It's the weekend again, so another historical shot from me.
Class XA Leyland Atlantean buses were introduced in London in 1965 as part of an experiment to evaulate One Person Operation on double deck vehicles. The agreement, at that time, with the Busmen's Union didn't allow one person operation on D/D vehicles in London, so a door was fitted on the stairs in order for the vehicle to be used as single deck in OPO operation. These vehicles were used on routes 24, 67, 76 & 271, but ended their London lives on the Croydon 'C' flat fare services. Most were exported to Hong Kong, where their worked out their lives.
The bus is seen leaving the garage on Philip Lane, with the council's Youth Employment Centre seen behind it.
Tags (All lower case. Use " " for multiple word tags): 1966, Atlantean, Buses, London Transport, Philip Lane, More…Route 76
I think it was also illegal to operate one man double decks at that time. There was also a batch of identical looking Daimler Fleetlines (XFs) that were in Country area green and cream and these also operated the 67 & 76 for a while, some red XAs taking their place in the country.
I think the XFs only worked on the 67 & 271. I travelled on one on the 67. But can't recall them being on the 76.
2 XFs are preserved, but sadly no XAs. If I recall correctly, only the XFs had the door at the bottom of the stairs
Yes, that's my memory too. I only ever travelled on an XF once (XF3 I think) and that was on a private hire tour just before LCBS withdrew them from East Grinstead garage.
Add a Comment
© 2024 Created by Hugh. Powered by
© Copyright Harringay Online Created by Hugh
You need to be a member of Harringay online to add comments!
Join Harringay online