing a public service is secondary). Martijn has been clear in a recent briefing that the future for buses is on high usage, mass transit - so run from X to Y and if you happen to live in Z or A to W, tough/walk/change potentially multiple times or modes of transport. Improving journey times might result in marginal gains by tempting more people who live on or close to the X to Y route that is sufficiently profitable for the operator to service, but will do nothing for the majority - those people making the myriad other journeys which will continue to be made in the car, just crammed into one lane instead of two. The danger is the extent to which this stupid approach of making the bus more attractive relative to the car only really by deliberately worsening car journey times is pushed, risks breaking the entire transport system (so-called public, as well as private).
(29 Sep 2021, 9:57 pm)stagecoachbusdepot Agree with all of this and especially the last point. Congestion is going to be made much worse by reducing car lanes (increasing congestion) to create bus priority measures, without fundamental changes to the way operators work (which is not going to happen when profit is king and providing a public service is secondary). Martijn has been clear in a recent briefing that the future for buses is on high usage, mass transit - so run from X to Y and if you happen to live in Z or A to W, tough/walk/change potentially multiple times or modes of transport. Improving journey times might result in marginal gains by tempting more people who live on or close to the X to Y route that is sufficiently profitable for the operator to service, but will do nothing for the majority - those people making the myriad other journeys which will continue to be made in the car, just crammed into one lane instead of two. The danger is the extent to which this stupid approach of making the bus more attractive relative to the car only really by deliberately worsening car journey times is pushed, risks breaking the entire transport system (so-called public, as well as private).
(29 Sep 2021, 9:57 pm)stagecoachbusdepot Agree with all of this and especially the last point. Congestion is going to be made much worse by reducing car lanes (increasing congestion) to create bus priority measures, without fundamental changes to the way operators work (which is not going to happen when profit is king and providing a public service is secondary). Martijn has been clear in a recent briefing that the future for buses is on high usage, mass transit - so run from X to Y and if you happen to live in Z or A to W, tough/walk/change potentially multiple times or modes of transport. Improving journey times might result in marginal gains by tempting more people who live on or close to the X to Y route that is sufficiently profitable for the operator to service, but will do nothing for the majority - those people making the myriad other journeys which will continue to be made in the car, just crammed into one lane instead of two. The danger is the extent to which this stupid approach of making the bus more attractive relative to the car only really by deliberately worsening car journey times is pushed, risks breaking the entire transport system (so-called public, as well as private).
The fun police works over at the RVI in Newcastle ( thanks for clapping btw ) With me starting work later in the day I was giving her a lift during covid lockdown when the road were almost deserted. Now we are getting back to normal i drop her off at gateshead metro and she either gets the metro or the bus over to town. She did this before they changed Askew road and closed hill street and says now the buses get her to toon much quicker than they did so there one person who thinks the changes are a good thing. As a car driver you would expect me to disagree but I also don't think its as bad as all the " karens" on FB are making out. when it was busy over the last 2 weekend it would have just been as bad as the olden days as it was the amount of traffic trying to get across the tyne bridge. I was on the bus when the queues were forming and got to toon no bother.
(30 Sep 2021, 10:46 am)Rob44 The fun police works over at the RVI in Newcastle ( thanks for clapping btw ) With me starting work later in the day I was giving her a lift during covid lockdown when the road were almost deserted. Now we are getting back to normal i drop her off at gateshead metro and she either gets the metro or the bus over to town. She did this before they changed Askew road and closed hill street and says now the buses get her to toon much quicker than they did so there one person who thinks the changes are a good thing. As a car driver you would expect me to disagree but I also don't think its as bad as all the " karens" on FB are making out. when it was busy over the last 2 weekend it would have just been as bad as the olden days as it was the amount of traffic trying to get across the tyne bridge. I was on the bus when the queues were forming and got to toon no bother.
(30 Sep 2021, 10:46 am)Rob44 The fun police works over at the RVI in Newcastle ( thanks for clapping btw ) With me starting work later in the day I was giving her a lift during covid lockdown when the road were almost deserted. Now we are getting back to normal i drop her off at gateshead metro and she either gets the metro or the bus over to town. She did this before they changed Askew road and closed hill street and says now the buses get her to toon much quicker than they did so there one person who thinks the changes are a good thing. As a car driver you would expect me to disagree but I also don't think its as bad as all the " karens" on FB are making out. when it was busy over the last 2 weekend it would have just been as bad as the olden days as it was the amount of traffic trying to get across the tyne bridge. I was on the bus when the queues were forming and got to toon no bother.
(05 Oct 2021, 8:57 am)ne14ne1 GNE seem to be well on their way to getting ready for the CAZ. How are Stagecoach & Arriva doing?
(05 Oct 2021, 8:57 am)ne14ne1 GNE seem to be well on their way to getting ready for the CAZ. How are Stagecoach & Arriva doing?
Stagecoach are putting ALX300 through MOT's ready for the swap with Stockton E30D.
Can't vouch for Arriva
(05 Oct 2021, 9:01 am)54APhotography Stagecoach are putting ALX300 through MOT's ready for the swap with Stockton E30D.
Can't vouch for Arriva
(05 Oct 2021, 9:01 am)54APhotography Stagecoach are putting ALX300 through MOT's ready for the swap with Stockton E30D.
Can't vouch for Arriva
(05 Oct 2021, 8:57 am)ne14ne1 GNE seem to be well on their way to getting ready for the CAZ. How are Stagecoach & Arriva doing?
(05 Oct 2021, 8:57 am)ne14ne1 GNE seem to be well on their way to getting ready for the CAZ. How are Stagecoach & Arriva doing?
(05 Oct 2021, 9:41 am)Storx Apart from a few spares at Jesmond (B7's). Arriva is done already* and has been for awhile fleet wise.
*On paper at least since the Ashington B7's like wandering onto the express work (should be 35) and Blyth's Pulsar's from Redcar for the 1/2 which won't have the mods (might get them) keep ending up on the Blyth expresses.
(05 Oct 2021, 9:41 am)Storx Apart from a few spares at Jesmond (B7's). Arriva is done already* and has been for awhile fleet wise.
*On paper at least since the Ashington B7's like wandering onto the express work (should be 35) and Blyth's Pulsar's from Redcar for the 1/2 which won't have the mods (might get them) keep ending up on the Blyth expresses.
(05 Oct 2021, 9:53 am)Dan None of Jesmond's Solos are Euro 6 to my knowledge (based on our fleet list, which I appreciate hasn't been updated for over a year!) This means that the 46/46A, 51 and 55 don't yet comply with the Clean Air Zone.
There's also the 685 which, presumably on paper at least, does not yet comply - as the OmniCitys are only Euro 3 (appreciating that they're actually withdrawn and SCRT-fitted Pulsars usually fill the void).
(05 Oct 2021, 9:53 am)Dan None of Jesmond's Solos are Euro 6 to my knowledge (based on our fleet list, which I appreciate hasn't been updated for over a year!) This means that the 46/46A, 51 and 55 don't yet comply with the Clean Air Zone.
There's also the 685 which, presumably on paper at least, does not yet comply - as the OmniCitys are only Euro 3 (appreciating that they're actually withdrawn and SCRT-fitted Pulsars usually fill the void).
(05 Oct 2021, 10:04 am)Storx Yeah could be true, I just knew Arriva bid for the 51 as part of the North Tyneside green fund so assumed some of them got done as part of it - https://my.northtyneside.gov.uk/sites/de...port_0.pdf
Mind nevermind whether things are Euro 6 at Jesmond it'd be interesting to know what's supposed to be allocated to what as it's a right mess lately; Pulsars on the 55, Streetlites on the 306, Solos and Enviro's on the 52/53/54; Pulsars on the 306 and so on and it's been the same for weeks now.
(05 Oct 2021, 10:04 am)Storx Yeah could be true, I just knew Arriva bid for the 51 as part of the North Tyneside green fund so assumed some of them got done as part of it - https://my.northtyneside.gov.uk/sites/de...port_0.pdf
Mind nevermind whether things are Euro 6 at Jesmond it'd be interesting to know what's supposed to be allocated to what as it's a right mess lately; Pulsars on the 55, Streetlites on the 306, Solos and Enviro's on the 52/53/54; Pulsars on the 306 and so on and it's been the same for weeks now.