these buses are actually quite easy to drive, its normally the customers that are difficult.
@terawattz6 ай бұрын
i have to agree with you
6 ай бұрын
As an ex London bus driver, I have to agree but 99.99% customers are no problem it's the other .01% that stick in your mind.
@blahmcblahface39656 ай бұрын
Some of you bus drivers do have an attitude problem. I don't care if you've had a bad day...if you can't smile at every customer you shouldn't deal with them at all
@terawattz6 ай бұрын
@@blahmcblahface3965 instead of complaining go get your licence and do the job yourself, within 1 shift you will see what we mean
@YoloMenace0016 ай бұрын
James may: "easiest job ive ever done, as easy as sitting here. You can have a joint" 😂😂😂
@MaxwellMoore-d1u6 ай бұрын
We've got Double Decker buses all over Britain.
@WookieWarriorz6 ай бұрын
and the world there is nothing unique about them, americans just cant use tax payer money to buy foreign busses so they buy trash american busses. Mexico is right beside the the usa and has so many of them too.
@mikkorenvall4286 ай бұрын
All over Europe too.. In the Continent they are used for longer routes like town to town trafiking. And even in NY, USA has some.. upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/ab/DATTCO_Van_Hool_Astromega_coach.jpg/440px-DATTCO_Van_Hool_Astromega_coach.jpg
@whynotagain36396 ай бұрын
Not fake routemasters tho, that's only central London. Even the suburbs don't get them.
@WinstonSmith198475 ай бұрын
Yes there have been green double decker buses in my hometown for years I think they may blue and yellow now I have not lived there for a while.
@jean-fabl61876 ай бұрын
Greetings from a London bus driver! I drive the 427, the 207, the E10 and E11!
6 ай бұрын
Keep up the good work, I was on the 6, 52, 260 out of AC & 4, 17, 134 & W7 out of HT, now living in Australia and not driving buses. There is a guy in Sydney who runs a RT & a RM on private hire.
@MaxwellMoore-d1u6 ай бұрын
I've just read a post by another who said the buses are quite easy to drive ( his words not mine ) anyway its the customers that cause most trouble.
@jean-fabl61876 ай бұрын
@@MaxwellMoore-d1u that’s correct! There’s trouble with other motorists sometimes!
@MaxwellMoore-d1u6 ай бұрын
@@jean-fabl6187 The Thought of driving a bus around London streets brings me out in a Cold sweat. I'm 64 Driven Cars and vans since 19 .But never in London, And something the size of a Bus .That's why I always say Thankyou Driver when I get off the Bus.
@bananenmusli27696 ай бұрын
You are one of the few "reaction youtubers" that seem genuinely interested in the topic they're reacting to. That makes your videos especially nice to watch because I am learning too.
@nigethesassenach36146 ай бұрын
I agree
@planekrazy17956 ай бұрын
The Cool Red Car is a Volvo P1800. 2+2 Sports Car Manufactured between 1961 and 1973. Famously driven by Simon Templer (Rodger Moore) in the iconic British TV series The Saint.
@FTFLCY6 ай бұрын
They're beyond gorgeous.
@paulafletcher80066 ай бұрын
Made by Jenson Motors West Bromwich...
@paulschneider92866 ай бұрын
It was also Roger Moore’s own car! I think it ended up on Jay Leno’s garage… and the video also showed a small electric fan fitters to the rearmost pillar behind the driving seat - I think they said the filming equipment/lighting required made it hot in there. Oh, and also Moore sometimes missed the stubbed on the dash 😝
@TriPBOOMER6 ай бұрын
The crazy looking one was designed as a tribute to the original bus, glass swooping down at the front to tribute the single cab buses of old, as well as the rounded roof at the back, the window design was for optimal natural light, and viewing potential, also makes sure that both stair wells, front and back are fully windowed, adding an open feel to a fairly narrow vehicle.
@tonycasey31836 ай бұрын
Nearly forty years ago, a friend of mine got a gig driving a used Routemaster from London to Arizona where some guy had bought it t go outside his restaurant/bar. Mike had to drive it to Southampton, put it on a ship bound for New York, then, a couple of weeks later, flew to NY with his girlfriend, picked the thing up and drove it across the States to its new owner. Bearing in mind, this was probably 1982 or thereabouts and it was an old, retired bus, but it made it all the way and never broke down once.
@MrDaiseymay6 ай бұрын
GREAT STORY. I'M HOPING IT WAS A BRITISH MADE BUS ? SO RARE NOW.
@ChrisGBusby6 ай бұрын
So many Americans are like "I don't know how I would handle driving in London" Simple - DON'T!! It's a lot slower than walking, bus, tube etc and will cost you a fortune in congestion charges. If you are only here for two weeks then you would probably only need a car 3-4 days max.
@automation72956 ай бұрын
*"It's a lot slower than walking"* Same thing can also be said about Los Angeles and New York City, though New York City especially in Manhattan is constant gridlock 24/7.
@-The-Darkside6 ай бұрын
@@automation7295 I'm sure they are also a nightmare but unless you live in London and have to drive to work there's no reason to drive there, UK roads are also smaller than New York roads, no straight lines here.
@automation72956 ай бұрын
@@-The-Darkside True NYC have bigger roads and mostly a grid like most American cities. I know UK roads are smaller, they're even smaller than many road in mainland Europe.
@adamruscoe1706 ай бұрын
I would agree if you're only going to Central London or the West End, but there's a lot of London that isn't just in the middle. Get outside of the south and north circular and there's still loads to see and do (and still plenty of London and other busses of course) but you can move a lot quicker than walking pace
@keithbeall79816 ай бұрын
Living in south west England I've driven through London once and decided that's enough. Buses, underground and foot are much easier.
@scribbletoons20356 ай бұрын
The old RouteMaster busses they showed in this, used to have to undergo some crazy tests. Like a tilt test and a skidpan test. You can see it in this old British Pathe film from 1957: kzbin.info/www/bejne/amPJZHaka72fic0 Those double deckers are everywhere across the whole UK (except the new RouteMasters) - Where I live in Manchester, the fleet colour is bright yellow for the city instead of red.
@martinwebb16816 ай бұрын
Yeah every area has its own colour buses, our local ones are dark blue and cream. I remember some years back that Manchester's buses were Orange.
@skylined55346 ай бұрын
@@martinwebb1681 We used to have the cheerful 'rhubarb and custard' red and yellow buses in Stoke on Trent but now they're mostly just grey with other shades of grey 😂 Also loved the old Cymru buses from the 70s to the 90s, usually a nice grassy green!
@peterbrazier71076 ай бұрын
A lot of towns in England have double decker Busses
@ShaunOfthedead-kp6yu6 ай бұрын
Tbh I like the black pool design, the grey and yellow
@martinwebb16816 ай бұрын
Yes, many rural areas also have double decker buses. My local bus company only has 4 routes although they are all over 20 miles long, and they have 20 double deck buses and 10 single deck buses. They also use the double decker's on the school services.
@stevieinselby6 ай бұрын
@@martinwebb1681 This can lead to the incongruous situation where you have double-decker buses going through little villages in the middle of the day with no more than a dozen passengers on ... because it's a lot cheaper to use the double-decker that you have for the school runs than to buy an additional small bus.
@martinwebb16816 ай бұрын
@@stevieinselby ... That's true, but our local bus company usually runs its single deckers on routes during off peak hours and the double deckers in the peak hours, except on the main route which is busy most of the day so is always served with double deckers which run every 30 minutes.
@RWL20126 ай бұрын
buses
@andyman2866 ай бұрын
Great vid man, notice the old type bus with the open back door. Back in the day when safety wasn't a thing you could jump on the back while the bus was moving. The conductor was there ready to take your cash.
@HrLBolle6 ай бұрын
read somewhere the jumping went both ways
@-The-Darkside6 ай бұрын
Even in the 90s I could ask "can I get off here" (undesignated stop) and the drivers would open the door and you were pretty much jumping out of a moving vehicle.
@jlr1086 ай бұрын
@@-The-Darkside No doors in the earlier days. You just missed the bus? Run as fast as you can and you might catch it up, especially if there's a bit of traffic ahead. And you want to get off between stops? Wait until it slows to go round a bend and off you hop.
@PaulMcCaffreyfmac6 ай бұрын
If you have another look at your "three in a row" section at around 13mins 20sec you'll see that they all have different numbers and different destinations. They would have come from different directions, met at around the point where they were filmed and then headed off in different directions where appropriate.
@grahvis6 ай бұрын
" Along the Queen's great highway, I drive my merry load, At twenty miles per hour in the middle of the road. We like to drive in convoys, we're most gregarious, The big six-wheeler, scarlet painted, London transport, diesel engined, ninety-seven horsepower omnibus." Flanders and Swann "A Transport of Delight".
@Suprahampton6 ай бұрын
You legend!
@roygavin82196 ай бұрын
Hold very tight please. Ding, Ding.
@stevieinselby6 ай бұрын
Although the red double decker bus is iconic to London, double decker buses are common across the country, they just aren't usually red 😎 They are typically about 11m long, so slightly shorter than a full size single decker at 12m, which means they aren't particularly difficult to manoeuvre. They typically seat about 70 passengers, plus room for standing downstairs. Riding on the upper deck is best ... especially on routes outside London that go through open countryside, where you can get a great view! It can be very disconcerting if you're sitting at the front, because your field of view is different from the driver's, you can spend the whole journey worrying that you're about to hit a car/building etc. 3:45 That slightly mad design was the so-called "New Bus for London", built in the 2010s as a replacement for the classic split-cab Routemaster that was the mainstay of the fleet from the 1950s to the 1980s. Often called the Boris Bus because it was designed at the behest of Boris Johnson when he was the Mayor of London, they have proved to be expensive to run, have poor reliability, have not been operated as they were supposed to be and have not lived up to the hype around them (which makes them a _very_ fitting tribute to Boris Johnson). While other buses running in London can be found elsewhere around the UK, no other bus company in the country has shown any interest in buying any of these!
@totalutternutter6 ай бұрын
The iconic, old school London buses are the AEC Route Master, if you like these buses you'll love the AEC Matador military vehicle.
@jlr1086 ай бұрын
And it's pronounced "Rootmaster", not "Rowtmaster".
@wrorchestra16 ай бұрын
The Routemaster (pronounced Root-master) was designed using aircraft principles of a monocoque shell. It makes is strong, lighter than a normal bus and much bigger inside. The ones with the curved back windows are the modern version of the Routemaster.
@jlr1086 ай бұрын
And they started off with a conductor, just like the old Routemasters. I knew that wouldn't last long and, sure enough, they soon canned the conductors. Probably thought paying people money to do a job was a waste of resources.
@5imp16 ай бұрын
Hi dude. The old buses inside the building were the original Routemaster buses. They were designed in the 1950s and started service in 1956. They were phased out in 2005. They are the famous AEC Routemaster. The bus everyone thinks of when they think of London buses. They had a weird semi - automatic gearbox. The AEC company made some absolutely amazing military trucks. Check out the AEC Matador gun tractor. Everything on these is super heavy duty and built to last (except for the cab which is wooden and suffers with rot). They are super low geared with massive torque.
6 ай бұрын
Associated Equipment Company of Southall, Middlesex owned by London Transport.
@andrewlaw6 ай бұрын
Pre selector gearbox, you engage the next gear and the bus changes up when it's time. I was fascinated by them as a kid sitting behind the driver.
@tonys16366 ай бұрын
@@andrewlaw RM's have a 4 speed auto which can be used manually as a semi automatic. The RT had a 4 speed pre select box.
@tonys16366 ай бұрын
Originally owned by Electric Underground Railways of London and London General Omnibus Co. before becoming London Underground then London Transport when the GLC formed the London Passenger Transport Board. The LPTB later sold AEC off to Leyland Vehicles, hence from the late 50's AEC's and Leyland trucks looked similar. The AEC name, both companies producing their own chassis and engines, remaining until the collapse of Leyland Truck and Bus. LT's Aldenham bus works and Leyland's parts depot adjoined each other.
@jamesfrench72996 ай бұрын
@@tonys1636 that's correct.
@MaxwellMoore-d1u6 ай бұрын
Haven't you seen Harry Potter, The buses can fold up. And drop for Low Bridges, your seat drops to the bottom.
@NK-bj8li6 ай бұрын
You’ve opened a rabbit hole with these; from the electric fleet with rapid charging, to the fleet of hydrogen busses; and of course, the old school Double-Decker Bus Racing.
@felixalbion6 ай бұрын
The electric ones are crap and have already started to burst into flames apparently.
@iDislikeAlotofThings6 ай бұрын
@@felixalbionNot a lot of EVs have caught fire. Most bus fires happens to diesel buses, i mean a few months ago a diesel double decker caught fire in Bristol. And its one of the more modern ones, not one of the aging Volvos.
@dominicjohn89546 ай бұрын
I drive double-decker bus in Cornwall, South West England on some of the narrowest roads in the UK. Even on single track lanes where if you meet on-coming traffic, the driver closest to a lay-by has to reverse so you can pass each other. Best job ever
@eddieaicken56876 ай бұрын
The Wrightbus model is sometimes referred to as the Boris Bus, because that design happened when he was Mayor of London. They make fully electric and hydrogen powered busses. The company is owned by the same family that own JCB.
@nicolad88226 ай бұрын
Ahh The Bamfords, famous Tory donors and buyers of influence, such a surprise they get huge public sector contracts.
@nicolad88226 ай бұрын
Mmm my comment disappeared, it wasn’t that controversial.
@ThermoMan6 ай бұрын
The left hand drive Leyland bus was probably built for export. Leyland used to have a huge export business.
@jonathangoll29186 ай бұрын
I'm a pensioner, and I've travelled on double-decker buses all my life. Americans should realise that only in London are they mostly red; they're all sorts of pretty colours elsewhere ! My memory goes back to when there were two bus company employees: a driver, and a 'conductor', who used to take your fare and keep order on the bus. Many of us felt that when - for economy reasons - they scrapped the conductors and made the drivers do everything, it led to less order on the buses. I remember when the back of the bus was open. For years you could smoke upstairs. It is still the case that you can take your dog on the bus, provided it doesn't sit on the seats. In my local buses there are spaces for baby buggies, and they can take one wheelchair user. When a wheelchair user wants to get on or off, the driver gets out of his seat and lets down a ramp. In the West Midlands there is a bus museum with many old buses. I'm old enough to remember 'trolley buses' which were powered by overhead wires. Until about 1960 there were trams; and we now have them back again! London does occasionally get snow. The urban "heat island' effect tends to discourage it, but just outside London the county of Kent gets heavy falls.
@Escapee59316 ай бұрын
Yes, I remember we had trolley buses in Walsall in the 60s. They had to carry a long pole to rehook the connecting rods to the overhead power lines on occasions when they got detached.
@craigmacmillan25286 ай бұрын
the old Routemasters used also to have a conducter inside to sell tickets. and a bell to warn passengers that the bus is moving off "Ding! Ding! Hold very tight, Please!"
@martinwebb16816 ай бұрын
"Hold on tight" and "move down inside please" were common shouts by the conductors, along with "any more fares please".
@jillybrooke296 ай бұрын
We have lost the famous Routemaster double deckers ..the ones we used to jump on and hang off the open back, it had a conductor so you paid cash on board.
@juniusvindex7696 ай бұрын
No you haven't. They run old routes throughout London, and during bank holidays they run the Imber range path here in Wiltshire during bank holidays. They are more popular than other buses......... 🙄🙄
@frglee6 ай бұрын
Lots of Routemasters in preservation, fortunately - and they often give rides to the public at bus meets and transport museums. They also seem to have become quite popular tourist buses around the world, too - many converted to open-top double decker buses. You might recall seeing one being used by Austin Powers in Las Vegas!
@martinwebb16816 ай бұрын
@@juniusvindex769 ... AEC Routemasters finished in regular service in London in December 2005. They no longer operate in London. There were two heritage routes (routes 9 and 15) where they continued to operate for some time but they were discontinued in 2020. No old Routemasters are used in London anymore.
@jlr1086 ай бұрын
With the cool machine that he turned the handle on and pumped out your ticket. I loved them.
@PiersDJackson6 ай бұрын
Ian, a point to be made.... Buses generally are a Chassis made by one Company and a Body built by another, so you may have a bus manufactured by Wrightbus that's built on a Volvo, Mercedes-Benz or Scania chassis. Possibly closer to home for you the YELLOW school buses may all look alike, but taking the iconic Type B and Type C (long bus with a hood) you've got (now) four builders and their bodies are interchangeable onto two or three manufacturers chassis. Eg a Bluebird on a Ford, GMC or Freightliner chassis.
@siouex6 ай бұрын
Ex London bus driver for 4 years here. Yes, it is narrow and yes, they are big, but once quickly you get hang of it, you're biggest concern is usually not constantly treading a needle, but other road users. When you visit London, you must board any double-decker, get onto the second floor, and sit in the front seats over the drivers cabin. It is most fun that you can have while riding a bus. All TFL(Transport For London) buses are red, unless they have sticker advertising The asymmetrical double-decker is called "New Routemaster", it came to service around 10 years ago, the original Routemaster (11.27)is the one that when you think about really old vintage double-decker. When it comes to sizes, only double-decker has one standard measurement, and single deckers come in all shapes and sizes. P.S. 6:45 car is Volvo P1800
@t.a.k.palfrey38826 ай бұрын
Most London buses which don't run on routes extending beyond the metro area are double deckers. In addition, almost all buses in Dublin and Hong Kong are too, as are over half of those in Singapore. A majority of Dhaka buses are too, as is the case in several of the bigger UK cities. I've seen quite a few in Berlin, but beyond that they're used only by city tour operators.
@freethinker--6 ай бұрын
Double deckers make the perfect mobile bar and mobile home,seen many converted.
@BlueKangaroo22296 ай бұрын
The unusual one that you see on route 27 was built specifically for London. They first entered service in 2012 and there are some 1000 of them built. They are referred to as New Routemaster as a tribute to the iconic Routemaster that you see in the West Ham bus garage later in the video. Perhaps you could do a reaction video on this specific vehicle as their unusual design carries on inside the bus.
@Iskandar642 ай бұрын
About 5 million people travel by London Bus per day. It is not a secondary form of public transport compared to the Tube, Overground, Tram and Rail but completely integrated with it. And if you get to ride on the upper deck - get the seats in the front as the view is fun.
@schmittydAU6 ай бұрын
4:23 the windows on the rear and behind/above the driver are following the stairwells between the lower and upper decks.
@TheCyberSalvager3 ай бұрын
Usually with the Scania buses, the chassis is built by Scania and the bus bodies are built by a UK coach builder. (Alexander is one company that springs to mind)
@plonchyvideos74566 ай бұрын
It's pronounced 'Rootmaster' 😊
@seijika466 ай бұрын
In the UK, its a 'pavement' you walk on next to the road.
@brianbradley67446 ай бұрын
You have ex UK double deckers acting as tour buses in both the US and Canada. In fact we saw one of the old Routmasters in Vancouver, Canada. They can be dangerous for passengers as the entrance door is on the wrong side for driving on the right if in original condition.
@stollers16 ай бұрын
when it says scania or Volvo, it means it's a Scania or Volvo engine and chassis, the body's are made in the U.K. by british coachbuilders.
@RWL20126 ай бұрын
not always though, the Scania OmniCity is a fully Scania bus.
@nigethesassenach36146 ай бұрын
Hey Ian, a couple things you need to look at regarding buses. The first is an old 1960’s clip of a Routemaster on a Skidpan and the other is a video of upstairs on an open-top double-decker sight-seeing London. You’d enjoy those.
@MrDeadhead19526 ай бұрын
The bus with the 'weird' windows has a story. It was designed as a homage to old-style ones (known as Routemasters) that were parked in the garage, Unlike the current standard bus whose exit is at the centre of the side it has a rear exit as well as the centre one. The rear entrance goes back to when buses had conductors as well as drivers who sold tickets and directed the passengers and who stood near the rear entrance which was open so it was possible to 'jump on and off' the bus. It was also designed to replace what were known as 'bendy' buses which were single-deckers but extra long and articulated in the middle hence the 'bendy' name. The argument for replacement was partly around the extra length which made manoeuvring them difficult. As they had multiple entrance doors along the length of the bus it was impossible to prevent freeloaders. It's a shame they were replaced as I liked the concept and since they are common in other parts of Europe it's clearly possible to resolve the freeloading issue.
@Jee1231236 ай бұрын
The reason for the odd windows on the side and at the rear is because the bus has two sets of stairs one behind the diver and one set of stairs at the end. With double-decker busses normally the top of the bus has better AC / heating than the bottom, the back of bottom level can gets toasty because of the engine. Due to most of the weight being on the lower level of the bus they are hard to tip on their side. I've been in one when there was very powerful winds.
@philltolkien50826 ай бұрын
Where I live, double deckers are only used on some routes. For someone who grew up using them a lot. Its such an experience on the top deck. Watching the world go by from so high up. The front seats are the best. And you can pretend you're driving the bus.
@frittibreezedancer6 ай бұрын
New subscriber here, and I have to reach out because I have a love for buses. Europe has several iconic buses, such as the London Routemasters, but here in my little country of the Netherlands we had one too; the DAF/Den Oudsten MB200, which was the national bus throughout the country from the 70's up to the early 2000's. Very distinctive style, pretty much always in yellow, and it was the bus I, you could say, grew up on as they were all you saw when I was a kid and it was the bus I had to take to the rain station later when I went to school in a different town >^_^< Little random fun fact or two; I NEVER understood why they had amber brake lights, and I was always SO fascinated by the front turnsignals which were two lights above each other which alternated when activated. There's actually a decent few videos to find of them on youtube, too.
@scrappystocks6 ай бұрын
London buses are manufactured by a coach building company called Plaxtons in Yorkshire. They make the bodies on chassis made by Scania, Volvo, and MAN (I believe). The parent company of Plaxtons is Alexander Dennis.
@martinwebb16816 ай бұрын
Not all of them, many are by Wrightbus. The new London "routemaster" bus was built by Wrightbus along with other types they make bodies for including Volvo, Scania, etc.
@scrappystocks6 ай бұрын
@@martinwebb1681 thank you Martin
@MrDeadhead19526 ай бұрын
@@brianbrotherston5940 Wrong. Just not completely accurate. If your going to claim someones wrong either provide the correct information or don't bother commenting as it isn't helpful.
@MrDeadhead19526 ай бұрын
@@brianbrotherston5940 Then shut up as your a trolling waste of space.
@gladiusthrax49416 ай бұрын
I have been on the London double deckers. Riding on top is cool, but you have to anticipate your buss stop because it takes extra time from your seat to the door. The design and functionality are so iconic. I hope they keep using them for many many yeard. I have always wondered about their center of gravity. I am afraid it would tip over when cornering. But obviously they have it figured out somehow
@Strigulino5 ай бұрын
There's tilt test videos you can watch. The centre of gravity is really low. They can tilt way more than they ever would on the roads and be fine.
@davidwatts-hw2dh6 ай бұрын
You should look at the first old 'skid pan' tests of the buses. They are tall but light with a low centre of gravity, so, very hard to tip them over.
@AndrewGruffudd6 ай бұрын
The iconic London buses are the old-style Routemasters, built in the mid '60s. They were phased out for general service around 2003, but still operated on some heritage routes like the No9 City to Kensington High Street. Apparently, they're not disabled friendly - and they require a conductor to collect fares. The only other iconic bus is the Wright bus, the modern re-imagining of the old Routemaster made from 2006 in Northern Ireland. The Routemasters proper were made by AEC and badged for London Transport with the roundel logo.
@RWL20126 ай бұрын
9H finished in 2014 and 15H finished in 2020 (after being reduced to just weekend and bank holiday services from March to September in 2019). They had to run in front of / behind normal 9s and 15s to get around disability requirements. The conductors' ticket machines' contactless readers only working with Oyster cards (not bank cards) was part of their decline. There are now no classic Routemasters left in TfL service, however since October 2023 there is the non-TfL service T15.
@emmanuelmartin12386 ай бұрын
If you sit at the front at the top of the bus (the best seats) you get a great view, the perspective makes you feel like the bus is riding in the middle of the road but if you're not used to it seems like it's going to hit oncoming traffic. also you get hit by tree many branches.
@ihmcallister3 ай бұрын
The shorter wheel base with the driver in front of the steering axle makes the bus easy to handle in tight corners etc. The drive has to be aware of the extremities and how far out they can swing on corners.
@Peterraymond676 ай бұрын
Hi. Some of older buses were AEC Routemaster and had no door but an open platform at the rear manufactured many. A company called Dennis, once made some, this company is famous for building fire engines both internal combustion types plus earlier steam powered. The newer ones London has now were assembled by Wrightbus, they assemble these in Ballymena Northern Island. You see them in the dockyard awaiting shipment across the sea to England. In the early 60’s I used to ride red double decker bus for the 5 mile trip. Ours were red but Rhondda Transport, some were old ones with open platform at the rear, the later were AEC with a closing front door. The upstairs front seats were usually taken by the time I got on, three stops before mine. The “Hard” kids were the ones who occupied the rear bench seat. we had two buses for the boys and two more for the girls. The girls school was a half mile from the town. Our buses stopped at the town hall and then it was a 10 minute walk to school. The buses had 2 staff, a driver and a conductor, we were on an ordinary bus route, so 4 double deckers for school and a single decker for the public. The passenger capacity is 70 - 90 with no standing upstairs. Double deckers are a common site here in Wales. They must stick to specific routes to avoid low bridges. Some of the old double deckers had their top deck windows taken out and the roof removed. These were used by the bus company to trim trees so normal buses would not get damage by low branches. During WWI older double deckers were used to transport soldiers around France and Belbium. The London Transport staff are still remembered for their service in the Remembrance Parades in London.
@FTFLCY6 ай бұрын
I lived in London for 45 years and never stopped marveling how drivers got these things around London streets - and not just central, either. There's loads of tight maneuvers in the burbs too. Back in the day, they used to drive them like they were in F1! To this day, do NOT argue with a DD if you're in your car. They have right of way when pulling out into traffic, and they take it. These days they're more calm, being GSM tracked. An incredible responsibility too, yet they earn way less than the pampered Tube drivers. If you ever realised a Euro trip, I would love to host!! We could sit outside the local pub (at busy T junction) with a pint of Blackthorn and just stare at the traffic. I already do, for unhealthy periods. I'm interested in the difference in cars between NE London and where we are now (Bath). Very noticeable. Way more bangers here!
@Strigulino5 ай бұрын
Mum and I used to rush to get the top front seats when I was a kid. Great view. They have open top ones in the summer for tourism sometimes too. And they can lean over way more than you'd expect and not fall. There's some amazing tilt test videos showing just how far. They wouldn't lean like that in normal use but it's reassuring to know just how low the centre of gravity is.
@ElunedLaine6 ай бұрын
My late husband used to drive the double deck 'round London sightseeing' buses. One day, whilst crossing Westminster Bridge a lady stepped off the pavement about 6 feet away from him, as she forgot to look right. He swerved away but just clipped her shoulder and she fell over. She wasn't hurt but the police were called. The passengers, when questioned explained what they had seen and said it wasn't the drivers fault. The policeman said 'it happens all the time'
@blahmcblahface39656 ай бұрын
Typical bus driver...late
@rustyboi72566 ай бұрын
I'm a bus driver in Melbourne, Australia, from my understanding, Double Decker buses are just the same as a regular bus to drive so long as you don't try to fit them under low bridges and take corners just a touch slower than a regular bus. However, I have never had an opportunity to drive one. The closest I have got is a articulated bus (bendy), same deal applies except when cornering you'll need to take it a little bit wider too, but not much. Probably safer in any heavy vehicle to drive them super cautiously anyway, there is a difference between a F1 car and a bus. Some bus drivers don't understand that difference.
@chrisperyagh6 ай бұрын
Double deckers are used up and down the country as our normal bus service. There are single deckers as well for local use and out in the countryside, but the major bus routes tend to use double deckers. You have to watch videos of Routemasters doing handbrake turns as well as double decker racing.
@johnhood31726 ай бұрын
Not much point telling an American about handbrake turns, they don’t know what handbrakes are .lol
@chrisperyagh6 ай бұрын
@@johnhood3172 Human League even had one doing a handbrake turn on a bridge and with people in it in their 'Louise' video: kzbin.info/www/bejne/m5mtm2Z8qKublcksi=ehHtPzT_N-EUpbna&t=17
@chrisperyagh6 ай бұрын
@@johnhood3172 Human League featured one doing a handbrake turn on a bridge in their 'Louise' video and there's even people on it! kzbin.info/www/bejne/m5mtm2Z8qKublcksi=ehHtPzT_N-EUpbna&t=17
@chrisperyagh6 ай бұрын
There was an instance in the 1950s where a bus driver jumped Tower Bridge as it started to open as he was driving over it with 20 passengers on board. He floored it to make the jump. Fortunately for him, his side of the bridge had started to rise before the opposite side so he successfully landed it, but he broke his leg on landing while his 20 passengers were fine but a bit shaken up.
@stuborn-complaining-german6 ай бұрын
There used to be many cities all across Europe and the world using double decker busses. Two other iconic places otsidr Britain still doing so today are Hongkong and Berlin. Berlin has been using double deckers since 1907, and they are all german made (mostly MAN today...). BTW, Neoplan is a german company, so that one used bus you showed probably started its life off somewhere around here before being converted into a cinema bus and that's probably why it is left hand drive...
@grahamtruckel6 ай бұрын
Scania don't make double-decker buses. Like some other manufacturers they make the chassis then another company provides the bodywork according to the customer's requirement. Most UK towns and cities have double-deckers - they're everywhere, in all different colours. But the Wrightbus you saw operates only in London. It was designed according to a brief from Boris Johnson when he was mayor of London and is often called the Boris-Bus. They cost almost twice the price of a regular double-decker.
@georgeratcliffe77526 ай бұрын
The Scania Omnicity Double Decker was a double decker fully made by Scania
@grahamtruckel6 ай бұрын
@@georgeratcliffe7752 You're right, but that was a few years ago and Scania now only offers chassis for completion by bodybuilders in double-deck markets.
@automation72956 ай бұрын
What lot of people don't seem to realize that most European and UK market buses have bodies and chassis built by different companies, some buses are made entirely by one company. Some buses like Volvo B10BLE does have different bodies depending on the market; In mainland Europe, B10BLEs were bodied by Säffle/Aabenraa, Carrus and other local manufacturers, In the United Kingdom, many of the B10BLEs had Wright Renown bodywork, and in Australia many (if not all) B10BLE buses had Volgren bodywork
@georgeratcliffe77526 ай бұрын
@@automation7295 Whilst we all like B10BLEs there are unfortunately very few left :( Whilst this is also a dying breed, I'd use the B7TL as my example which in the UK alone came as: Wright Gemini, Plaxton President, Alexander ALX400, East Lancs (Myllennium) Vyking etc...
@automation72956 ай бұрын
@@georgeratcliffe7752 Yeah B10BLE are unfortunately uncommon or even becoming rare, most of them in my city were replaced by B12BLE
@ClintDawg6 ай бұрын
@12:30 when I went to London as a kid there were still some of those old types in service. The cool thing about them was that they had an open platform in the rear, so people would just jump on and off when the bus slowed down
@bionicgeekgrrl6 ай бұрын
If you look up the London transport museum, they have a range of buses and other things from the 1930s onwards and earlier. Well worth a visit if you visit the uk. The main museum is in Covent Garden, with the other at acton depot, which has various tube stock.
@davidflack64306 ай бұрын
There is also the London bus museum at Brook lands.
@knightwish16236 ай бұрын
Back in the 1960s my dad was a bus driver and drove the bus shown at 11:20. When visiting London one of the best things is to do a siteseeing tour on a open top doupledecker bus (as long as it's not raining). You get to see more than trying to do it under your own steam.
@michaels6406 ай бұрын
London, yes, but every town and city has double-deckers, countryside routes too. And where Britain had her colonies, Hong Kong, South Africa etc there are double deckers. They developed from early trams which were open top - and open cab - that later got closed over to protect passengers from the weather.
@peckelhaze69346 ай бұрын
Before these buses there were double decker buses that were hop on/hop off, 12:13. No door just open platform. You can jump on and off when the bus was moving and pay a conductor for a ticket. This was up to late 70s at a guess. There are also double decker tourist buses in red with no roof. Sidewalk in the UK is a pavement.
@glo01156 ай бұрын
Always up top at the front. I miss the ones Trent Barton (Nottinghamshire) had in the 90s, you could stare down the porthole drivers had to see up stairs and try to distract the driver.
@hermandobernardes7222 ай бұрын
The older ones are the Routemasters, many a seasoned Londoner's favourite double-decker bus.
@Philcoxon6 ай бұрын
Scania and other lorry manufacturers supply the chassis to the body builders, who make the bodies including ones that show movies, cinemas. The LHD Leyland was probably an export model.
@PiersDJackson6 ай бұрын
Ian, the basics are legislation (I think) mandated that all TfL buses are Red, and like most things in the UK it makes little sense, but they've been that way because of tradition, like Hackney Cabs (London Taxis) being Black, and because it's been that way so it will be into the future... the Iconic London Bus is a model called a Routemaster (aka RM####) fleet numbers, often confused with their predecessor the Regent RT, however there were some variations on the Routemaster. Namely the easily identifiable RMC and RML "Coach" variant with four headlights, and when built a rear door, coach seating and a GREEN livery; the RMF and RMA with the door at the front and stairs with them; the less easily identifiable variation is the RML, RCL and RMF being 29'11" vs 27'6" for the corresponding RM, RMC and RMA versions, there is an orphan seventh prototype, the FRM which was rear engined, the door was in the now standard place in front of front axle, and the stairs were behind the driver.
@Ghhft33Ай бұрын
My school bus was a double decker, a fleet of them outside the school every day. Being the.. ‘cool kid’ I rode the top deck everyday, front row like I was the bloody queen lol
@lindamerrett66006 ай бұрын
Loved your reaction, I always sat at the top and up front.
@MegaJackpot1806 ай бұрын
i was a bus/coach driver for over 30 yrs when i first started we used crash box manuals where you had to double de clutch (a lost art) later on we had semi auto then full auto i drove for Bristol omnibus then badgerline then a private company that did national express and coach trips all over uk the fav bus i drove was a BRISTOL VR and BRISTOL RE most double decks are 14ft high give or take as you get low bridge versions 8ft or 7ft 6 wide and up to 40 ft long on national express coaches are over 40ft most buses are body on chassis for example bristol chassis with ECW Body (Eastern Coach Works) So in bristol it was common to see chassis driving with no bodies to ecw for fitting before privatisation (1985) different areas had different colours london RED Bristol Green keep it up great channel
@Trident43906 ай бұрын
12:58 is a new variant of the Envrio400, its called a BYD Envrio400City, a complete remodel of the Enviro400MMC seen ay 12:43. The BYD is the 4th generation Enviro400 made
@rorschch126 ай бұрын
I'm 58 years old and whenever I get on a London Bus I still try to sit in the front of the top deck. Just like when I was a Kid.
@missharry57276 ай бұрын
I used to travel to school by public transport buses - it actually took two buses each way as you had to change from one route to another. In my are there were buses with three different liveries. There were two from the two local towns, one cream and blue, the other yellow and green, and a third that was red and white. From choice we always went upstairs and if possible sat at the front.
@danielferguson37846 ай бұрын
These buses are not just in London, but common throughout the UK. Everyone likes the top deck. The glass design ones are the newest. The first ones were horse drawn over a hundred years ago. The classic one is the Route master with an open jump on back. London gets snow occasionally, but it gets less rain than New York, Rome & Sydney. Buses are not all red. Each region or town has it's own colour scheme. In Edinburgh they are cream & purple. A mobile cinema, they show films on the bus.
@nicksykes45756 ай бұрын
I drove a Ford Transcontinental and later a Scania 111, working general haulage for a guy whose main business was a truck and bus driving school. He had one of the iconic AEC RouteMaster double-deckers, and a couple of times, when my truck was "in the shop" I would supervise learner drivers on it. Sometimes I've had to get behind the wheel, and they're pretty easy to drive.
@TerenceDixon-l6b6 ай бұрын
Double Decker buses are used in just about very British cities, not just London. Here in Birmingham, most of our buses are also red. Most of our roads are not really that narrow, it's just that we don't love Tarmac (blacktop) as much as Americans. London buses are red (except the ones sponsored for advertising) as they are owned and run by London Transport, organised by local government. Even in modern towns in the UK based on grids there are roundabouts at most intersections as they are so efficient. Of course we have snow, the UK is much further North than the US, more aligned to Canada of Scandinavia. Public transport is ubiquitous in the UK, I travelled to school on a service double-decker for at least 6 years, we used to race to get on the top deck when possible, especially as smoking was banned on the lower one.
@charlesemerson67636 ай бұрын
There used to a Utube channel called "Routemaster for Hire" showed the efforts of guys restoring the old London buses. It closed when the owner decided to muck about with boats but the other guys involved started up again with a new channel called London bus restoration.
@denniswilliams1606 ай бұрын
The buses with the 'weird windows' are the New Routemaster, originally referred to as the New Bus for London and colloquially as the Boris Bus. They have two internal staircases and have a a "hop-on hop-off" rear open platform similar to the original Routemaster bus design but updated to meet requirements for modern buses to be fully accessible. It first entered service in February 2012 with Arriva London on London Buses route 38. See en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Routemaster
@mothmagic16 ай бұрын
About the hardest thing to get used to driving those busses is that you are about 5 feet from the front of the vehicle and sitting over the front wheels. If you forget that it's easy to pass the front end of the bus over the opposite kerb if you forget. If you are on a country route it's better to be on the top deck as you can see over the top of the hedgerows
@Trident43906 ай бұрын
The Wrightbus International Streetdecks/Volvo B5LH ones you saw at the beginning 01:12 are powered by a Volvo D5-Series Euro6 with a 12Speed Gearbox and a HYB I-SAM Motor. Very powerful buses
@2busaman6 ай бұрын
The busses with the weird back windows are the new style Routetmaster bus, or "Borris Bus" They are electric with a diesel engine to charge the battery.
@rogerreed9056 ай бұрын
If people buy a used bus that was in city service you may need to change the rear end to a taller open road diff . . If your going to use it as a mobile home . .
@haystackhider71586 ай бұрын
Easy prey for the *11 foot 8* bridge LOL
@siouex6 ай бұрын
Not really. All low bridges have electronic beacons, and the buses have receivers and alarms respectively
@-sandman46056 ай бұрын
Check out the double decker bus driving school they must attend before given a full licence, they are also pretty hard to roll over.
@SciFiAmazon6 ай бұрын
This bus with the strange shape was designed (mainly) by the mayor of London who was Boris Johnson at the time. He later became the Prime Minister. It is affectionally known as the 'Boris Bus'
@evelynroadmedia94156 ай бұрын
3:50 - The number 27 bus, is the new route master bus, which is a attempt to replicate the really old route master buses from a long time ago, think it has had a hot/cold welcome to the fleet, due to budget issues (could be wrong). The main bus that had a lot of bad press is the bendy buses from about 10/15 years ago, if I remember them ones had a problem with catching fire.
@Trident43906 ай бұрын
11:10 is the spirit of London 19000, the bus caught fire severely and was rebuilt and named Spirit of Lindon. 19000 was one of two of the first Alexander Dennis Trident2 Enviro400's, the Second being 4698 BX55XOA, both buses were demonstrators. 4698 resides with national express now as a trainee bus
@tonybennett99645 ай бұрын
I used to live in the 18 bus route and as kid remember Park Royal where they made the original routemaster buses and the dog track and Guineas brewery
@lawrencegt22296 ай бұрын
See if you can find footage of a bus undergoing a 'tip test' where they put it on a tilting platform to test how far it can lean until it falls over.
@mikewilding31996 ай бұрын
My local bus co has mostly Volvo engined and chassied vehicles. The body is by Wrightbus. All buses are low floor and have a ramp inbuilt and hydraulic lowering for disabled passengers.Many vehicles have free WiFi and USB charging points. All of this is normal throughout Europe.
@SuperGoodison6 ай бұрын
When I was in school in the 90s sometimes we'd get a double decker to bring us home always tried to get the front seat up top. The was a mirror that would let you see the driver below
@HankD135 ай бұрын
Our last Routemaster through Streatham was the 159, in 2005 - and there was a crowd to wave it an emotional goodbye. My wife used buses far more than me and she was pretty heartbroken. The open back allowed you to hop on and off at traffic lights - and could save a lot of walking! But modern health and safety considered them too dangerous and we lost them. Sad - I loved the Routemasters. Being over 60 now, buses are now free to me (outside of the morning rush hour) so I do use them much, much more - evening in the pub, night bus home - perfect. Know some are kept around as tourist tours - there is a ghost tour Routemaster I have seen around!
@JohnRoberts-pt8cu6 ай бұрын
I did my apprenticeship building buses back in 1970, I then joined the Royal Air force for 6 years in 74, and then in 80, needing a job, I became a conductor for a few months, the buses now are full automatic, with some being full electric which keep catching fire and have a short range, which means you need two electric buses for every Diesel hybrid out there, rubbish, every county has its own colours, London the iconic red, Yorkshire buses are linked to each town where they operate, so the colours change for each operator, and the size of the bus, from 20 to almost 100 seat bus like the double decker and bending buses, the one that suits the purpose, like for rush hour and less Busy times, when we buildt our buses for Leeds Council we used Leyland Chassis which were delivered naked, with only a seat and dashboard, and a big diesel engine at the back, later came Volvo, enjoy your journey 😀
@MadPhantom6 ай бұрын
The left hand drive double decker most likely is coming from a former colony in Asia (also the background in the photos is quite tropical). There's a few out there who use double deckers, Hong Kong is pretty famous for them but they drive on the left so will be one of the other.
@Peter-mj6lz6 ай бұрын
The buses in London are probably shorter than most US buses hence they rather use double decks over articulated. The first two buses are Wrightbuses, but the first one has a Volvo chassis and engine with a wrightbus Gemini 3 body.
@LearnTechnicalSketching-y1e28 күн бұрын
The double-decker buses are not just in London, they are used all over the UK especially in larger urban areas and cities but also often on rural routes, and often connect towns, so are seen all over the UK on a regular basis. We have had double-deckers since the very early days of trams and buses. They have different colour schemes in different parts of the UK, and come in just about every colour except black, which actually is not a colour. Actually most roads in the UK are not small, the lane width on main roads, dual carriageways and motorways are the same width as in the USA, it's just that KZbinrs like to show the rarer narrow roads, and of course as our cities grew mostly before the advent of motor vehicles, roads in the centres tend to be a bit narrower. You are looking at quite wide, 4 lane city roads in London, with wide pedestrian walkways and still call them narrow. Many of our buses are now electric, hybrids are diesel/electric.
@isthatthetimealready6 ай бұрын
I live in London, and for the past 16 years, I’ve lived on the route of the 27 (the double decker buses in the early portions of the video, all seem to be that route (it’s England, so rhymes with put, not pout)
@juniusvindex7696 ай бұрын
Scania do not make London buses, they provide the engine and chassis but body builders make the bus. Much like most municipal and commercial bodied vehicles. It's Lego not legos btw.
@marksinthehouse19686 ай бұрын
The scania omnidecker was built in Poland by scania as a compleat bus yes they did
@iiBus6 ай бұрын
This is true for modern day, but older buses like the Omnicity and Omnidekka are fully built by Scania.
@christianc98946 ай бұрын
You are interested in so many things that when you come to Europe one day, you will stay there for several months to see everything. It's rare to find such a curious American, who is interested in something other than the USA. You raising the level.
@mej65196 ай бұрын
We used to have double decker buses on our local bus route. Green line 441 to staines middex. Used to catch it to watch saturday morning cinema(kids cinema).
@johnevans20446 ай бұрын
IWrocker says that he's not aware of any double deck buses operating in the US. Interestingly, there is old (restored) film footage available on KZbin that shows New York in the 1930s, and in those days, the city operated almost exclusively double deck buses. There's footage of the highway running along the side of Central Park along which much of the traffic is double deckers - with left hand drive and right hand entrances of course. Double deckers are still found in other parts of the world, particularly ex-British colonies. Hong-Kong has long operated double deckers - right hand drive ones with left-hand entrances, because they drive on the left on Hong Kong, unlike the rest of China. And as at least one other viewer has commented, Berlin has long operated double deckers on some of its bus routes - since way before the second world war. The city has recently taken delivery of a batch of Alexander Dennis double deckers built in the UK, to replace MAN vehicles that turned out to be unreliable and expensive to operate. Like London buses, Berlin's buses have long been an iconic, eye-catching colour, but not red - canary yellow instead!