(13 Feb 2020, 3:46 pm)ifm001 wrote Arrival pink Quorum Solo running around Boldon and Sunderland City Centre and Pallion today. Thought it may have just been engineers or someone on way to Head Office at Doxford Park but was too quick heading from City Centre to Pallion from being first seen at Boldon.
More than just the driver on board.
Wonder if anything is being viewed South of Tyne and North of Wear or just the bus on a wander.
(13 Feb 2020, 3:46 pm)ifm001 wrote Arrival pink Quorum Solo running around Boldon and Sunderland City Centre and Pallion today. Thought it may have just been engineers or someone on way to Head Office at Doxford Park but was too quick heading from City Centre to Pallion from being first seen at Boldon.
More than just the driver on board.
Wonder if anything is being viewed South of Tyne and North of Wear or just the bus on a wander.
(13 Feb 2020, 3:46 pm)ifm001 wrote Arrival pink Quorum Solo running around Boldon and Sunderland City Centre and Pallion today. Thought it may have just been engineers or someone on way to Head Office at Doxford Park but was too quick heading from City Centre to Pallion from being first seen at Boldon.
More than just the driver on board.
Wonder if anything is being viewed South of Tyne and North of Wear or just the bus on a wander.
(12 Feb 2020, 3:28 pm)Storx wrote Can't argue with that but that could be said mostly about most the North East really. The fact there's one bus that runs to Teesside Park which is the main the shopping area for Teesside pretty much sums up how outdated the network is down in Teesside to me then people wonder why everyone is driving. I don't know the Redcar area enough though to comment on it directly though.
It's a similar story with Silverlink and Team Valley which unless you like walking for miles you can't really get to without driving then the council wonder why they have traffic problems yet still approve extensions and more units at them. (All 3 have had new stuff built in the last couple years).
(13 Feb 2020, 8:19 pm)Andreos1 wrote Totally agree.
It's as though it's a race to the bottom.
Money not being made from certain routes (or not as much as they would like anyway) and they get axed and fleets get smaller.
I genuinely wish (and challenge) at least one of the operators to take a punt - creating a service which is different and can make them money, rather than more of the same, just with a different livery and a few bits of tech thrown in.
I can remember when Nexus did a huge survey a few years back. They visited libraries/community centres and spoke to people about what they wanted.
The sample must have been huge!
Either way, they identified where people wanted to go and proposed a whole load of new routes as part of the provisional QCS scheme (or at least a forerunner of it).
I've yet to see any of the operators make use of the mass of qualative or quantative data made available on a big scale (I think the X24 was one of the routes identified by Nexus. Not sure of any others).
It makes me wonder how ambitious these commercial departments really are or if as we see with the rumoured Teesside changes, they're just interested in saving pennies.
(13 Feb 2020, 9:38 pm)scanialover wrote With you on what you say about Arriva. There is no, or little ambition or interest across the board, from management through to the operating staff, and it shows. I've commented here about service 63 double (and odd times triple) running and yesterday we had the classic example. An 18 minute wait at James Cook Hospital on what is supposed to be a route with a 5 minute headway between buses then what do we get? 4 buses in a row! An Arriva 63, packed, an Arriva 29 followed by a Stagecoach service 10 and lastly another Arriva 63, empty! You couldn't make it but then it's a fairly regular occurrence as no-one is interested in some form of timetable/operating regulation and the passengers have, or are, throwing the towel in
(14 Feb 2020, 2:34 am)scanialover wrote So just what is the point of timetables? Let's just let the drivers go and pick their bus up and do what they like. The attitude demonstrated here does typify in some way just how people accept the standard of bus travel.
(14 Feb 2020, 7:00 am)tvd wrote Keeping to time all the time and having no bunching of frequent services like the 63 is pretty impossible, to be fair to Arriva.
There's the level crossing in Redcar that can hold them up both way, as well as all the traffic lights and usual congestion on the roads. And we've all seen buses running late only to get to a stop only then for the boarding passengers to ask questions, look all over for their money or pass, and basically delay things even more.
So the first bus gets delayed and end up picking up passengers who intended boarding the next bus - which in turn is quieter and can keep to its time easier, ending up behind the earlier one.
(14 Feb 2020, 7:10 am)scanialover wrote The inevitability of bus travel these days and despite my grumble about service 63 being from the area I know just how difficult it is to maintain time. I'd thought of things like turning late running services short and some sort of radio control management but this is Middlesbrough not London and it's just best, a fact, we stick with what we've got.
(14 Feb 2020, 7:10 am)scanialover wrote The inevitability of bus travel these days and despite my grumble about service 63 being from the area I know just how difficult it is to maintain time. I'd thought of things like turning late running services short and some sort of radio control management but this is Middlesbrough not London and it's just best, a fact, we stick with what we've got.
(14 Feb 2020, 10:47 am)scanialover wrote So what's the point of being in business if you can't afford to be ? How much would a radio network cost , pitch that against how more reliable and effective services would be. I don't know just how depots (Arriva) keep in touch with their drivers Mobile phones perhaps? It all sounds a bit archaic, quite honestly.
(14 Feb 2020, 10:55 am)streetdeckfan wrote The issue is Arriva's owners seeming want to invest as little as possible in it, so anything is too much.
Yes, drivers have to stop the bus and get off to use their mobile if they need to get in touch with the depot (we had an issue with the ticket machine not accepting cards pre-ticketer upgrade, and a passenger wasnt happy about it as he had no cash, so she had to call up to ask what to do)
Not sure how it would work the other way round, I guess if their phone rights they just check it at the next stop.
Although iirc the ticket machines have a messaging function on them so maybe that's how they do it now
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(13 Feb 2020, 9:12 pm)Jimmi wrote I have to agree about lack of ambition for trying new things especially routes, about the last real attempt Arriva gave a go at was the X1 from Darlington and that only happened as GNE introduced the competing OK1 service. About the only real changes in the last few years have been a few frequency increases and combining or altering of routes to make some form of improvements.
Arriva seem to be the worst for this atm, very little has changed and it feels as if nothing much is being done to combat the issues going on with things like timekeeping on routes, even with congestion increasing I still can't fathom why the Sapphire 7 seems to have so many issues sticking to time lately and is forever running in twos lately, the last month of service I've encountered from Arriva has been poor to say the least, nearly missed trains as a result of drivers crawling around the routes or just faffing about making services fall behind schedule or timetables that don't meet demands some of which I've expressed problems with for many years now.
Stagecoach has likely been the most ambitious recently with services of the big three with introducing the X24 plus that Saturday only X55 which didn't perform well but hey at least they gave it a go and of course that open top 'Seasider' service although must give GNE a mention for the Toon Tour even if it was just a replacement of sorts for the City Sightseeing tour. Hodgsons has done a bit since picking up some North Yorkshire tendered work including adding some extra runs to those services. Arriva have lacked this I feel, closest I feel was the 57/57A/58 changes in Durham recently and that was only because Scarlet Band seemingly didn't want to run the 58 anymore.
(14 Feb 2020, 10:55 am)streetdeckfan wrote The issue is Arriva's owners seeming want to invest as little as possible in it, so anything is too much.The ETM does have a messaging system yep, so direct contact is available and used as much as radio systems.
Yes, drivers have to stop the bus and get off to use their mobile if they need to get in touch with the depot (we had an issue with the ticket machine not accepting cards pre-ticketer upgrade, and a passenger wasnt happy about it as he had no cash, so she had to call up to ask what to do)
Not sure how it would work the other way round, I guess if their phone rights they just check it at the next stop.
Although iirc the ticket machines have a messaging function on them so maybe that's how they do it now
Sent from my LM-G710 using Tapatalk