(11 Aug 2021, 11:54 am)Andreos1 wrote Just out of sheer curiosity.
How long is the bus journey (including connections) vs the uber?
Bus with connections is 1hr 13
uber is 18-21 minutes
Skip to main content
(11 Aug 2021, 11:08 am)Ambassador wrote I know it's a seperate issue but the bus was pretty rammed and only 2 or 3 people were wearing masks which was a little offputting
For the 2 days a week I'm in the office I'm gonna stick to Uber.
(11 Aug 2021, 11:51 am)Jimmi wrote It's amazing how seriously things like WiFi and plug sockets can be taken by some passengers, I've even seen passengers kicking off with drivers when the plugs don't work especially when the passenger think the driver is just being awkward and not turning them on to annoy the passengers, will admit in the past I have been annoyed when I'm short on data or battery life and a basic spec Bus turns up instead of the advertised bus with these features.
Getting people out of cars now is always going to be a struggle as the bus is seen as not good value alternative option due to high priced fares and long indirect journey times.
(11 Aug 2021, 11:57 am)mb134 wrote Just as an illustration of the points made, here's a quick snapshot of some of the vehicles on 'premium' (Sapphire for ANE, X-Lines for GNE) NE routes at present/at some stage today:
ANE:
43/44/45: 1574, 1581, 1582, 1583, 7562
X21/22: 4664, 7411, 7446, 7484, and a couple of MAX E400s.
22/23/24: 1476, 1579, 1580
X3/X4: Various Temsas and standard Pulsars
GNE:
X1: 6099, 6168, 6169
X15: 6919
X20: 5486, 8342
X21: 6142, 6173
X30/31/45/46/70/71: 9056, 5441, 5409
That's about 5 minutes of having a look at Bustimes (with the usual caveat there). Appreciate there are day to day challenges, but it isn't a great look - particularly in some cases where the allocation should be brand new buses, having that many off isn't a good sign.
(11 Aug 2021, 11:57 am)mb134 wrote Just as an illustration of the points made, here's a quick snapshot of some of the vehicles on 'premium' (Sapphire for ANE, X-Lines for GNE) NE routes at present/at some stage today:But isn't this norm in the summer months whilst Schools are off to carry out important maintenance as I recall Dan mentioned this a week or 2 ago in relation to Go North East.
ANE:
43/44/45: 1574, 1581, 1582, 1583, 7562
X21/22: 4664, 7411, 7446, 7484, and a couple of MAX E400s.
22/23/24: 1476, 1579, 1580
X3/X4: Various Temsas and standard Pulsars
GNE:
X1: 6099, 6168, 6169
X15: 6919
X20: 5486, 8342
X21: 6142, 6173
X30/31/45/46/70/71: 9056, 5441, 5409
That's about 5 minutes of having a look at Bustimes (with the usual caveat there). Appreciate there are day to day challenges, but it isn't a great look - particularly in some cases where the allocation should be brand new buses, having that many off isn't a good sign.
(11 Aug 2021, 6:08 pm)Malarkey wrote But isn't this norm in the summer months whilst Schools are off to carry out important maintenance as I recall Dan mentioned this a week or 2 ago in relation to Go North East.
I can't say the same for Arriva as nothing really is ever allocated to the correct route.
(11 Aug 2021, 6:15 pm)Dan wrote There’s an unusually high number of StreetDecks and E400s off service at the moment as the DVLA revoked the Covid-19 MOT extension (of one year) on all the new buses received last year.So were they initially granted the year but it was taken away, or is it just they weren't eligible in the first place?
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
(11 Aug 2021, 6:08 pm)Malarkey wrote But isn't this norm in the summer months whilst Schools are off to carry out important maintenance as I recall Dan mentioned this a week or 2 ago in relation to Go North East.
(12 Aug 2021, 8:26 am)MurdnunoC wrote With arguably the youngest fleet in the North East combined with the lack of branding and promises like 'USB and Plug Sockets', 'Tables', or 'Free WiFi; a case could be made for GCT being the best bus operator in the North East I suppose.
(12 Aug 2021, 8:34 am)Ambassador wrote Haha, they certainly do what they it says on the tin.
When they get it right they provide a bus with wheels and seats that takes passengers from point A to B, which is the whole aim here.
(14 Aug 2021, 4:05 pm)Adrian wrote The last two days have been a bit of an experience for me, having spent two consecutive days as a commuter after 18 months. I think it's fair to say that things aren't always as they seem, so I've written up my experience here: https://www.busesandbeyond.co.uk/2021/08...commuters/
Would welcome any thoughts.
(14 Aug 2021, 4:05 pm)Adrian wrote The last two days have been a bit of an experience for me, having spent two consecutive days as a commuter after 18 months. I think it's fair to say that things aren't always as they seem, so I've written up my experience here: https://www.busesandbeyond.co.uk/2021/08...commuters/
Would welcome any thoughts.
(14 Aug 2021, 4:05 pm)Adrian wrote The last two days have been a bit of an experience for me, having spent two consecutive days as a commuter after 18 months. I think it's fair to say that things aren't always as they seem, so I've written up my experience here: https://www.busesandbeyond.co.uk/2021/08...commuters/
Would welcome any thoughts.
(14 Aug 2021, 9:14 pm)ASX_Terranova wrote Best way to reverse passenger decline is to put services back into the estates, rather than just the village centres or Main Roads. I can remember the GNE Metroriders weaving through Washington.
(14 Aug 2021, 4:05 pm)Adrian wrote The last two days have been a bit of an experience for me, having spent two consecutive days as a commuter after 18 months. I think it's fair to say that things aren't always as they seem, so I've written up my experience here: https://www.busesandbeyond.co.uk/2021/08...commuters/
Would welcome any thoughts.
(14 Aug 2021, 9:20 pm)Dan wrote Is it really?
For every comment that I see that says buses should go back through the estates again, I see others that say the reason why they don’t use the bus is because they’re too slow.
There’s no way the network can cater for everyone’s preferences, clearly.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
(14 Aug 2021, 10:04 pm)Ambassador wrote it’s probably not in a simple term no. GNE and the others really need to focus on getting the basics right. It doesn’t help that nexus and whatever bunch Cllr Gannon heads up are so limited in their thinking and approach. The public transport network in the north east and particularly Tyne and Wear is woefully fragmented and with that lot in charge it won’t change.
(14 Aug 2021, 9:14 pm)ASX_Terranova wrote Best way to reverse passenger decline is to put services back into the estates, rather than just the village centres or Main Roads. I can remember the GNE Metroriders weaving through Washington.That'll never happen again, the operator would have to run 50% more buses just to pick up 20% extra passengers.
(15 Aug 2021, 10:05 am)RobinHood wrote What needs to happen is for every local authority in the region to actually put in place bus priority measures that make a significant dent into current journey times. A 100m stretch of bus lane here and there really isnt going to cut it. If the bus was reliable, fast and dependable - most people wouldn't really care about the Wifi/Next Stop/Livery etc. They would choose the bus due to speed and access.
Unfortunately, none of local authorities have a backbone to do this as they are too scared to lose the political vote that comes from the car owner. Lets hope the National Bus Strategy calls them out on it, as I understand it, the biggest and boldest ideas are most likely to be funded first (so they cannot claim money will be an issue).
Another issue for me are Clean Air Zones. Why do buses need to be Euro 6 but cars don't? Makes no sense. The bus operators should be incentivised to upgrade (better BSOG rates etc) but the car should be simply banned from core areas of the city (generally speaking, appreciate the numerous variables at play).
(15 Aug 2021, 10:27 am)Driver9*** wrote That'll never happen again, the operator would have to run 50% more buses just to pick up 20% extra passengers.
When I started at Arriva they had numerous minibuses plowing through estates whilst the big buses that went past the outskirts of said estates were carrying fresh air, the penny finally dropped at the silliness of doing this around about 2010ish........
(15 Aug 2021, 10:41 am)Andreos1 wrote You can stick as many bus lanes and priority measures as you want. Unless the bus goes where the people are going, bus lanes are pretty much pointless.Mostly pensioners into the town centre for their bread and milk.
Banning cars from city centres, isn't going to do anything other than encourage car users to go elsewhere.
Were those minibuses taking the residents of the estates to places the residents needed to go? Or where the operators thought they wanted to be.
Having a minibus go from an estate to Whitley Bay, when residents are travelling to drop the kids off and then heading in the opposite direction, to get to work - was never the brightest idea.
(15 Aug 2021, 10:41 am)Andreos1 wrote You can stick as many bus lanes and priority measures as you want. Unless the bus goes where the people are going, bus lanes are pretty much pointless.
(15 Aug 2021, 12:40 pm)MurdnunoC wrote Bus lanes are pretty pointless when a council changes the road layout to such an extent where it becomes more hassle for a bus to use the bus lane rather than the roads the bus lane is meant to avoid.
Gateshead Council, in particular, must be singled out for this. The idea of the Centrelink was to allow the X66 to run traffic-free from the Teams into the centre of Gateshead. Now, with the closure of Hills Street and the bottom of West Street to buses, and the multitude of traffic lights which stand in the way between the bottom of Prince Consort Road and Pipewellgate, why would any driver driving the X66 use Centrelink towards the Metrocentre? It's easier and quicker to use Askew Road. It's slightly better heading into Gateshead, I guess, but it used to be a lot easier when buses coming from the direction of the High Level Bridge were allowed to use West Street and filter into the Interchange from Prince Consort Road. As an alleged bus priority measure, it's an absolute mess as it stands now.
Whenever you see council chiefs such as Martin Gannon (or whomever) standing with directors of bus companies such as Martijn Gilbert (or whomever) announcing the latest initiative to encourage people to use public transport, it's pretty hard to take whatever they say seriously as we've heard it all before. It always comes across as a cynical publicity stunt to raise the public profile of each without anyone actually committing or delivering anything of note. It doesn't convince me, it probably won't convince anyone else either.
(15 Aug 2021, 1:43 pm)Andreos1 wrote These photoshoots might allow for self-congratulatory back pats, but like you - they don't convince me either.