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When did London buses stop having conductors?

By the early 1980s, bus conductors were largely obsolete in all cities except London and Dublin. Two-person crews continued to operate a number of bus routes in central London until late 2005, well beyond their demise in the rest of the United Kingdom.



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Women conductors, known as 'clippies' after the ticket-clipping machine they used, were among the most visible roles in London. Ellen Bulfield was one of the very first female conductors to join the LGOC and was also the last to leave after the end of the war.

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In 1905, the London Motor Omnibus Company adopted the fleet name 'Vanguard' and painted their vehicles predominantly red.

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Due to the high operating cost, cumbersome transportation and high fuel consumption, the BEST administration stopped inducting double-decker buses after 2008. The move to decommission these buses is in accordance with government policy as the vehicles have reached their legal life of 15 years.

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The reason behind their colour dates to the early 1900s, when the transport system was operated by different rival companies. London General Omnibus Company (or L.G.O.C.) owned most of the buses and in 1907 painted its entire fleet red to stand out from competitors.

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[ kuhn-duhk-tris ] show ipa. noun. a woman who conducts; a female leader, guide, director, or manager. a woman who is employed as a conductor on a bus, train, or other public conveyance.

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Transport for London (TfL) does have air conditioning fitted in bus cabs to help drivers regulate the temperature during hot summer days. During the pandemic, it was necessary to switch off and modify some of these to make sure they drew in air solely from outside the vehicle.

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Ten years ago, the Transport for London introduced a programme for the installation of white panels atop the capital's trademark red buses in the framework of further climate-adaptation plans. More specifically, white panels reflect the rays of the summer sun, thus keeping the vehicles cooler.

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Articulated buses, colloquially known as bendy buses, were rarely used in the United Kingdom compared to other countries, until the turn of the millennium. This was due to a preference for the double-decker bus for use on high capacity routes.

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The TfL 69 - Walthamstow - Stratford - Canning Town bus serves 38 bus stops in the London area departing from A | Walthamstow Bus Station and ending at A | Canning Town. Scroll down to see upcoming 69 bus times at each stop and the next scheduled 69 bus times will be displayed.

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Route 18, running between Sudbury and Euston bus station is the busiest bus route. The service carried over 16.6 million passengers in 2018/19. The next busiest routes (over 10 million) are: 25, 29, 140, 149, 243, 207, 86, 36, 38, 5, 279, 53, 109, 141 and 43.

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A double-decker bus or double-deck bus is a bus that has two storeys or decks. They are used for mass transport in the United Kingdom, the United States, Canada, New Zealand, Europe, Asia and also in cities such as Sydney; the best-known example is the red London bus, namely the AEC Routemaster.

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Most of maintenance facilities in north America aren't build to accommodate these much taller buses,also there may some clearance issues on bus routes as well, so double decker buses is the USA would be limited in use.

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Mostly for practical purposes. There are lots of bridges over roads that are high enough for a double decker bus to pass underneath, there are few, if any, that are high enough for a triple decker bus to pass underneath. That's assuming that a triple decker bus could be made stable enough to not risk tippling over.

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