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Why did they stop using trolley buses?

Electricity prices rose and rapidly-growing cities soon outgrew a network of overhead cables in desperate need of investment. When Cardiff's trolleybus number 262 returned to the Newport Road depot for the last time in January 1970 it marked the end of an era.



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Electricity prices rose and rapidly-growing cities soon outgrew a network of overhead cables in desperate need of investment. When Cardiff's trolleybus number 262 returned to the Newport Road depot for the last time in January 1970 it marked the end of an era.

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The real problem was that once cars appeared on the road, they could drive on streetcar tracks — and the streetcars could no longer operate efficiently. Once just 10 percent or so of people were driving, the tracks were so crowded that [the streetcars] weren't making their schedules, Norton says.

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Disadvantages of Trolleybus Re-routing of the trolleybuses are not usually readily available outside of the downtown areas. Trolleybuses cannot overtake one another in regular service unless two separate sets of wires with a switch are provided or the buses are equipped with off-wire capability.

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1909: Electric trolleys replaced the steam-powered cable cars in all five boroughs, giving NYC transportation a sudden boost in speed and efficiency. 1957: The last streetcars disappeared, fully replaced by the city's bus system.

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The trolley car, which made its first New York City appearance in 1832, ended its days here in 1957, a victim of the awesome power of the automotive interests and the metamorphosis of American life that they engendered.

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What really killed the streetcar: gridlock and artificially low fares. The decline of the streetcar after World War I — when cars began to arrive on city streets — is often cast as a simple choice made by consumers. As a Smithsonian exhibition puts it, Americans chose another alternative — the automobile.

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Changing economics and evolving public needs motivated policymakers to remove elevated lines and replace them with subways, which continued to burgeon. In the 1930s those forces, in combination with the Great Depression and upheaval in New York city and state politics, doomed the Manhattan Elevated system.

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Boris Johnson scrapped London's bendy buses. Between 2002 and 2011 around 400 bendy buses operated in London. I often used the bendy bus route 29 to travel between Finsbury Park and central London. They offered speedy boarding and alighting times, reducing journey times.

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New York City Transit President Andy Byford said the buses at that time were not equipped to handle the roads. My understanding was, where New York previously trialed double-deck, there were problems with the air conditioning, and the technology just really wasn't appropriate to handle New York streets, Byford said.

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trolleybus, also called Trackless Trolley, vehicle operated on the streets on rubber tires and powered by electricity drawn from two overhead wires by trolley poles. It is distinct from a trolley car, which runs on rails rather than on tires and is thus a form of streetcar. trolleybus.

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Trolley service ended on Flatbush Avenue on March 5, 1951, and on Nostrand Avenue on April 1, 1951. Only eight trolley lines remained in service after those on Nostrand were replaced by busses. The last trolley service in Brooklyn ended on October 31, 1956 with the cessation of service on MacDonald Avenue.

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Electrification of streetcars began here in 1892 in Brooklyn. The last NY streetcars were removed in the late 1950s in favor of diesel buses.

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Trolley service ended on Flatbush Avenue on March 5, 1951, and on Nostrand Avenue on April 1, 1951. Only eight trolley lines remained in service after those on Nostrand were replaced by busses. The last trolley service in Brooklyn ended on October 31, 1956 with the cessation of service on MacDonald Avenue.

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With a length of 86 km, route #52 of Crimean Trolleybus is the longest trolleybus line in the world.

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“Trolley” refers to the trolley poles on the roof of the bus that are used to transmit the electricity from the overhead wires. Although their operations can be less flexible than that of motor buses, trolley buses are more energy efficient, much quieter and much less polluting.

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Being active helps with physical health, and taking transit instead of driving reduces stress. Buses are also safer than individual vehicles. By leaving the car at home, a person can save up to 20 pounds of carbon dioxide emissions every day. Buses keep the air cleaner.

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