Old Bus Photos

W Gash & Sons – Daimler CVD6 – KAL 580 – DD3

W Gash & Sons - Daimler CVD6 - KAL 580 - DD3

W Gash & Sons
1948
Daimler CVD6
Strachans but possible rebodied by Massey 1962

I have cobbled together this info from too many to mention web sites if you know more let me know. Also I can’t remember for the life in me where I was when I took the photo possible Nottingham as the bus behind is a Barton Transport fleet no 703.

A full list of Daimler codes can be seen here.


The location is undoubtedly Nottingham Huntingdon Street bus station – long since disused.

It may be of interest that Huntingdon Street bus station was host to no less than ten different operators in the 1950s – Trent (about 12 routes or groups of routes), Barton (4), East Midland (3 joint with Trent), Midland General (3), Mansfield District (2), South Notts (2), Lincolnshire (1 joint with Trent), Skills (1 joint with Trent), W Gash (2) and Nottingham City Transport (1) – a mish-mash of AECs, Leylands, Daimlers, Bristols and the occasional Guy, in various shades of blue, green, red, purple and brown.

Stephen Ford


This is the bus I went to school on and it is DD3

JB


In addition the other bus companies were
East Midland who operated services to Doncaster & Retford via Farnsfield Bilsthorpe Edwinstowe and Ollerton
United Counties operated a London service via Northampton
Black & White Coachways to Cheltenham
Taylor Bros & Hall Bros services to Newcastle
Royal Blue operated from Maidenhead on Saturdays
Skills Scenicruisers services to Bridlington on Saturdays
Midland Red to Ashby de la Zouch/Birmingham
East Yorkshire to Scarborough on Saturdays
Lincolnshire road car to Ingoldmells Mablethorpe and I think possibly Skegness
Yorkshire Traction to Leeds via Sheffield, Barnsley and Wakefield… later as part of what was combined by United Counties/Yorkshire Traction to form the first Leeds – London service changing at Huntingdon street.

Huntingdon street bus station long before the national express routes we know today was a major hub/interchange link for all of the above operators there were a few others as I remember but at this moment in time cannot remember their details hoping this adds a little more info to your entry.

Mickey Summers (New York)


Hi Mickey, you are quite right about the other operators. I only listed the regular local and interurban bus routes, as opposed to longer distance coach services, though some of the local operators (Trent and Barton in particular) also ran coach services, mainly to the east coast resorts. By the early 1950s (the earliest I can remember) Midland Red’s X99 Birmingham service had been transferred to Mount Street bus station, where it shared platform 6 with selected Trent routes. Actually Mount Street only had 3 platforms, numbered 4 (Midland General/Notts & Derby), 5 (Barton) and 6. Not sure why there was no 1,2 or 3! I think the idea of Mount Street was to hive off all the routes that left the city in a north westerly direction via Canning Circus, so that they didn’t have to fight their way through increasing traffic around Huntingdon Street.

Stephen Ford


Well now, there’s another operator that I had forgotten at Huntingdon Street. North Western were equal partners with Trent on route X2 to Manchester, via Ilkeston, Ripley, Matlock, Buxton and Stockport. It was "limited stop" rather than a true express service, and also had a strict "no setting-down" restriction until after Ripley (to protect Midland General’s B2).

Stephen Ford


This area was a hive of activity in those days, across from the bus station were the Central Markets, opposite was the Palais-de-Danse, there was also a short cut for bus passengers wishing to get to Victoria Railway Station. Strange how the focal point of a city can be altered over the years, I suppose construction of the two shopping centres led to that. I was often taken on shopping trips to Nottingham by my parents and we usually concluded the shopping down the Huntingdon Street end, I always enjoyed a visit to Notts but the one thing I hated was the long trek back to Mount Street to get our (Midland General) bus home! Today, Huntingdon Street is quite a dead area, apart from passing traffic, and so too, for that matter is Mount Street!

Chris Barker


11/03/11 – 09:30

Is the saloon next to the Gash decker a Barton’s own built MK2 Veiwmaster?

Roger Broughton


11/03/11 – 16:05

Roger – in a word yes! And lovely vehicles they were to travel in too. Comfortable coach type seats, and orange Perspex panels in the roof which could make even a dismal wet November day seem sunny – until you alighted of course! I have spent many a happy half hour travelling from Long Eaton to Nottingham in one of these on routes 3/3C, 10 and 11 in the mid 1950s.

Stephen Ford


11/03/11 – 16:10

Re Mickey Summers comment above: I can think of two more operators not mentioned as yet, West Yorkshire Road Car Co (whose coaches were in daily use on the Yorkshire Services pool), and Ribble Motor Services who contributed to the X2/X60 connection to Blackpool – more often than not a through vehicle in the summer months with everything from all-Leyland Royal Tiger coaches to BET Federation 36 ft service buses in drab all-over red appearing in Huntingdon Street.
Does anybody know why Nottingham corporation route 25 terminated there, or to put it another way why just the 25?
Fond memories. The iconic tram-shed is still in place and currently being advertised as luxury apartments. A great shame – it would have made a superb bus museum for the area and with the vehicles known to be in preservation a passable good recreation of Huntingdon Street in its heyday could have been held on a regular basis. If I ever win the jackpot on the Lottery those flats are being ripped back out again!

Neville Mercer


12/03/11 – 07:05

In answer to Neville, the 25 was the last of three NCT routes that originally started/terminated at Huntingdon Street. It was a circular to Mapperly Westdale Lane – out via Carlton, in via Sherwood (25A in the opposite direction). In the 1930s it was virtually an out of town service, going to the limits of where housing development was just starting. The other two were to Hucknall via Basford and Bulwell (route 22 at the time) – later discontinued as Trent served that area; and route 19 to Lenton Abbey, near the University campus. Geoff Atkins’ photos show AEC Reliances in Huntingdon Street on routes 22 and 25, and a 1935 Regent/Northern Counties with its blind set to "19, Huntingdon St Bus Stn via Derby Road and Wollaton Street."

Stephen Ford


29/08/11 – 16:16

Re operators of Daimler buses with Massey bodywork – Peter Gould lists in SHMD Fleet List four Daimler buses owned by SHMD with Massey bodywork. They are HMA 12 (Daimler CWG6) and HMA 155,156 and 157 (all CWA6’s). Info of any interest?

Peter Crossley


25/12/11 – 18:49

Just been reading through the site on Huntingdon Street bus station Nottingham.
I was a conductor with Trent Motor Traction from 1968 to 1983 then driver from 1983 to 1991, I have conducted on the Manchester service X2 and the Great Yarmouth service, and local services, great remembering the old bus station

Stephen Morrell


26/12/11 – 10:49

Stephen, just reading your comment above made me think you may be able to help me with some research I am undertaking re. the end of crew operation around the UK. I don’t have a final date for Trent; you mention you were still a conductor in 1983 which I imagine must be close to the date when Trent became 100% o-p-o. Any idea when the final date may have been, please?

Dave Towers


02/01/12 – 12:57

In reply to Dave Towers, I passed my bus test 10/10/1983 and I was one of the last conductors to go driving at the Nottingham depot there could well have been some after me at the Derby depot. So I would think by end of October 1983 it would have been 100% o.m.o, hope this helps, (might be able to find out exactly still know one or two at Nottingham) who might be able to help me.

Stephen Morrell


08/02/12 – 15:37

Regarding the comments on Strachans, I have been trying to ascertain their history without much success. I do have a photograph of the interior of their works in West Acton in 1935 with a line of Austin Taxi’s all bodied by Strachans. I live in France and have discovered a 1935 Austin taxi with a body by Strachans which I am renovating. I am missing the small brass plaque which says "Body by Strachans" and their address, if anybody has such an item I would be delighted to purchase it.

Peter London


13/02/12 – 15:56

Strachans at Hamble did indeed start in London. The ‘history’ is not ‘straightforward’, and may well get put into a book in due course ! (A not particularly accurate article did appear in an ‘Annual’ some years ago).
The origins of the firm were with W E Brown, who began as a coachbuilder in Shepherds Bush in the 1890s. He went into partnership with S A Hughes – and – as Brown & Hughes – they bodied many of the earliest motor buses (including the initial Milnes Daimlers at Eastbourne) – in fact they later claimed to build the first double deck motor bus ever made. In 1907 B & H were joined by J M Strachan, and the firm was renamed Brown, Hughes & Strachan – a company registered in December 1908. J M Strachan was also proprietor of Aberdonia Cars – also with a factory in Shepherds Bush (he came from near Aberdeen), and BH & S bodied these. They moved to new premises at the (then new) industrial estate of Park Royal in 1912, and in early WW1 work included ambulances. However, Messrs Brown and Strachan were removed as directors in April 1915, and in June that year there was a disastrous fire. Meanwhile, Messrs Brown and Strachan set up a new firm – trading from July 1915 from premises in Kensington where BH & S had been previously — the firm being a partnership under the title Strachan and Brown (ie not a ‘registered company’). They built – amongst other things – aircraft during WW1, and from 1920 or so got back to ‘what they knew best’ – ie motor vehicle bodies. Several patents were granted for special springing, opening windows, opening roof etc. They often built bodies for chassis builders who had quoted for ‘complete vehicles’, (AEC and W&G for example) as well as supplying bodies ‘direct’. S&B moved to a new, purpose built factory (designed by J M Strachan) in 1923 at Wales Farm Road, Acton.
However, there was a ‘disagreement’ between Brown and Strachan, such that in November 1928 the Commercial Motor announced the partnership had been dissolved. (There were related court hearings). At this point, W E Brown became a director and principal of Duples (where 2 of his sons also held senior positions). It is at this point that Duple’s coachbody sales ‘accelerated’.
The firm at Acton then became just ‘Stachans’. However, J M Strachan died in June 1929 – and the firm never quite had the same flair having lost both of its founders. From October 1929, the company became Strachans (Acton) Ltd. A further name change came in August 1934, when the name Strachans Successors Ltd is adopted – and the firm continues under this title until well after WW2. A holding company – Giltspur – then acquired the business, and they subsequently moved production to Hamble, Hampshire, on part of the airfield there, ‘A’ and ‘G’ Hangars were leased to Strachans by April 1960 (possibly earlier). Later this became part of a specialist vehicle building group called Glover Webb (who made armoured land rover type vehicles), but the airfield was sold in 1984 for housing, by which time Strachans as such had ceased to exist.

Peter Delaney


14/02/12 – 07:39

Further to Peter Delaneys helpful info, a web search reveals that a meeting took place on March 30th 1976 at which it was agreed to wind up Strachans Coachbuilders Limited and Strachans Engineering Limited. This ties up with the reported move of Glover Webb to Hamble around that time. Any suggestions for the last Strachans bus body to be built?

Nigel Turner


14/02/12 – 07:42

Thx Peter, for this concise history of a company with a complicated past! I’ve read titbits over the years and they’ve conflicted, unsurprisingly.
Despite finishing up in Hamble, Strachans were not really supported by its neighbouring bus operators. Only Provincial gave them an order for nine single-deck Seddon/Strachans in 1968, which might well have been a unique combination.

Chris Hebbron


14/02/12 – 07:43

Thanks for that, Peter. Looks like another case of a great might have been (such as I have mentioned before – Metalcraft, Sentinel and Foden). In that period of "get what you can, when you can" in the immediate post war period, Sheffield’s only PS2 Tigers (most were PS1) had Strachans bodies. A long way to go for emergency provisions!

David Oldfield


14/02/12 – 11:23

I think Chris you have overlooked the 6 AEC Swifts Numbers 1-6 taken by Southampton Corporation in 1967/68.

Pat Jennings


14/02/12 – 16:34

Ah, Yes, Pat, I stand corrected on them!

Chris Hebbron


06/04/12 – 15:39

I was one of the last conductors at W Gash I was the only one in April 1986 until October 1986 when the rms came, conductors stayed until the last day of Gash existence

Anthony Townsend


16/11/12 – 07:38

Regarding Strachans bodies, I understand that some of those built in the 60s included faults that limited their life. Those purchased by Wolverhampton on Guy Arab V chassis in 1967, were scrapped after only 7 years and most of the chassis were sold to Hong Kong.

Tony Martin

20/05/13 – 16:46

With reference to Lincolnshire Road Car running from Huntingdon Street to the Lincs East Coast. This was Express service A and started from the Skills booking office on Alfreton Road (Peveril Terrace) and proceeded to Huntingdon Street. It then ran via Newark and Lincoln (same route as Trent) but branched off in Wragby to Mablethorpe via Louth. From Mablethorpe it travelled down the A52, through Sutton on Sea, and diverting off the main road calling at Anderby Creek and Chapel St. Leonards before continuing to Ingoldmells. The service terminated at Butlins. I have fond memories of making this journey with my parents regularly to Chapel St. Leonards, as we had a caravan there from 1949 onwards. Bristol L types were the mode of transport of my childhood, painted in the "coach" style of predominantly cream with Tilling green lining – a reverse of the stage carriage livery on these vehicles.

Brian Binns


01/05/18 – 06:05

A bit more miscellaneous info for Peter Delaney. I am not sure of the date but following a fairly lengthy strike, we were all brought into the office at 1000 on a Friday morning and told that the company was closing and we had to be out by 1200. Probably late 72 or early 73. A very sad time as some of the old hands had even built their toolboxes into the walls. They brought a few people back on a six week contract to clean up and sort out the drawings etc. ready for the take over. There were only a few of the Ford Transit chassis/cowls remaining as Fords had removed most of their stock before the strike started. I quickly lost contact with the drawing office staff although I did hear that Neil Moore who was the Chief Draftsman with Strachans did stay on with the new owners. In the latter days we were looking at building dedicated school buses similar to the North American style as they also used the truss panel construction methods. We also spent time working on the drawings for how to ship buses out in CKD and SKD for overseas assembly but the end came first.

Dick Henshall


15/02/21 – 06:18

X2 (Trent and North Western joint service to Manchester) ran direct to Ripley, via Eastwood, I think, not Ilkeston. The Barton service to Blackpool ran via Ilkeston.

John Bremner


15/02/21 – 15:16

Just been checking my 1953 Trent timetable, and the X2 definitely ran via Ilkeston, not Eastwood. (Actually it is mentioned in Neville Mercer’s excellent 3-part article on Huntingdon Street bus station on this site). It took only 21 minutes to Ilkeston, compared with the Midland General all stops B2 schedule of 27 minutes for the shorter run from Mount Street.The X2 was, of course, limited stop and only had 21 stops between Nottingham to Buxton. From Nottingham to Heanor they were Radford Boulevard, Wollaton (Doctor’s Corner), Trowell Church, Ilkeston Market Place, Ilkeston Rutland Arms, Shipley ‘Brick and Tile’.

Stephen Ford


16/02/21 – 05:56

It would make sense to run the limited stop service via Ilkeston rather than Eastwood. Although approx. half a mile longer, there were substantial sections of open countryside between Wollaton and Trowell and between Ilkeston and Heanor, whereas the route via Eastwood was even then essentially continuously built up, with probably very little derestricted road. A check on Google shows that even today, following the old routes, it’s about 5 minutes quicker via Ilkeston than via Eastwood. (You wouldn’t normally do it that way today, as the Kimberley/Eastwood bypass has eliminated much of the congested section of route.)

Alan Murray-Rust


17/02/21 – 07:09

The Barton (formerly Robin Hood) Nottingham-Blackpool service (X61) travelled via Kimberley, Eastwood, Heanor etc rather than Ilkeston.
Robin Hood timetable Winter 1959-1960:
//www.ipernity.com/doc/davidslater-spoddendale/37286302
Barton X61 timetable Summer 1968:
//www.ipernity.com/doc/davidslater-spoddendale/37286308

David Slater


18/02/21 – 07:14

I notice that the last picking up point going north and first setting down point going south was Stockport but there’s no mention of any restrictions from the Nottingham end. Does anyone know if local passengers were carried on the section Ripley, Matlock, Bakewell and Buxton?

Chris Barker


18/02/21 – 14:44

The Summer 1970 Express Coach Guide (first ABC successor) shows fares between Ripley and all stops to its west. There are no local fares shown between Matlock and Buxton. It’s an indicator of circumstances but not 100% reliable and a check of the actual licence records would provide the best confirmation.
Regarding the Bolton stop annotations these restrictions did not apply to the daily journeys – just the Friday and Sunday evening extras.
Given North Western and Trent’s presence on the corridor, all operating rights would be hard fought for.

Mike Grant


18/02/21 – 14:45

I cannot be sure. In the aforementioned 1953 timetable the X2 was described as limited stop – not express. In those days limited stop seemed to mean that it would only call at specified stops. I do believe that Midland General would have been "protected" on the Nottingham – Ripley section, though the X2’s four journeys per day wouldn’t abstract a lot of traffic. MGO ran their own limited stop service taking 41 minutes Nottm – Ripley (route A4 – did they pinch that monika from the railway?!) The X2 took 43 minutes – but for the longer run from Huntingdon Street. My impression was that "beyond Ripley) was regarded as the first setting down point. The notes in the timetable do say that after Buxton the X2 would stop "at any official stopping place" through to Manchester. (We’re getting a long way from Gash’s CVD6 aren’t we!)

Stephen Ford


KAL 580_lr Vehicle reminder shot for this posting


29/09/21 – 04:37

With regard to the X2 service, Trent timetables state that the first setting down point on journeys from Nottingham and the last picking up point on journeys to Nottingham is at Bull Bridge. This is about 3 miles beyond Ripley and so would give protection to MGO/NDT services A1/B1/B2/C6/E7 etc between these points.

Philip Backhurst


 

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Hull Corporation – Daimler CV6G – KVK 970 – 128

Hull Corporation - Daimler CV6G - KVK 970 - 128

Kingston upon Hull Corporation Transport
1948
Daimler CV6G
Metro Cammell Weymann H55R

My thanks to Paul Morfitt an expert on K.H.C.T. for information regarding this bus.

“this bus entered service on the 10th June 1961 and was withdrawn in December 1966. It came from Newcastle to cover parts of the trolleybus conversions”

Does anyone have any information of this bus whilst it was at Newcastle?


These ex Newcastle Daimlers were notable for their Birmingham style bodies. Compare this photo with any HOV ### registered Birmingham City Transport Daimler. I think Edinburgh also had some like this.

Simon Avery

To see a Birmingham Daimler registration HOV 845 click here


I think that "timeless elegance" describes this classic style of body – with just a quiet air of superiority. I loved to see them in Hull, where they fitted in perfectly with the Corporation Transport Department’s image. What a magical combination arose from the KHCT and EYMS fleets in those days, and many thanks to the RAF for sending me to Patrington (Spurn Point) for my two years National Service – I couldn’t have asked for anything better.

Chris Youhill


All the second hand Regents, and Daimlers too, were bought for two reasons, firstly, as Paul said, was to facilitate trolleybus replacement, although memory seems to tell me that the Coronation trolleybuses on the 63 (Beverley Road) service were replaced directly by the early Atlanteans.  Secondly, as already noted Hull lost 2/3rds of the fleet due to air raids on 7/8th May, 1941; consequently there were large batches of Regents acquired in the post war period, as replacements. Thus in the 1960’s a large number of Regents were nearing the end of their lives, and KHCT was in the process of introducing OMO to its fleet, having a planned purchasing plan for a large number of Atlanteans which was spread over a period of some 10 years. The various batches of second hand buses were basically stop-gaps until the end of the OMO conversion. Incidentally KHCT was the first Municipal operator to achieve 100% OMO operation on both saloons and ‘deckers. This was achieved in 1972.

Keith Easton


Further to my previous comment, the losses due to Luftwaffe exploits over Hull only 1/3rd of the fleet was lost (actually 35% – 44 vehicles).

Keith Easton


03/08/11 – 16:04

These old Newcastle Daimler were great buses – had preselector gearboxes as well – they were painted dark blue and often had a blue light on next to the destination board!
Travelled a lot in them in the early 1940ties!
My favourites were FVK 198 through to FVK 201!

Stui Beveridge


04/08/11 – 07:18

What was the purpose of the blue light, Stui?

Chris Hebbron


02/10/11 – 14:05

When the Daimlers first appeared local enthusiasts thought them old fashioned mainly due to the curious windscreen arrangement (130 with a Roe body was an honourable exception) – they did not compare with the contemporary Hull Regent IIIs or the EYMS PD1s.
Authority to buy was obtained in May 1961 with a bid limit of £205 per vehicle. There is no mention in the report specifically regarding trolleybus replacement although. My own view is that they were to cover the bodywork problems on the Regent IIIs which were such that the department couldn’t cope and many went to Roe for attention. No buses were withdrawn as a result of their arrival.
Mr Pulfrey had said in May 1960 that he expected the Chanterlands Avenue route to be replaced in 1960 using spare standard 58 seat buses. The 1961 timetable did not mention services 61/65 but included replacements 13/23 but not until July 1962 did that conversion take place.

Malcolm Wells


15/03/12 – 09:30

Hi Chris, sorry for the delay as we are out and about in retirement living mainly in Düsseldorf but in winter on Gran Canaria!
Strangely – the purpose of the blue light next to the front destination board was to show at night they were so called " Blue buses " and not the new fangled bright yellow trolley buses.
Just loved travelling on these buses – favourite routes were 1 and 2 – Denton Burn / Cochrane Park / Scrogg Road etc and yes – they were quite advanced as they had pre-selector gearboxes which made life easier for the drivers.
It was wartime and the buses were very often completely packed in the rush hours or when it was pouring with rain – even upstairs – as the unions at that time had no influence on passengers carried!
Upstairs was then a disaster as the passengers were all soaking wet and damp and it was full of smokers and their gaspers! Players Please or Senior Service were favourites and poor dock workers building warships like George V or so sufficed with a cheap 5 fag paper pack of Woodbines!
Has anyone relatives or friends with any decent old Newcastle street scenes showing all these marvellous blue and yellow buses and the dark maroon trams?
Lets have your comments here please?

Stui Beveridge


16/03/12 – 08:38

Thx for the ‘blue light’ v yellow trolleybus explanation, Stui. I assume that there was an extraordinarily large part of the local populace who were colour-blind and/or deaf, not being able to detect the different noise level between the two! Seriously, it’s not commonly known that London trams had three small lights above the destination screen, so that combinations could indicate which route they were on, for the illiterate. Other systems had this, too, with some having different coloured liveries for different routes. Not a lot of use for those like me who were colour-blind!

Chris Hebbron


16/03/12 – 09:55

As many custom car enthusiasts have found to their cost, apart from emergency and specifically exempt vehicles, under current legislation it is illegal to show a blue light that is visible on any part of the to the exterior of the vehicle ‘including the underside’

Ronnie Hoye


16/03/12 – 12:40

Wigan Corporation always had two green lights either side of the destination so that locals caught "their" bus as opposed either Ribble or LUT both of whom used red as a colour as did Wigan. This arrangement lasted until the last buses delivered to Wigan in 1972.

Chris Hough


17/03/12 – 06:18

Regarding the Hull Coronations what a crying shame that none were preserved.

Philip Carlton


23/04/13 – 07:54

I am sure there was an Atlantean at Maspalomas Gran Canaria. Is it still there?

box501


13/10/14 – 17:23

Special or even no lights? Please remember at that time these buses were originally in service between 1939 – 1945 we were in the middle of a deadly serious world war on several fronts simultaneously and had more or less total black out on the streets!
Danger of invasion was later not quite so imminent but it was still there! Life was not a pony farm and quite so funny as it is to-day under the EU and Co!
In occupied Europe life was horrific with daily trains leaving most main cities with cattle trucks packed with innocent men, women and children for the concentration camps mainly in the east!

Stuart Beveridge


14/10/14 – 06:29

I wonder if Hull Corporation would have purchased these vehicles if they had had Daimler engines?

Chris Barker


15/10/14 – 07:19

Hang on, Stuart, why the seeming rebuke? This is a site for those interested in buses, not a history one. That said, I’m sure that many of us who post are ‘of a certain age’ and fully aware of the war, maybe even lived through it, as I did. I lost an uncle in both wars and years of working a 6.5 day week, in munitions work, killed my father prematurely. Knowledge of the Holocaust would not be unfamiliar to us, either.

Chris Hebbron


 

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Yorkshire Woollen District – Leyland Titan – HD 8553 – 699

Yorkshire Woollen District - Leyland Titan PD2 - HD 8553 - 699

Yorkshire Woollen District Transport
1963
Leyland Titan PD2
Roe H63R

Now this gets interesting according to my book this is a 1950 Leyland Titan PD2/3 with a Roe H56R body. Well it is defiantly not a rear entrance that’s plain to see and the registration of just two letters I think came well before 1950. I think its time to get Googleing
Here is a result found on the SCT ’61 website the link takes you to a better photo of the same bus, the info found does make sense to me it is as follows.
“Yorkshire Woollen rebuilt a number of Leyland Tiger PS single deckers as double deck vehicles in the 1950s and 1960s. One such is HD8553, a PS2/5 given a Roe front entrance body in 1962 and numbered 699 – later renumbered 502 by YWD.
This bus and its brethren survived long enough to receive NBC livery.”


I think your history is wrong.
A large number of PS1s were rebodied. I saw one of the first which was painted "Poppy Red" in Frost Hill depot parked in the middle of the depot It looked terrible then. The new bodies were MCW Orion.
They weighed less after re-bodying than when original.
They were very noisy and cold as the new bodies were single skinned.
The photograph is one of a small batch of PS2s which were rebuilt much later. the chassis were rebuilt by YWD with new chassis sides, they originally had a bolt on chassis extension as the rules changed when they were originally built. I think there were only 8 rebuilt. A like number were sold to Yorkshire Traction for rebuilding the only difference was that the Yorkshire Traction rebuilds were reregistered. I never found out why.

E. Malone


I will investigate this further find my own information and get back, check with the ’Latest Comments’ page for any update.
Here are the details of a batch of six Leyland Tiger PS2/5 chassis that were re-bodied by Roe to H35/28F in 1963 Reg no HD 8551-4 and HD 8562-3 they went into service with fleet nos 697-700 and 708-9 respectively.
The above photograph is one of this batch and this information backs up the original article.
An extra piece of information I found is that the original Tigers were probable bodied by Willowbrook with a B38F body and were first built in 1950.
The PS1 chassis you mention were a batch of 24 originally built in 1948 the registrations are a bit haphazard but are late HD 7800s and very early 7900s the fleet nos are a bit the same but they all fall between 562-631. These were re-bodied by Metro-Cammell with H56R ‘Orion’ bodies in 1954-5.

Peter


Richard Malone is wrong about the colour. Poppy red only came in with NBC.  The closest to the original colour was Post Office red. I know this from a YWD Fleetline I owned at one time.
There were 75 Brush bodied Leyland Tigers PS1s, fleet numbers 558-632 registration HD7841-7915. In 1954 12 of these were rebodied as double deckers with fleet numbers (562/75/7/97/8/9/603/11/3/4/6/20) with a weight of 6.8.1 tons. A further 12 were rebodied in 1955 as fleet numbers (570/4/83/7/8/96/618/24/7/8/30/1) with a weight of 6.7.0 tons. It is interesting to note that they weighed 6.9.1 tons as Tiger single deckers.
I own the only survivor of the original batch of Brush bodied Tiger PS1s fleet no 622 registration HD 7905 which can be seen here.
The Willowbrook/PS2s, 697-725, HD8551-79 (and OPD2s, 728-733, HD8710-5) were built in 1949. They were originally 27’6" long with B32F bodies these were then lengthened to 30′ B38F by Willowbrook between June 1954 and June 1955. Six were rebodied by Roe as H63F (697-700/8/9) for YWD a further nine went to YTC (701/4/6/7/10/1/2/4/6) in 1962, rebodied by Northern Counties as front entrance double deckers. (One of these still exists.)

Gordon Brooke


The subject of re registrations of bus rebuilds is an interesting one. I was always curios about the batch of Leyland PS2s that were rebodied as double deckers by both Yorkshire Traction and Yorkshire Woollen. The Y W D ones kept their old 2 letter HD marks yet the YTC ones were allocated new YHE marks of the time. Another example of these double standards concerns County Motors of Lepton owned by YTC, YWD and West Riding. In 1955 they had two elderly single deckers rebodied as double deckers. They wanted to give them new registrations but Huddersfield CBC would not allow this so they were transferred to Barnsley where they were given new marks of the time.

Philip Carlton


Difficult to tell from the photo if the width of this vehicle, was a PS2/5 7ft 6in or 8ft wide? The original batch of re-bodies, from PS1 chassis were certainly 7ft 6in Orions. When Birch Bros had some PD1’s re-bodied with Orions by MCW a year or so later, they were virtually identical even down to the destination display. Maybe the same drawings were used!

Chris Barker


01/01/14 – 09:14

I drove these buses in 1965 at this time I lived in Heckmondwyke and worked at Becklane Depot I remember the P duties they worked Mirfield Bradford 65 service they seemed to be sluggish pullers..

Jack


03/01/14 – 10:00

I would like to comment on the "Hales Cake" vehicle shown in Colin Shears yard. It is a Leyland TS7 and was East Midland Motor Services No10 BAL 610. In the 1950s I worked at EMMS Chesterfield workshops at this time after I left school and remember this vehicle well it was one of eighteen rebodied by Willowbrook in 1948 it looked far better in EMMS livery of biscuit cream and brown picture shown in Mikes afterlifes.

Jack


26/10/16 – 06:41

I remember the forward entrance versions of these rebodies on B and C services from Ossett to Fir Cottage in YWD red and cream and then NBC poppy red not bad for a bus built as a single decker in the late 1940s and still in service in the 1970s we cannot say that today, by the way I liked them as much as AEC Regent Vs.

David Parkin


27/10/16 – 08:17

To answer Chris Barker’s question from way back, the PS2/5 was 8 feet wide.

Peter Williamson


28/10/16 – 07:37

Peter W, thanks for your answer, I’m certain that these vehicles reverted to their original length of 27ft 6ins. upon rebuilding as double deckers, the seating capacity of 63 seems to support this. However, when they ran as single deckers, presumably they had drop frame extensions to enable the provision of luggage boots and then they were extended to 30ft length, still with drop frame rears, so was the chassis itself extended? When they became double deckers, a drop frame extension would have been of no use on a front entrance d/d but if it was simply removed, the rear overhang would have needed supporting somehow, I imagine new chassis frames were the only answer. Perhaps it might have been easier to rebody them as 30ft double deckers!

Chris Barker


31/03/17 – 15:37

The registration of just two letters I think came well before 1950.
Dewsbury didn’t reach HD 9999 until November 1953 – while it took until April 1960 for Bootle to reach EM 9999 and August 1960 for Rutland to reach FP 9999.
And nine Scottish counties didn’t reach 9999 with two letters before the year suffix system was introduced in 1964/5 – Buteshire famously only getting as far as SJ 2860.

Des Elmes


06/09/17 – 06:44

Chris Barker, I think you will find that NONE of the PS1 or 2’s owned by YWD had luggage boots. The emergency door was in the middle at the back on both those models.

Ron Lake


 

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