Geordie driver
Member
My mistake, I should have said every depot I have worked in.We don't have a big book, we have defect cards we fill in
My mistake, I should have said every depot I have worked in.We don't have a big book, we have defect cards we fill in
As far as I'm aware that is not classified as a minor defect and is an immediate prohibition.bus to be reported as defective during the day for minor stuff like the bell not working
No problemMy mistake, I should have said every depot I have worked in.
Not technically correct.overkill, bus windows are laminated, two sheets of glass sandwiching a plastic sheet so not risk. It is, or was legal to run providing the crack does not run from edge to edge of the screen or does not affect the drivers vision.
One garage I worked at in Manchester, we used to keep the cold bus as a spare to ward off drivers trying to pull a fast one, trying to miss a trip! (Surprising how effective this can be) Said bus was also slow and rattled ridiculously!Theres company / legal standards and then there's the standards of the person in the garage who decides if the bus is fit for service, and the pressure on the engineering department at 'run out'.
Cold buses usually put on school runs
Electric faults as described by OP probably put on schools
Buses with engines knackered leaking oil (but legal) probably put on peak only boards until labour available for engine overhaul
If that's true, it's honestly disgraceful that bus drivers are happy to simply not bother provide the service if it means they get home a bit earlier. The phrasing "certain drivers" suggests they did this habitually, or at least several times - how on earth were they not sacked?We also used to occasionally "test" drivers on how serious their defect actually was... When far away from the depot, certain drivers would magically breakdown, hoping to miss a trip (usually their last run) and run back private. Cue "the breakdown van is on the other side of town and a recovery lorry will be about 3 hours getting to you"... You'd be surprised how many buses were suddenly fixed by themselves and they carried on..! You'll have also guessed that I work in engineering! Lol!
overkill, bus windows are laminated, two sheets of glass sandwiching a plastic sheet so not risk. It is, or was legal to run providing the crack does not run from edge to edge of the screen or does not affect the drivers vision.
Aren't buses are generally provided with steel hammers with which to break the windows? This might mean you can have a stronger window and still have it safe in an evacuationAll of them? On a car the windscreen (and possibly rear windscreen) are laminated, whereas side windows are toughened so they are easy to break (and break into small, non-sharp "beads") in an emergency.
I wonder how far this quality vehicle would get!Much depends on the state of the economy. In a desperate enough environment you always can ignore windows without glass, doors that won't close.
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Oh it's absolutely true! Most large garages have a reasonable turn over of drivers so you'll always get some that don't really like working!If that's true, it's honestly disgraceful that bus drivers are happy to simply not bother provide the service if it means they get home a bit earlier. The phrasing "certain drivers" suggests they did this habitually, or at least several times - how on earth were they not sacked?
Quite correctly as otherwise the driver has no means of supervising passengers on the upper deck, assuming the bus in question wasn't fitted with a periscope.Early this evening at Hull Interchange, I saw a Stagecoach double decker get taken out of service because the CCTV was only working on the lower deck and not the upper deck.
It was a short trolley bus line between town and colliery, a few kilometers long l think. The strange roof behind the trolleybus was the ticket office but it's completely closed.I wonder how far this quality vehicle would get!
Certainly the big OPs are quite (overly) cautious with this. Your mileage may vary with smaller ops. I was once (about 7 years ago) on a First X78 bus Doncaster-Sheffield when a chip & small crack appeared in one of the windows presumably downstairs from roadside debris. I was on the top deck at the time. We had to alight at a roadside junction and wait to be squeezed onto the next one.
Side windows are genrally toughened, as anyone who has seen a stone thrown through one can testify. They must not be able to crack as if they could it would be possible to end up with people being cut should it break, they are normally toughened but can be laminated.Not technically correct.
Windscreens are laminated. Side windows can be single glazed (especially if of gasket fitment) but must be safety glass... So it is not overkill for the vehicle to be brought off the road.
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In my experience, the last run is the most important one for getting back on time, if their bus was suitable for running back light then why would they need to wait for the fitters to come out?Not technically correct.
Windscreens are laminated. Side windows can be single glazed (especially if of gasket fitment) but must be safety glass... So it is not overkill for the vehicle to be brought off the road.
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One garage I worked at in Manchester, we used to keep the cold bus as a spare to ward off drivers trying to pull a fast one, trying to miss a trip! (Surprising how effective this can be) Said bus was also slow and rattled ridiculously!
We also used to occasionally "test" drivers on how serious their defect actually was... When far away from the depot, certain drivers would magically breakdown, hoping to miss a trip (usually their last run) and run back private. Cue "the breakdown van is on the other side of town and a recovery lorry will be about 3 hours getting to you"... You'd be surprised how many buses were suddenly fixed by themselves and they carried on..! You'll have also guessed that I work in engineering! Lol!
It'll probably be the same for a lot of places.In my experience, the last run is the most important one for getting back on time, if their bus was suitable for running back light then why would they need to wait for the fitters to come out?
Buses that are cold, slow and rattle should be fixed, surely, not kept in that condition to punish drivers and, by extension, passengers?
Only kidding, I know how the industry works and sending out a vehicle in that condition is seen as perfectly reasonable. No wonder it is in trouble.
Our company would routinely send out buses with orders not to switch it off as it probably wouldn't start. Not suitable for service as a driver has to be able to !eave his vehicle and he can't leave it running.
Some drivers would wait until they were as far away as possible from the depot then, by some quirk of fate, the engine would cut out. They wouldn't do this on their last run, far more likely on their first run.
It'd certainly be an interesting read to hear tales from the fitters / mechanics side of bus operation. Let us know when you get round to itI've loads of examples hence I'am considering writing a book. There are quite afew from drivers about life on the road but few, if any infact, from "the otherside"
Thanks, I shallIt'd certainly be an interesting read to hear tales from the fitters / mechanics side of bus operation. Let us know when you get round to it![]()
Think of when your phone freezes, a full shut down or restart normally unfreezes the issue, or going back 10 years we’d just pop the battery out and back in.The 'switch it off and on again' philosophy often gets laughed at (I used to have to deal with peoples' mobile phone issues), but much of the time it does work!
Oh come on! Don’t be so naive. I’d say a significant proportion of drivers turn up simply to get paid. They don’t care about running the Service. And why should they? They aren’t paid greatly and are trodden on at virtually every opportunity, from the public, bus station staff, revenue protection and management. Not saying it’s right. But acting like you’re surprised is quite amusing.If that's true, it's honestly disgraceful that bus drivers are happy to simply not bother provide the service if it means they get home a bit earlier. The phrasing "certain drivers" suggests they did this habitually, or at least several times - how on earth were they not sacked?
I'm not really that surprised that they would be doing this - I just think it's disgraceful, whatever the cause.Oh come on! Don’t be so naive. I’d say a significant proportion of drivers turn up simply to get paid. They don’t care about running the Service. And why should they? They aren’t paid greatly and are trodden on at virtually every opportunity, from the public, bus station, staff, revenue protection and management. Not saying it’s right. But acting like you’re surprised is quite amusing.
It’s where the industry is in general. Where it’s been for a while. And I can’t ever see it improving.I'm not really that surprised that they would be doing this - I just think it's disgraceful, whatever the cause.
I should clarify that I don't want to place all the blame on the drivers here, given they are often not treated well.
What I am surprised about on the other hand that this sort of behaviour is expected and sometimes seemingly just accepted.
Doesn't look much worse than some First buses I've seen out in service.......I wonder how far this quality vehicle would get!
Suppose this depends on location. I have often been on buses running out of Catford Garage (London), operated by Stagecoach where the ticket machines/oyster card readers has failed and got a free ride.I’ve even seen Stagecoach take a bus out of service simply because the ticket machine wasn’t working.
As far as a stop bell not working, it has two classifications.As far as I'm aware that is not classified as a minor defect and is an immediate prohibition.
I take it that the driver being separated from passengers by a full-height assault screen to their left and a wall behind them, such as on most Stagecoach buses, not count as a separate compartment thenAs far as a stop bell not working, it has two classifications.
If the driver is in a separate compartment (eg a old half cab type bus) it’s an immediate prohibition.
If the driver is in the same compartment (most modern buses) it’s not even a delayed prohibition.
No it doesn’t. As it still simple for the passenger to communicate to the driverI take it that the driver being separated from passengers by a full-height assault screen to their left and a wall behind them, such as on most Stagecoach buses, not count as a separate compartment then
"Passengers must not stand forward of this point or speak to the driver whilst the vehicle is in motion" as the signs (used to?) say.No it doesn’t. As it still simple for the passenger to communicate to the driver