Monday, 20 April 2026

Single Deck Surprise ...

 ... Which Puzzled fbb!

Pinterest often throws up transport paintings but with no captions whatsoever. But fbb likes to know!

There will be some readers of this blog who will be aghast at fbb's gross incompetence at not identifying a very obvious picture.

But stick with it. The process is fascinating.

So the investigation starts with the loco on the bridge. It looks very Great Western but where are the curved splashers so typical of a 'Western' loco? fbb thinks this is GWR but a slightly unusual GWR. It is not, for example, a Castle ...
... but it may be a County with straight splashers ...
... ... so, assuming that the artist had done his/her art accurately, fbb will draw that conclusion.

The bus destination blind might help. It says "Pier Head via Monument" and is route 14. Monument is a feature of Newcastle upon Tyne, but a maroon bus isn't.

the most famous Pier Head destination is at Liverpool, but the buses there were green.

And it is a trolley bus.

But the internet is truly wonderful and a search revealed a real 14 on that route.
fbb did not recognise the above location. Fortunately the article accompanying the above picture told fbb that he was in Cardiff.

Of course he was, but he never knew (or just forgot?) that Cardiff had single deck trolleys.
The rusty cogwheels of the aged brain began to creak into action.

The Pier Head Building is distinctive ...
... and just peeps in far left of a 14 at the terminus. 

This is how it looks now ...
... but it was very different then!
If we can work out how the 14 gets to the Pier Head, we should be able to find the railway bridge.

The only trolley bus map on-line is decidedly unhelpful ...
... so your intrepid blogger has to try one of these.
A likeily route from "Monument" (which monument?) to Pier Head is via Bute Street ...
... which intersects ...
... with a railway at right angles; and not just any railway ...
... but the main line east from Cardiff Central station (above top, c/o Google Earth). This was Great Western territory. The line curving south is the branch to Cardiff Bay station.

And here is the bridge today, looking north.
Note that there is a section of the bridge structure that is lower than the near girders ...
... and passing under both sections, we see a pub ...
... with Bute Street wiggling to continue north. Below, a trolleybus on route 16 turns right into Bute Street at that iconic pub.
The pub is The Golden Cross, dating from 1903 when the present building replaced an earlier hostelry.
Bute Street is to the right.

But if we look south from the pub, the bridge looks different.
Because of the angle of view we only see one level of bridgeness.

And that, dear reader, is where our painting places the No 14. The bus is travelling north on its way back to Monument.

QED!

For the record, the current Cardiff Bus service via Bute Street is the 1/2 City Circular.
On Cardiff's excellent bus map we see part of the 1/2 in a pale blue/grey shade.
Plus, for nostalgia freaks, a single deck tram ...
... is pictured trundling north towards the city centre.

But where and what is 'Monument'?

  Next Airport blog : Tuesday 21st April 

Sunday, 19 April 2026

sunday Variety

Sea Breezer Ceases Breezing

The Southern Vectis open top leaflet has recently been published - and something is missing.

In 2025 Vectis took a step back in time by operating an open top bus between Ryde and the fbbs' former alma mater, Seaview.

OK, these pictures are from a Ryde Bus Museum event, but fbb does remember open tops on the 7 ...
... a route which hardly saw the sea, taking the inland route to the village.
It was a bus like the above that ran open top to Seaview. Last year it was something like this.
The service ran "one bus in steam" with a lunch break for drivers hours.
The route saw more of the sea than the old 7 ...
... with a circuit of the boating lake at Ryde ...
... and the full length of the coastal road between Puckpool and Seaview.
The route was even equipped with its own bus stop flags!
But, from an "experience" point of view, over half the route was via very ordinary suburban housing ...
... passing very close to the fbb's former pad!

To add to the disadvantages of the route, local passengers were discouraged by a lack of local fares.
The Sea Breezer, with less than 50% of "sea", did not "perform up to expectations".

So this potentially enjoyable short trip for Ryde visitors attracted very few locals who might have 'talked it up'.

it will not reappear this season.

Go-Op Go or Stop?
Remember this open access proposal?
The company won access rights for a very different service along rural lines. So far all open access schemes have been for inter city routes.
the idea is that the project would be 'crowd funded' with a broad invitation for investors to come on board.

But they haven't - well, not enough of them and not enough with deep, well filled pockets.
The company is probably in the last chance saloon.
Here, the directors gaze enthusiastically on their possible territory, a vision which may, sadly, evaporate.
Pity!

Large Lumbering Lorries
In previous blogs, fbb has commented (adversely) about some of the misleading 'headline' pictures used by YouTubers to persuade viewers to open and 'enjoy' their unrealistic efforts.

Here is one for lovers of road transport, definitely transport used by the public, albeit indirectly. We would be lost without large lumbering lorries!

So here is a typical example.
As usual, the very long 'road train' does NOT appear anywhere in the body of the video.

But a collection of pictures from the wilder parts of Australia seemed, initially at least, to be going in the same sensationalist direction.
But the above headline shot was for real; indeed the above 'rig' was hauling FOUR trailers, not three.
And not a drop if Artificial Insanity in use!

Some are not quite as long, but very tall ...
... needing to avoid not just low but reasonably high bridges.

And another long 'un!
fbb does not expect to meet such a beast in nearby Axmouth!

In the UK, heavy and long truckin' does happen, but with expert support throughout the journey. Historically, Pickfords was the star if this trade in fbb's youth.
Allelys is often the go-to haulier these days ...
... being particularly well-known for locomotive transport!
Still not ideal for a quick nip round Seaton; maybe not Lyme Regis either!

==================
Having spent an age building a small fleet of OO Newton Chambers car carriers, their proud owner looked and looked again ...
... and looked again ...
... and to his profound disappointment the car carriers were a few critical millimetres too tall! They should be the same height as their accompanying sleeping cars.

Palpably, they isn't (kit on the left)!

Their creator shrugs his shoulders and closes his video.

In a later YouTube video, however, he does review, very enthusiastically, three ready-to-run ready-built Heljan models of the same vehicle ...
... and they are the right height ...
... as seen in this direct comparison picture.

Did he consign carefully crafted kit carriages to the coach crusher?

================

 Next single decker blog : Mon 20 April