(06 Mar 2014, 6:52 am)aureolin wrote Have these been converted to single door?
Looking at photos I've previously given links to (such as this one), it looks like they have.
Skip to main content
(06 Mar 2014, 6:52 am)aureolin wrote Have these been converted to single door?
(06 Mar 2014, 7:42 am)Tom wrote So if six are to be used on the X93, where will the ADL 400's go? Possibly Ashington?
(06 Mar 2014, 7:50 pm)G-CPTN wrote Could they change the final-drive ratio (or would that be a step too far)?
(06 Mar 2014, 8:58 pm)Davey Bowyer wrote Arriva should've taken opportunity of Euro 5 and ordered a load of 310bhp B9TL Gemini's for the X10, X11, X15, X18, X21, X22 and X93. The only problem GNE has had with theirs has been the gearing ratios on the TTX but otherwise, they haven't done too badly and if Arriva had've bought them, they would get 5 years of good service with only the odd breakdown on the X15 / X18, and 7 years of good service on the rest mentioned with very few breakdowns.
(06 Mar 2014, 11:30 pm)aureolin wrote And finance them how? You're talking 20+ new buses at a guess, and there's not infinite money to throw around at every problem.
(06 Mar 2014, 11:30 pm)aureolin wrote And finance them how? You're talking 20+ new buses at a guess, and there's not infinite money to throw around at every problem.
(07 Mar 2014, 4:01 pm)VolvoMarkII wrote Exactly, but typically too many people on here have no idea how a business works - resulting in posts just like that one about buying loads of new buses just because they might be better.
(07 Mar 2014, 4:01 pm)VolvoMarkII wrote Exactly, but typically too many people on here have no idea how a business works - resulting in posts just like that one about buying loads of new buses just because they might be better.
(07 Mar 2014, 5:46 pm)Roland Pratt wrote They 'may' be able to get new buses next year for the X93 depending how it performs this summer?! Charming! I didn't realise they were running that close to the bone! From how they performed LAST summer they'll be lucky to have any customers left. Shouldn't that be factored in when deciding what buses to put on the service?
(07 Mar 2014, 6:09 pm)BJ10VUS wrote Have you even tried them yet? You can't say they won't work with no proof from that route.
(07 Mar 2014, 6:33 pm)VolvoMarkII wrote The X93 is a seasonal service. The revenue it takes presumably cannot be guaranteed every year (it may rain all summer this year and it could be 70% down on last year for example), so an investment would need a couple of good years to be able to to justify itself to Arriva, surely, before new stock is considered?
As far as I know, all local operating companies (ANE, ANE, ATS, AYK etc) all bid to Arriva UKBus for new buses, who then ultimately order in bulk (thus saving significant cash). Therefore, local operating companies don't have a big say in what type of new buses they get, as the order is taken on the whole of the UK and the requirements of the majority.
Example, Arriva UKBus gets 100 bids for new double deck buses from all local operators and 90 of them are for town work. ADL then say to Arriva UKBus that if they order all 100 as E400, they will get a discount of 10% say. Of course I can't see the top managers at UKBus saying that they cant agree that significant saving, because they need 10 buses for one route to be different and dictate the entire order. Its just not going to happen.
On that basis, there may be people at ANE who would love to get some B9's for the X18, X93 and so on, but the parent company is saying that ordering more E400's is a better option for the whole of the UK considered and ANE have no option but to go with it. However, may people on here still slate the decisions without actually thinking about who is actually making them.
(07 Mar 2014, 6:41 pm)Davey Bowyer wrote Well on an ISBE 6.7, all you can hear is the turbo screaming way but on a Volvo B9TL, you get that proper heavyweight diesel engine grunt that a powerful double decker should have. Don't get me wrong and I'll look at it from Blyth and Ashington's double deck operations excluding the 35, the X4, X5 and 308 can cope with a Cummins engined double decker. Any other double deck route with the exception noted above, needs a heavyweight diesel engined double decker. Why do you think GNE ordered 67 of them between 2011 and this year?
(07 Mar 2014, 6:49 pm)BJ10VUS wrote First Eastern Counties' X1 route from Lowestoft to Peterborough uses Enviro 400s - bearing in mind this route is 107 miles long, it's fair to say a bit more challenging than Go North East's 'Tyne Tees Express' and Arriva's X93.
(07 Mar 2014, 5:46 pm)Roland Pratt wrote I agree with Davey Bowyer. We're talking about a major multi-national company not a skinflint backstreet operator. They 'may' be able to get new buses next year for the X93 depending how it performs this summer?! Charming! I didn't realise they were running that close to the bone! From how they performed LAST summer they'll be lucky to have any customers left. Shouldn't that be factored in when deciding what buses to put on the service?
(08 Mar 2014, 8:19 am)Kuyoyo wrote By perform I'm referring to how much revenue is taken - not how th vehicles perform. If we get a summer like last year, then the likelihood of new vehicles next year is high. On the flip side, if we get a summer similar to the winter we've just had (storms and heavy downpours) then the taking won't be as high so it will have to wait another year.
(08 Mar 2014, 1:10 pm)Roland Pratt wrote I know that's what you meant. If that's true that they base the decision on when they can get decent buses for the X93 on what the weather might be like this summer then it's ridiculous.
(07 Mar 2014, 6:43 pm)Davey Bowyer wrote I'm not necessarily saying it's Mr Knox's fault. But the guys down in Luton need to look at routes on an individual basis.
(04 Mar 2014, 9:13 am)tyresmoke wrote They're down to go to Durham (6) and Ashington (3), though this will be dependent on the results of a trial on the X93. Withdrawn as a result will be DAF DB250's 7459-64 and Olympian 7367, Spectras 7482/3
(08 Mar 2014, 1:15 pm)Kuyoyo wrote Yes - you want to order a brand new order vehicles costing £1.5million and the service runs at a lose all summer due to poor weather!? This is exactly what VolvoMarkII was talking about - some people on here don't understand how a business works. The business case for new vehicles for the X93 needs building over years due to it's seasonal state rather than just the one year the other services.
(08 Mar 2014, 2:22 pm)Roland Pratt wrote Exactly - the 'business case' should be based on a long term view of ridership and not be affected by what the weather might be like in one particular year. If they buy a new fleet of buses and the weather's bad the first year then it's hard luck, but its not the end of the world.
A business 'works' how you want it to work.
(08 Mar 2014, 2:31 pm)Andreos Constantopolous wrote Whilst I can see some logic in what people are saying about the weather impacting on passenger numbers, what happens if we have 2-3 consecutive poor summers?
There will be no financial justification to purchase vehicles (using the argument put forward by others) nor any real reason to keep the service due to low numbers.
Whilst in the meantime, the kit using the route, is getting older and older, with bosses, drivers and passengers praying for a decent summer so that investment is forthcoming!
Yes, the weather needs to be taken into account, but there are many other factors involved in the purchase.
(08 Mar 2014, 2:34 pm)Kuyoyo wrote Yes, passengers numbers are taken into account - BUT you can't order buses with no profit made.
(08 Mar 2014, 1:59 pm)palatine3833 wrote Quite embarrassing but they should have a better idea on how things run since all of the main decisions are made in Sunderland. Luton is simply where customer services is based. How Doxford Park have so little knowledge on the North East services they run does actually amaze me.