
Sheffield Corporation
1952
AEC Regal IV
Roe B44F
Sheffield 13 (originally 213) is passing a splendid array of shop fronts in Haymarket, Sheffield on a
midday 29 to Blackburn (in Rotherham – not Lancashire). This was a works service to Shardlows Works
midway between Sheffield and Rotherham. A low bridge required the use of single deckers. I cannot recall
seeing a bus on this service showing a destination so presumably was not on the standard blinds. An
oddity of this bus by this date (August 1967) was the plain cream front presumably after an accident
damage repair. As delivered it had a City of Oxford style swoop painted blue a feature which was
retained by sisters 12 and 14 to the end of their service life. I used to chat to a Greenland Depot
Fitter when he worked at Greyhound in Sheffield on a Saturday afternoon. I recall him saying how
unreliable these three buses were with repeated clutch and door failures. He told me one Bank Holiday
weekend all three were sent on Peak District extras and all three had to be towed back to garage.
Photograph and Copy contributed by Ian Wild
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Express Motors
1947
AEC Regal I 0662
Willowbrook rebody 1958 FDP39F
RC 9680 was new to Trent in 1947 with a Willowbrook B35F body being lengthened and fitted with a new
Willowbrook body in 1958. It was withdrawn by Trent in 1963 and is shown here four years later laying
over in the shadow of Caernarvon Castle on a wet day in September 1967.
Photograph and Copy contributed by Ian Wild
21/07/20 - 06:41
A small correction to Ian’s caption; these vehicles were not given new
Willowbrook bodies, the original bodies were lengthened at the rear to allow an extra double seat on
each side and slightly at the front to fully enclose the cab and conceal the radiator. The other
modification was a folding door, as seen, replacing the previous porch type entrance with a door at
the top of the steps.
There were twenty of these conversions, the first one was given all new
flush glazed windows mounted in rubber gasket, the remainder kept their original windows to reduce
the conversion cost. They were all given new seats which allowed them to be re-classified as dual
purpose but the new seats, although an improvement, were still rather spartan for 2-3 hour seaside
services.
Chris Barker
22/07/20 - 06:58
It was a very successful conversion, IMHO, helped by the completely horizontal
waistline instead of the dropping rear. I wouldn’t have guessed the bodywork wasn’t original. And
here it is, still around, 20 years after being built!
Chris Hebbron
25/07/20 - 07:15
I agree with Chris Barkers comment about the horizontal waste line, helping to
give the vehicle a more modern appearance. However when I see these vehicles I always feel that the
frontal appearance could have been improved if - either the aluminium trim followed the bottom
contour of the front windows, (and not a horizontal line) or the windows had a horizontal base
instead of the angled finish. I’m sure their were good reasons for not altering the line of the
windows (not least because they concealed the bulkhead and radiator and were part of the original
half cab design). Nice conversion in any event.
John Rentell
09/08/20 - 05:53
Looks like a Creams (of Llandudno) Bedford VAL alongside. Could be BCC 1C ( https://flic.kr/p/7Qrw3K ), or BCC 6C.
David Williamson
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Sheffield Corporation
1968
AEC Swift 2P2R
Park Royal B53F
Sheffield took delivery of two batches of AEC Swifts in 1968. The 2P2R type was fitted with the AH691
engine, ideal for the Sheffield hills. The first 11 buses were single doorway for the Joint Committee B
fleet as shown here. These buses were initially put to work on the Inner Circle services 8 and 9 despite
these being category A services. 1023 is seen here so employed when just a few weeks old at Hunters Bar.
The Inner Circle routes took one hour for a round trip serving the older and inner parts of the City.
The small window beneath the nearside windscreen had a roller blind behind which could be set to either
blank (as here) or Please Pay as you Enter as appropriate.
Photograph and Copy contributed by Ian Wild
29/06/20 - 06:21
Who knows? I could have been lurking within 1023. I was a pupil of King Edward
VII School on Newbold Lane from 1964-1971 and these were my regular mode of transport to and from
school from 1968. Fast and smooth but, in retrospect, not the equal of the RE. Ironic that, shortly
afterwards, an order for the superb RE was changed for the flawed VRT.
David Oldfield
15/07/20 - 06:45
I think you and I spent many a happy hour waitiog for these Swifts and before
that - whatever could be mustered from East Bank Road depot at that time in the morning, be it a
30ft long AEC Regent V with Weymann, Alexander or Roe bodywork, a PD3, Atlantean, Fleetline or even
somethingg older. What a splendid mix was the Sheffield fleet right up to the 1970s.
The
Swifts had a hard life climbing up and down the ferocious hills of the Steel City to Lodge Moor,
Gleadless, Upperthorpe, Walkley and, as here, on the Inner Circle. Of course they never looked as
good as this once taken over by the South Yorkshire PTE.
Philip Hanwell
17/07/20 - 07:33
Yes, it was a bit of a hotch potch just prior to the Swifts. Not sure about
the B fleet Regents Vs or Fleetlines, but we certainly had the rest - and older. [Not to mention the
fleet of almost retired Regent IIIs and PD2s used to ferry us to games at Trapp Lane and Castle
Dyke.]
David Oldfield
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