Lancaster City Transport - Daimler CWG5 - FTD 70 - 70
Lancaster City Transport
1943
Daimler CWG5
Crossley (1952) H30/26R
I’ve looked at the website several times, and made a few comments. I’ve decided to offer a few of my colour slides for inclusion in the forums. Sadly, the black and white prints I once had (taken on a 2s 6d camera bought from Woolworths in 1962) were not of suitable quality for publication and have long gone. My first offering is the Lancaster City Transport Daimler CW, FTD70, captured inside Kingsway Garage on a Saturday afternoon in August 1969. She had been given a 1952 Crossley body to replace her original "Utility" feature. As with many of the fleet at the time, she carried adverts for cough medicine, dishwashing and similar products from the makers of ZOFLORA.
Photograph and Copy contributed by Pete Davies
15/06/12 - 15:27
Compared to its near neighbour Morecambe Lancaster had a very mixed fleet of
Daimlers, Crossley, Guys, Titans, AEC saloons and later Leopards and Panthers. Having a fleet of
less than 100 buses the numbering system was also unusual the fleet number being the registration
number thus buses were numbered in the 800s !
I knew the fleet well in the seventies when they
had amalgamated with Morecambe whose main fleet bus was a collection of elderly AEC Regent IIIs. In
an effort to withdraw these the undertaking bought many second hand buses including a lowbridge
Atlantean from Trent a Wallace Arnold coach Burnley PD3s and some Maidstone PD2s which retained
their former livery. They were even brave enough to buy a Seddon Pennine demonstrator! A company
that is much missed, even today Stagecoach still use second hand buses on local routes, Plus
d’change!
Chris Hough
16/06/12 - 07:25
A very atmospheric garage shot Pete - you can almost hear the echoey sound of buses being started up in the distance. Hard to believe that the chassis would have been twenty-six years old at the time. Not bad for a "wartime stop-gap", and the Gardner 6LW would have been nicely run-in by then as well! The Crossley body looks to be in tidy fettle too if the shine of the paintwork is anything to go by. It looks quite handsome, and certainly less dated than the ‘traditional’ Crossley style, with its strange shallow windows over each rear wheelarch. Does anyone know if the latter feature was just a Crossley styling quirk, or was it of structural necessity? I’ve often wondered.
Brendan Smith
16/06/12 - 07:25
Is this a Crossley body, without the raised section over the rear wheel arches? Then there’s all those vents, at lower sides and upper front…and it really does look like a half-width front saloon window? Why? Are we sure that this is a G6 and not at that vintage an A6? Or even just possibly a D6? Questions, questions….
Joe
My mistake here, it is actually a Gardner 5 not a 6 glad you raised the question Joe, I have corrected the header, sorry about that.
Peter
16/06/12 - 10:17
I assume, Chris, that when you say ‘ex-Maidstone PD2s’, you mean ex-Maidstone & District and not ex-Maidstone Corporation. You say they retained their original livery, and the corporation’s brown and cream would have stood out rather. Interestingly, (to me, any way), John Stringer points out that Calderdale JOC also retained M&D’s livery on some second hand AEC Regent Vs. Old and faded though the paintwork might have been by the time M&D sold their old vehicles, the fact that other operators felt able to retain it, even temporarily, says something for its durability and the quality of M&D’s maintenance. Incidentally, were the PD2s in question of 1954 vintage, (RKP registration marks), fitted with Orion bodies?
Roy Burke
16/06/12 - 11:3
Roy, in answer to your query about the Maidstone element, they were most
definitely Maidstone Corporation, which were in a pale blue by then. I have several photographed on
duty in Morecambe. Following Lancaster’s practice of the time, 998 AKT became Lancaster’s 998!
Joe, yes the official records show it as a Crossley body it was rebodied in 1950 (OBP
Lancaster Fleet List) or 1952 (BBF Lancs Municipals) the original body was a Massey H56R. The
strange half depth windows towards the rear of many such vehicles were, I believe, a Manchester
feature.
Pete Davies
16/06/12 - 11:35
They were Maidstone Corporation PD2s but by then the brown and cream livery
had been replaced by a light blue one.
The small bulkhead window on the CWG is a standard
Lancaster feature and was due to there being a rather large notice panel on the inside. This can be
seen on a prewar Daimler at //davidbeilby.zenfolio.com
This Crossley body
is of the later style without the shallower windows at the rear. These originated with the
Manchester practice of cutting the chassis frame short immediately after the rear axle and
cantilevering the platform from the body structure, the idea being to prevent chassis distortion
(expensive to repair) in rear end accidents. This was not adopted by other operators (and I think
even dropped by Manchester) so the body style eventually reverted to this more conventional
outline.
David Beilby
17/06/12 - 07:44
Probably the nearest relatives of this later Crossley style were the 13
trolleybuses of Bradford Corporation, which were rebodied by Crossley, and entered service in early
1952. The chassis were of 1938/9 AEC 661T, and Karrier E4 origin, and very handsome vehicles they
were too!
Lancaster was a fleet of great interest. It had many Crossleys of more obvious, and
earlier parentage, and wartime Guys rebodied with Guy/Park Royal bodies…plenty of enthusiasm
generating influences, and a super fleet I well remember, mostly on visits to "Bradford by the
Sea" (Morecambe!).
John Whitaker
17/06/12 - 07:45
Thanks, Pete and David, for putting me right on Maidstone Corporation. I’d forgotten about the livery change, which was a bit after my time. I was also wrong footed by the reference to Morecambe, thinking of green. The vehicles in question would have been 1957 tin fronts with Massey H61R bodies. We, (we being M&D staff), always thought Massey bodies an unlikely choice by Maidstone Corporation, but no doubt they had their reasons.
Roy Burke
17/06/12 - 07:46
David B, Thank for your comment about the large interior notice board. I’d
quite forgotten them as the reason for the smaller windows. Perhaps, after over 40 years in
Hampshire, I can be forgiven! There was a venture, shortly before I moved south, to have adverts in
those spaces: some were illuminated, but I certainly don’t recall the earlier notices.
Some
operators had a similar board at the back of the lower saloon, on the staircase panel, and it housed
the timetable and fare charts. I had very little in the way of dealings with Morecambe & Heysham
buses, but they had that arrangement. I wonder if Lancaster’s ever had that function.
Incidentally, I had a classmate with the same surname, in my primary school days. Did you go
to Ryelands???
Pete Davies
17/06/12 - 08:06
There is a shot of a Maidstone Titan working in Morecambe at www.sct61.org.uk there are also
shots of other second hand vehicles bought by Lancaster at the same site.
Some buses bought as
driver trainers also ended up on service including a former Merthyr PD3 and a Southdown "Queen
Mary" The former Lancaster depot still exists as up market flats called the old bus depot the
parking area being the old depot with the flats added on top.
After amalgamation the new
undertaking bought the only Y type bus bodies (with small windows) south of the border. However the
planned panoramic Alexander bodied Leyland Atlanteans never materialised.
Mr Anon
17/06/12 - 08:07
David, thank you for the interesting information about the cantilevered platforms on the Manchester Crossley bodies. Fascinating, although one can’t help wondering why Manchester had such a fixation on severe rear-end damage being inflicted on its buses. The modified structure must surely have been more expensive to have had installed ‘just in case’. Or are Mancunian drivers more prone to running into the back of double-deckers than in other places? We should be told…..!
Brendan Smith
17/06/12 - 11:28
Brendan, the driving habits of car drivers in the Manchester area should indeed be publicised more. I have seen CCTV footage of a car which had been impaled after the driver tried to ignore a set of rising bollards installed to regulate a bus lane . . .
Pete Davies
17/06/12 - 16:20
The Crossley style body on the Lancaster Daimler CWG5 is similar to those that Bradford had on a few AEC 661T and Karrier E4 trolleybuses and received in 1952. These 13 re-bodies were well finished and introduced a new image of trolleybus in Bradford. Sadly Bradford did not re-body any of their utility motor buses and had 6 Daimler CWG5s (468 -473) similar to Lancaster which they were disposed of in 1953. A photo of Bradford AEC 640 and Karrier 682 at Thornbury re-entering service again in March 1952 shows the lovely Crossley body style.
Richard Fieldhouse
18/06/12 - 07:53
I note that John Whitaker comments on his encounters with Lancaster’s buses
during his visits to "Bradford By The Sea". That isn’t quite what some of my classmates in
the Sixth Form at Morecambe Grammar School used to call the place. Their usual reference was to
"British West Bradford".
Apart from the University services, which Lancaster City
Transport and Morecambe & Heysham Corporation Transport operated in conjunction with Ribble, the
fleets never met until after Local Government Reorganisation in 1974, and not immediately even so.
Pete Davies
18/06/12 - 07:53
David B – I’m a little confused by your comment that no operators, other than Manchester, took Crossley-bodied vehicles with shallow rear windows. Both Portsmouth and Luton Corporations had them, to my certain knowledge. Is it that other operators took them with the shallow windows, but not with the cantilevered platforms? Could you clarify, please?
The Crossley-bodied trolleybus is very handsome, Richard F, and it’s interesting to note the flared side skirting, a la post-war Weymann.
Chris Hebbron
18/06/12 - 07:55
Ashton also rebodied many of their wartime Guys with the same style of
Crossley body. The link was even closer, though, as Lancaster had one Guy Arab which was rebodied by
Crossley registered FTE 182 and Ashton had a batch of four registered FTE 183-6.
Whilst the
method of allocation of buses in wartime made the appearance of consecutive registrations in
different fleets more likely, that they should then receive virtually identical bodies when rebodied
is quite remarkable.
David Beilby
18/06/12 - 07:56
I don’t think the cantilevered rear platform was all that unusual. "The
Manchester Bus" (Eyre and Heaps) records that Manchester got the idea from an inspection of a
borrowed early production London RT. This presumably means it was a feature of all RTs, but less
obvious because London didn’t see the need to strengthen the structure in a way that showed itself
visually.
Something else that isn’t widely known is that the entire body, not just the
cantilever platform, was designed by Manchester Corporation and not Crossley. It’s rather remarkable
in my opinion that Crossley could end up with such a handsome product by simply taking Manchester’s
design and stripping it of its most Mancunian features. Similar bodies, but with a
Liverpool-inspired flat front, were fitted to 50 AEC Regent IIIs for Glasgow Corporation.
Peter Williamson
18/06/12 - 11:06
Thank You, Richard, for the Bradford Crossley trolleybus submissions, which
illustrate my point about what handsome vehicles they were.
Chacely T. Humpidge, that champion
of the trolleybus, had just been appointed, and he used these rebodies as a statement of intent for
his new, neat, clean cut image, and distinctive identity with regard to destination display, which
followed on into the later "East Lancs" period.
I found the Lancaster and Morecambe
thread to be of particular interest, but, as I seem to be a relic from an earlier age, my
recollections are of the Morecambe pre-war fleet, and the subsequent period to about 1950, when
Morecambe, or "British West Bradford" was a thriving resort.
I do, however, seem to
remember at least one of the Maidstone Masseys running in the ginger livery at a much later visit to
the town, but memories are prone to trickery.
A pity though, about Morecambe. A visit last
year showed that it is far from the place it used to be, but then, that applies to many other places
too.
Better to remember the heyday; green AEC Regents on the promenade with customers galore
amongst the holidaymakers!
John Whitaker
19/06/12 - 08:15
. . . and of course it’s the same body as this beauty, which is still with us. //www.flickr.com/
Peter Williamson
19/06/12 - 14:01
Many operators bought all Crossley deckers in the early postwar period most of which had Manchester style bodywork. This was available with either straight or drooping corners to the upper deck bodywork. Crossley also built bodies on other chassis most notably a batch of Guy Arab IIIs for Blackburn. The last all Crossley deckers were bought by Rotherham and were very attractive beasts. One of these survives in the Science Museum large exhibits collection.
Chris Hough
28/07/12 - 19:18
This CWG5 is a rare bird, for only 100 were ever built, after which they became CWA6’s, with AEC’s 7.7 litre engines, apart from a few at the end of the war which became CWD6’s with Daimler’s own engine.
Chris Hebbron
29/07/12 - 16:22
Re. the CWG5. This was more of a COG5, with ferrous metals replacing the
lightweight alloys, and probably using some pre-war stock of parts, whereas the CWA6 was more of a
re-design, with a new radiator.
Of the 100 CWG5s, 40 were built with Brush lowbridge bodies,
and 30 each in highbridge form, by Duple and Massey.
John Whitaker
02/08/12 - 11:28
The CWG5 was the wartime version of the COG5. It had the same wheelbase measurements as the COG but used cast iron parts in place of aluminium alloy parts and also had a Kirkstall Forge rear axle. The Gardner 5LW engine was flexibly mounted so with a fluid flywheel and Wilson pre-selector gearbox, this bus was perhaps the most refined of the utility buses available when it appeared in December 1942. No doubt Lancaster Corporation recognised this fact with their re-body programme. Sadly other operators such as Bradford Corporation disposed of their six CWG5s (468 - 473) in 1953 to scrap dealers Rhodes of Nottingham. Perhaps the steep hills in Bradford were a deciding factor to get rid of them. It would be interesting to know how many of the 100 CWG5s built were re-bodied for further service.
Richard Fieldhouse
02/08/12 - 17:09
Chris H , you’ve renewed happy memories for me there. Samuel Ledgard’s final
allocation of "Utility" buses consisted of eight Daimler CWA6/Duple - or did it ?? Well no
- two of them were CWD6s, both of which were allocated to Otley Depot throughout their existence. My
word what a fine pair of machines they were, and not only because the Duple bodies were very sound
indeed and rarely needed any serious attention, and no rebuilding to speak of.
Even now I
daren’t put in print the power and the speed that JUB 647/8 could display - suffice it to say that
the legal lettering "speed 30mph" was a joke !! Also the melodious hum of the Daimler
engines was a real joy, and in Winter the offside exhaust manifold provided fabulous heat - in
Summer too, but no problem as cab windows could be opened.
Chris Youhill
03/08/12 - 07:50
You were lucky to get a couple, Chris Y, for only a dozen of the Duple batch
you mention were CWD6’s. Aside from the reversed exhaust system which warmed the cab
unintentionally, the engines also had the timing chain at the rear of the engine, a nuisance to get
at for retensioning/replacement. I don’t know whether LT replaced the engines with reconditioned
ex-STL AEC 7.7’s for these reasons, or to achieve complete standardisation. You could always tell
the CWD’s for they had vertical rods down the rad instead of the grill. I always remember one CWD
having ‘D???, the fastest D of all’ written in chalk above the windscreen. The ‘D’s were
excellent vehicles and many went to Ceylon in their after-life. How the somewhat suspect bodies
stood up to the humidity, I’ve no idea, but they lasted some years, even into the slow demise of the
bus system there. LT’s Guys, conversely, gravitated towards Jugoslavia.
As an aside, a friend
of mine had a Renault 16, whose engine was designed originally for a rear-engined car , but fitted
at the front of this model. The timing chain, thus became inconveniently situated at the back of the
engine. When his timing chain failed, his solution was to cut a hole in the car’s bulkhead, sort out
the problem, then pop-rivet a plate over the hole! It saved pulling out the engine with all that
that entailed!
Chris Hebbron
03/08/12 - 17:13
How many CWD6’s were built? Were the dozen that Chris H mentions, the
remaining production additional to LT’s Daimlers and for provincial operators, or was it just a
dozen with Duple bodies?
Ledgard had two, Trent had two, but theirs had Brush bodies, is it
known who had the remainder?
Chris Barker
03/08/12 - 17:14
Chris H…at the risk of thread drift wrath, your memories of working on the (excellent) Renault 16 are a sharp recollection for me. If you had never removed the rocker box cover before, my challenge was 30 minutes to to simply take it off and put it back on again! With experience and knowing that you start by undoing the gearbox linkage down at the off side front corner of the engine compartment, I got it down to a three minute job! Simply getting it back onto the cylinder head required the finger dexterity of a surgeon and the problem solving skills of a MENSA crossword compiler…but once learnt..Ahh the satisfaction!
Richard Leaman
04/08/12 - 07:41
I’m not aware of any other of LT’s D’s being CWD’s; later, relaxed, ones had Park Royal bodies and were all CWA6’s. A quick trawl of the web suggests that other CWD6’s were distributed in penny numbers (all but one I found, had Duple bodies) Dundee (4), Northampton, S. Yorkshire, Aberdeen and Cleethorpes (1 Duple and 1 Brush). A couple (Aberdeen is one) are preserved, which surprised me. SEE: https://secure.flickr.com/
Chris Hebbron
04/08/12 - 11:38
I am assisting with "thread drift" again, Chris, as I was interested
in your comments about disposal of London buses.
Yugoslavia saw the arrival of some 16 Guys,
plus the 65 post war STDs and G436, but many Guys went to Kenya, and the former Southern Rhodesia,
and, of course, all over the UK, with significant numbers to the Scottish Bus Group.
I think
you have hit the nail on the head with CWD6 deliveries, Chris, as the only additions I can suggest,
and I am not sure, were a batch of Newcastle buses with post war style Massey bodies, but were there
any more with utility bodies, before the Daimler engine went into the CVD6? I would love to know!
A very "thirsty" engine, according to Bradford staff, but one of the silkiest and
smoothest bus rides I can remember, from experience of Bradfords 2 batches.
John Whitaker
04/08/12 - 17:24
I think these remarks about the Daimler engine are neatly timed with David Page’s recently posted recording of the Gash CVD6: smooth, helped by the preselector changes. Is this the best bus of all? (ducks). I wonder, though, if the aristocratic fuel consumption has anything to do with the quantity deposited all over the exterior of the engine & the ground beneath: I think it was fuel, not lubricating oil: after all, part of the thrill of a CVD6 was the smell!
Joe
04/08/12 - 17:25
I’ve been checking Alan Townsin`s book, and the Newcastle JVK Daimlers were
CWA6, but the paragraph seems to suggest that identical buses for Rochdale, still delivered under
the MOWT arrangement, were CWD6. Leeds had 2 batches of CWD6 though, JUB596-8 (Brush utility), and
JUM 571-6, (Roe).
I think I remember a ride on Sammie`s JUB 647, complete with platform doors,
on a Bradford to Menston journey. It was certainly a "flyer" if memory serves me right!
Most of my Ledgard "CW" memories are HGFs though, but it would be nice to think that on
the Menston occasion referred to, our captain and pilot was Chris Y! Trouble is, I cannot remember
when it was…too many senior moments these days!
I have this mental imagery of a cotton
coated conductor, bracing himself against the stair well at the upper deck rear, as the bus hurtled
down "The Branch". perhaps that was you, Chris!!
John Whitaker
04/08/12 - 17:26
I have found some more CWD6s, Chris:-
Exeter GFJ 82,83 (Brush), and
Birmingham FOP 420 etc.
Keep looking…between us we shall collar the lot!
John Whitaker
04/08/12 - 20:54
Of course, much of this CWD aspect revolves around when CWD to CVD production changed, for Daimler didn’t offer any engine, other than their CD engine, for some time afterwards, if memory serves me correctly. After a quick look, the earliest CVD’s I can trace were 60 for Venture of Consett between 1946 and 1948, the first still with painted steel rads!
Chris Hebbron
05/08/12 - 07:31
Hi John W - a most interesting trip you had on 647, but sadly I can’t claim to
be the driver or the conductor. As I said above, JUB 647/8 were at Otley Depot throughout their
existence and should not therefore have been seen on the Bradford - Harrogate service. So, you were
able to enjoy a real "one off " journey on that occasion as 647 must have been changed
over in Otley or nearby to replace a defective Bradford Depot vehicle. I would love to have been
with you as I’m sure the Daimler will have flown up the long and tortuous Hollins Hill like no
other, in spite of the extra 3 hundredweights imposed by the retro fitted platform doors !!
Incidentally the Bradford - Harrogate service (Ledgard’s longest) was referred to even officially to
the end as "The B & B" - having been taken over from Blyth and Berwick before WW2 - and
despite having being renamed after Samuel’s death in 1952 as "S.Ledgard (Bradford) Ltd."
The only involvement Otley Depot had with the route consisted of one morning and one evening
peak hour extra, Mondays to Fridays, between Otley and Menston Village - and these were shown in the
timetable as "Operated for the convenience of workpeople and liable to suspension if not
required."
Another happy memory - JUB 647 was the first preselector bus that I drove in
service on the fourth day of my career as a driver in 1961 - 06:40 am Otley to Leeds on Monday, and
the powerful rapid ascent of the three mile long A660 from Otley thrilled me, as had the gorgeous
refined hum I’d enjoyed previously when conducting this fine motor.
Chris Youhill
05/08/12 - 09:18
Hello Chris Y.!
My "647" memory could well be distorted; It
must have been late 1960, and I was going to Pool in Wharfedale to view my first car purchase there,
a 1936 Austin "Ruby". I am sure it was a Duple with doors, so were there any others? My
return journey was again with Sammy, this time a single deck Albion! If only we could replay our
memories!
To round off the Lancaster CWG5 theme, and having wandered off to London Guys world
wide disposals, it is perhaps apt to recall that 4 of these Gs were bought by Lancaster in
1953!
John Whitaker
06/08/12 - 11:42
Ah John - I think that perhaps solves the mystery. It is just possible that JUB 647 might have done the odd hour on the route in the event, as I mentioned above, of a changeover but is a one in a million chance. It was, however, quite common for Daimlers with "retro fitted in house" doors to operate on the long route. Most likely it would be one or other of the ex London Transport Sutton Depot "HGF"s with Park Royal "relaxed specification" bodies - in profile these loosely resembled the Duple outline. The only other possibility - a very strong one - could be JUA 918, one of four received in the dark days of the War, but with unmistakeable Roe body. Originally wooden seated, JUA 918 was superbly overhauled and was fitted with platform doors and, I believe, ex Midland Red very comfortable seats with "M"shaped tops to the backrests. In that form it spent much of its time on the "B & B" and was a magnificent vehicle - the 7.7 AEC engine was always in top form and performed impressively. However if, on your ride, you had the impression of "Duple" I imagine it would be one of the "Sutton HGFs" - better not get me going there, as I worshipped those and the Firm had twenty two of them, several fitted with doors in keeping with the post 1952 policy of the Executors of improving the image and putting WW2 firmly behind us.
Chris Youhill
Thanks Chris.
I , too, loved the HGFs I also remember JUA 918 as a
regular on Bradford-Harrogate. Probably as you say, an HGF, as I recall the "Roeness" of
JUA 918, and feel sure my memory would be more accurate if that were the case.
I loved Ledgard
in this period particularly, as our beloved WYRC Co. had become very standardised , and the
enthusiast in me craved for more interest and variation. You certainly got that with Sammy! Funny
that the other JUAs were not similarly overhauled, as the earlier Roe utility bodies were
exceptionally sound, or so I was led to believe. None of your Pickering qualities here!
Another favourite Ledgard Daimler which I always sought out, was GYL 291, the only Brush
member of the Daimler CW fleet.
What a wealth of memories, and how on earth are todays younger
enthusiasts going to have such rich flash backs, when they are my age, with the present scene as it
is!
John Whitaker
07/08/12 - 12:09
John, yes indeed the Roe utility bodies were sound and trouble free as were
the Duples. The four "JUA"s and the two Pickering Guys were Ledgard’s first taste of WW2
wooden seat double deck austerity. As you rightly say, the overhaul of 918 was the most spectacular
and 915/7 toiled away unspectacularly at Armley depot, while 916 was at Otley throughout its
existence. After a most unusual, unique even,long period out of use but stored inside the back of
the depot - such buses were normally kept outside, or inside at Ilkley "running shed" -
916 was again prepared for C of F to the usual impeccable standard displayed by the craftsmen of
every speciality. For the first time ever a platform repeater bell was installed, encased in a metal
box to prevent tampering - and tampering there would definitely have been, for this infernal but
well meant device emitted sufficient decibels (no pun intended) to call out every fire brigade
within five miles, well, four miles perhaps !! Upon emerging from the process, with commendably long
C of F for such an elderly utility bus, 916 gave many more years superb front line service and could
maintain the busiest schedules without difficulty.
I too fondly remember the two second hand
"one off" CWA6s at Armley depot - GYL 291 (Brush) and HGF 805 (Duple) - but with the
greatest admiration of all the twenty two Sutton depot "HGF"s, the undoubted saviours of
the Firm in the dark days of the mid 1950s when the difficulties remaining from WW2 and the Death
duties following Samuel Ledgard’s death in 1952 surely almost brought the Firm down.
One of my favourite pictures here of JUA 916 after its spectacular return to the front line, on a lovely day at Bramhope Church - the vehicle by now 16 years old, who would think it. Picture by the late Robert F. Mack to his usual splendid standards.
Chris Youhill
07/08/12 - 14:23
Many thanks, Chris Y., for the wonderful photo of 916, and all the superb
Ledgard memories your responses have generated for me!
It really was a truly wonderful fleet,
both from the enthusiast viewpoint, but also in terms of a very well run business, which was sadly
missed when it disappeared in 1967.
I am always surprised when I am reminded how
"fragile" the company was in the early years of the "Executors", as Samuel was a
very astute, as well as straight talking Yorkshireman, and I just wonder sometimes how it came to be
that his astuteness did not fully extend to his thoughts of his own demise! Perhaps there was
nothing more he could do in his final years.
As well as the early "exec" period,
which was a delight, the earlier period presented a very "corporate" image, with those
batches of pre-1950 Leylands, complete with all the "UA and UBness" of Leeds
registrations, punctuated by the occasional"AK/KYness" of my native Bradford!
I have
just resolved some pressing computer problems, and now I have the time, I find I cannot put down my
"Beer and Blue Buses" book!
Thanks,
John Whitaker
08/08/12 - 07:12
I’m delighted to see the photo of JUA 916, Chris Y - I can almost imagine
myself aboard now - very evocative!
It’s the first time I’ve ever seen a Roe utility body, as
you say, looking very ‘fit’ for its age. Was the body much modified by this time? The front
actually seems to have a curve upstairs and possesses neither drop side windows nor front opening
ones. The headlamps are certainly lower than the ‘norm’ I’m used to. Also, the front upper
part of the bulkhead. looks as if it’s been pop-rivetted one - a little odd.
Chris Hebbron
08/08/12 - 12:09
Roe built very few, if any, highbridge motorbus utility bodies after this
time, concentrating on lowbridge Guys, but they did build this style for several fleets, including
Doncaster, and the rebodied South Shields war damaged Daimler trolleybus.
They returned to
highbridge bodies in 1945, with the W4 trolleybus contract, to a squarer style. Bradford 703 - 714
refer.
East Yorkshire had a batch of wartime Arabs with similar bodies to the
"JUA"s, but adapted to Beverley Bar shape, where the existing arched roof dome proved
advantageous. Roe utility bodies seemed to enjoy longevity, but they would, wouldn’t they!
BCT
703-714/734-739 were the last to be taken out of service for rebodying, withdrawal preference being
given to the Park Royals. Roe always took some beating!
I just wish that the Crossgates
Carriage Works were still producing such quality vehicles!
John Whitaker
09/08/12 - 07:21
The complete list of Roe highbridge utility bodies on Daimler CWA6 is: Trent
8, Ledgard 4, Northampton 4, Kippax 1, Felix, Hatfield 1, Ebor, Mansfield 1. Total 19.
There
were three other highbridge utilities, A Regent for Doncaster and Leyland TD7’s, 1 for Yorkshire
Traction and 1 for Yorkshire Woollen.
Chris Barker
09/08/12 - 07:22
Sadly John, the magnificent Crossgates Carriage Works - and the lovely office
building where all brand new vehicles were photographed - has recently been demolished and Optare
are now at Sherburn in Elmet.
When new housing is built on the famous site I think the streets
should be named :-
Titan Terrace….
Regent Mews…….
Valkyrie
Vale……
Lion Walk………..
Daimler Drive………
and so forth.
Chris Youhill
09/08/12 - 09:21
Chris, How about "Renown Avenue"…a postal address I would be
proud of!
When tram riding in Leeds, we always tended to gravitate as near as possible to
Crossgates, to inspect what delights may be on view!
John Whitaker
09/08/12 - 11:27
John W and myself made many pilgrimage visits by tram to Crossgates Carriage
Works to pay homage to our favourite bus builder Charles H Roe. I think the best outcome of this sad
news of the works demolition would be the street names suggested by Chris Y and John for the new
re-development of the site for houses.
Roe built quality bus and trolleybus bodies and will
never be forgotten for their belief in teak frames and the patent waistrail.
Richard Fieldhouse
09/08/12 - 18:29
The solitary highbridge utility Roe bodied TD7 for YWD was HD7286 fleet number
480. It sustained serious damage in a lowbridge accident on the outskirts of Huddersfield in 1949
but such was the quality of the Roe bodywork that it was repaired and put back into service.
One wonders if these early utilities (1942) may have been built from pre-war seasoned timber
the bodybuilders carried in stock, rather than the unseasoned timber they had to contend with
later.
Eric Bawden
09/08/12 - 18:30
Thanks, Chris B, for that interesting and informative breakdown of the Roe
highbridge utility bodies. It is a great feature of this site, that we can learn such detail from
each other.
I think there were 2 rebodies as well, the S.Shields Daimler trolleybus, CWK 67,
and the Grimsby 1931 Regent, EE 9860, which was the Roe prototype centre entrance bus, which was
also war damaged.
I think I am correct in saying that Roe lowbridge utility bodies were only
built on Guy chassis, but I am not certain, and am wondering also, if any Mark 1 Arabs were
involved.
John Whitaker
Vehicle reminder shot for this posting
27/09/12 - 07:13
There is a major misconception in this thread regarding the Crossley built
stepped window design and cantilever platforms.
The design is actually a Metro Cammell design
for Manchester and was patented as such. Over 700 bodies were produced to this design for Manchester
and, as Metro Cammell could not meet all the orders, their production was on Leyland PD1 and PD2
chassis. Crossley provided the bodies on their own chassis as well as on some Daimlers and Brush
built a number on the other half of the same Daimler batch.
Crossley adopted the design for
its own product range (with or without cantilevered platforms, depending on the operator) and paid
Metro Cammell a license fee for each vehicle built, thus an "all Crossley" bus of the late
1940s/early 1950s had a license built body and a licensed (or pirated, depending on how you view the
Saurer saga) power plant.
All vehicles so built had a manufacturer’s plate stating that the
body was built by Crossley under MC patents.
Crossley built the design on their own, Leyland
and Guy chassis for a range of municipal operators around the country.
Phil Blinkhorn
Of course I should have included Daimler to the list of chassis bodied by
Crossley.
Some other observations. The design was known by Manchester as the post war
Standard, as opposed to the Standard of the pre Streamliner era in the 1930s.
The drooped
front windows were a direct link to the Streamliners. I assume that, when Crossley built bodies
without the droops, and later without the stepped windows, they still were licensed built bodies as
the basic framing was the same.
Manchester took just one batch of PD1s with 7’6" bodies
from MC, everything else was 8′ wide.
Crossley offered both widths throughout the period
it built the body style and successfully rebodied a number of wartime austerity Guy Arabs as late as
the mid 1950s, as well as adapting the body for 8′ wide trolleybus chassis.
Phil Blinkhorn
28/09/12 - 07:46
The comprehensive "Crossley" book by Eyre, Heaps and Townsin does not endorse the view that the Crossley body was a Metro Cammell design, though it does state that bodies of the same design were built by Metro Cammell and Brush. Several of the features of the post war Crossley body arose from a detailed study of the revolutionary body of the London RT, and the early drawings even show the fairing of the nearside wing into the body structure in classic RT style, though production did not embrace this feature. Insofar as the HOE7 engine is concerned, the prototype unit fitted to GNE 247 did incorporate Saurer principles in the toroidal piston cavity and four valve per cylinder head, but Arthur Hubble of Crossley refused to cough up the licence fee demanded by Saurer. Production HOE7 engines had a hurriedly redesigned cylinder head incorporating two valves per cylinder and a curious piston cavity of concentric ridges, and the engine was a dismal failure that contributed fundamentally to the demise of the company. There were no Saurer elements in the HOE7, and the prototype engine was withdrawn and scrapped after the difference with Saurer over a licence fee.
Roger Cox
28/09/12 - 14:41
Roger I take your point re the Saurer principles, having re-read the story of
the HOE7, however the book is as vague as Eyer and Heaps "The Manchester Bus" in regard to
the "ownership" of the Standard body design. What "The Manchester Bus" says is
that "Crossley adopted the design for its own production"
I was brought up in
Manchester from the late 1940s and spent a great deal of my youth riding these vehicles and spending
time around the depots. Later in life I had access to the MCTD records.
The Streamliner of the
1930s was designed by Metro Cammell (Manchester’s preferred builder) and the MCTD Car Works. Bodies
by Crossley and English Electric were badged as licence built.
When Stuart Pilcher instigated
the post war Standard, MCTD again turned to the Birmingham based builder. The body outline and the
cantilever platform were designed in co-operation between Metro Cammell and the Car Works. "The
Manchester Bus" states, on page 149, "In May 1945 Titan 1396 went into the Car Works to
have its rear end reconstructed using Metro Cammell’s bearerless cantilevered platform system which
was then adopted for Manchester’s post war Standard body design".
This chimes with my
belief of the last 50 odd years and my reading in the archives 30 odd years ago, that the post war
Standard was essentially a Car Works/MC design.
Crossley actually built the first vehicles to
the design due to order congestion at Metro Cammell and used their own frames to fit the outline but
all the evidence I’ve seen shows the patent remained with Metro Cammell.
Phil Blinkhorn
29/09/12 - 07:29
Post-war Crossley body badges made no reference to Metro-Cammell and almost
certainly didn’t include any of their patents.
I’ve always considered that one of the main
aspects covered by patent was the pillar section used by Metro-Cammell, which was formed hollow
section steel. The Crossley frame was quite different, formed from two angle sections with a zig-zag
section spot-welded between.
I don’t know if there were any patents relating to the
cantilevered platform, as the feature was first used on the pre-war RT which was not built by
Metro-Cammell. I would expect any patents to be related to detail design and thus not related to the
principle.
I’m not sure that any Crossleys built for other operators featured the cantilever
platform. Oldham 368 most certainly does not and yet has the shallow windows at the rear of each
deck.
David Beilby
29/09/12 - 07:29
"The Manchester Bus" describes the postwar standard as "the fourth of Stuart Pilcher’s designs" (page 153), and only acknowledges Metro-Cammell involvement in respect of the framing that supported the cantilever platform. Certainly during the time I worked for MCTD in the 1960s we believed the design was ours. At least we agree that it wasn’t Crossleys, something I have been trying to convince people about for the last 20 years!
Peter Williamson
29/09/12 - 12:27
Peter: You are correct, the conception of the design had nothing to do with
Crossley. It was put together in the Piccadilly drawing office in co-operation with Metro-Cammell.
Manufacturers assiduously protect their innovations and the Park Royal design of cantilevered
platform for the RT was so protected, leading to Metro Cammell and MCTD coming up with their method
of cantilevering that led to the step windows.
David: Crossley could not have used the overall design as their own without
the agreement of both MC and MCTD and it is my belief from my readings in the archives in the 1980s
that the design was patent protected and Crossley had to pay royalties. As to badges, my memory may
well be at fault but I have a memory of a MCTD post war Standard all Crossley with such a badge.
On the question of patents and how manufacturers protect not just detail design but overall
concepts, and as we all keep referring to Messrs Eyres and Heaps publications, see p230 of The
Manchester Bus. Manchester had designed its own airport coaches which were in outline similar to
London Transport’s AEC Regal coaches bodied by Park Royal for BEA. MCTD had to pay a small royalty
to LT as they had infringed the latter’s registered design for a high roof airport coach.
Apart from my memory of reading the archives, I can’t see either Stuart Pilcher or Albert
Neal, let alone the ever eagle eyed and cost conscious Transport Committee, letting Crossley have
the post war Standard overall design for nothing.
As to whether Crossley used the cantilevered
platform, later versions of the body, such as Stockport’s last batch of DD42s, or Reading’s, did
away with the stepped windows and probably didn’t have cantilevered platforms. You cite Oldham 368
which, like a batch delivered to Stockport, has the stepped windows but no drooped corner front
windows and I accept your knowledge regarding that vehicle’s lack of a cantilevered platform.
But ask yourself this: why would a company, however it was able to use someone else’s design,
keep the otherwise useless stepped windows on vehicles delivered to a range of operators over a
period of 4 or 5 years if a cantilevered platform wasn’t specified?
Phil Blinkhorn
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