Ivo
Established Member
Most places worldwide give their bus routes numbers to distinguish them from one another. Occasionally you might get a specially branded route that uses letters etc to promote it, such as the 'more' routes in Bournemouth, some that are less significant that others and often done to associate them with their local area, such as some of the more localised routes in London, and most often, these letters are used as suffixes to identity route variations, e.g. 2, 2A, 2B.
So why do some places, such as Cheltenham and Exeter (both modern-day Stagecoach operations), use letters instead of numbers to identify each route? I realise that these letters only apply to the local routes in both places, but is it a convention of a former operator, a means of separating local routes and long-distance routes - or simply local preference?
So why do some places, such as Cheltenham and Exeter (both modern-day Stagecoach operations), use letters instead of numbers to identify each route? I realise that these letters only apply to the local routes in both places, but is it a convention of a former operator, a means of separating local routes and long-distance routes - or simply local preference?