Friday, 10 July 2026

Express Sprinter : 158/159 (1)

It all started with this comparison ...

... in a previous blog. Two sprinters, both produced by Bachmann but offered at widely differing prices. The upper model was "pre owned"; the lower was a reduced price offer from Rails of Sheffield but still farcically expensive.

Both were in West Yorkshire PTE Metro livery.

Which started the old blogger thinking - always a risky and unreliable process.

So the challenge was to work out how many different liveries have been used in the classic 158/159 stock?

A lot!

We can start with the "as delivered" paint job - rather uninspiring ...
... as branded for the Regional Railways "business unit".  Units were delivered between 1989 and 1992 built at BR's Litchurch Lane works in Derby.

But the paint job was refreshingly different from the good old diesel units that formed BR's standard DMU fleets. All over rail blue was dull in the extreme.
The decision to adopt the blue and grey "inter city" version was wise ...
... but, somehow, the colours always looked dull. Many train watchers preferred the lined green of yore.
As a teenage schoolboy, fbb felt he was travelling in luxury on such a train compared with steam hauled 12 seat compartment suburban stock.
And you could see where you were going - unless the driver unsportingly pulled the blinds down!

Back to the "super sprinters"

Sone trains actually operated InterCity services between Liverpool and Glasgow but only received the livery ...
... in train simulation programs. Likewise when they were transferred to Virgin trains.
In the early days of privatisation, sticky labels attempted to provide identity as with Wales and West's Alphaline brand.
The fully fettled Alphaline branding was messy ...
... with the 'alpha' logo too big and lacking in contrast with the silver grey body sides.

For many travellers, this gave way to Wessex Trains silver grey with puce doors.
Arriva Trains Wales simply stuck an 'Arriva' on the side ...
... before adopting the group standard blue tones.
Of course, now we are nationalised Transport for Wales and it is back to the future for boring grey but now with red doors ...
... and a stripe of red at cantrail level. When fbb was very much younger, a red stripe up there signified buffet or dining facilities - even appearing on this ...
... a venerable ex LNER buffet car! The red line (and the yellow similar for first class) were meant to be a European standard. Here a Belgian Railways double decker offers 1st Class above and 2nd below.
The idea did not really catch on!

By comparison with Wales, fbb's local sprinters have only had three liveries; South West Trains version one ...
... followed by easily the best livery of the privatized era.
This scheme was also adopted by Stagecoach for its East Midlands business.

Or was it?

Sadly, Stagecoach lost its contracts because it dared to object to the bidding system.

So First took over and brought miserable livery mediocrity.
Yawn!

Before fbb explores other 158/159 liveries, he must add a caveat. Your elderly enthusiastic compiler of fascinating factoids (?) may not have covered every change of colour scheme, or logged the changes in the correct order.

His motive has been to share his wonder at the wide variety of liveries that privatisation has brought. But also to consider the expense of brand changes, some of them within the length of the franchisee's tenure.

Does changing the colour if the trains attract more passengers?

Unlikely!

YouTube Useless?
Yet another farcical phtoshop type headline picture.
Apart from the ludicrous concept of a load that is as wide as the carriageway and a on very long trailer that has no articulation, so would never go round any corner. The rig is too big for the drivers; or, the drivers are aged about 5.

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

Coming soon:-

The Telly : Tubby's Technological Trauma!
Surely not?

  Next Sprinter Tinter blog : Sat 11th July 

Thursday, 9 July 2026

The Boston Bees (Bs) - Part 2

 The New B6

This is a School Holidays, Monday to Friday only service. You would guess that Brylaine has multiple buses usually deployed on their school contracts ...
... plus drivers who will have nothing to drive during the hols, so a route that might not be highly profitable could well work as a low-cost marginal operation.

The publicity is good ...
... and plentiful on-line ...
... augmented with a printed leaflet. A generous half hourly headway is on offer ...
... which requires three buses. Here is the route on a geographical map.
The route appears to take the A158 from Burgh le Marsh to Skegness, then northbound on the A52 to Mablethorpe. 

fbb decided to have a look at existing buses in the Skeggy area and, excitedly, he found an on-line map of Lincolnshire's bus services ...
... but he struggled to find any timetables that matched the cartographic detail. Apart from the infrequent 7 ...
... almost everything else did not exist! Yes, you guessed it, the on-line map was utterly out-of-date!

A further search and a bit of judicious cropping produced this.
The B6 follows the 56 ...
... and the 59 ...
... increasing the schoolday frequency dramatically.

And The New B617?
The route is named after the famous World War 2 bomber squadron.

No. 617 Squadron is a Royal Air Force aircraft squadron commonly known as The Dambusters ...
... for its actions during Operation Chastise against German dams during the Second World War, originally based at RAF Scampton in Lincolnshire ...
... and currently based at RAF Marham in Norfolk. In the early 21st century it operated the Panavia Tornado GR4 in the ground attack and reconnaissance role until being disbanded on 28 March 2014. The Dambusters reformed on 18 April 2018, and was equipped at RAF Marham in June 2018 with the Lockheed Martin F-35B Lightning ...

.. becoming the first squadron to be based in the UK with this advanced STOVL type. The unit is composed of both RAF and Royal Navy personnel, and operates from the Royal Navy's Queen Elizabeth-class aircraft carriers.

B617 would be a brilliant brand for a bus service; but perversely  it does not serve RAF Scampton ...
... once the home base of Guy Gibson et al, which is due north of Lincoln!
RAF Scampton closed for good in 2023!
The route does serve several places of historic interest ...
... and comes with an excellent printed leaflet.
Local councillors have had their pictures taken with bus stop ...
... and bus!
And another councillor!
Of course the service is subsidised!
A bus has also shared fame with a Dambusters aircraft.
The service runs Monday to Saturday ...
... with five through trips in each direction.
That is impressive for something so innovative.

Oddly, on a day when trips out are popular, there is no Sunday service.

But the B617 is just right for the current heatwave and Billinghay Pool.
For the record, the B617 begins by roughly following
Brylaine's B5 
(BLUE on the map below) ...
... between Lincoln and Woodhall Spa then strikes cross country to Horncastle.

Yes, innovative!

  Next Sprinter Selection blog : Thurs 10 July 

Wednesday, 8 July 2026

The Boston Bees (Bs) - Part 1

If Manchester can have Bees, so can Lincolnshire! Harrogate had them for a while as 'The Bilton Bs", a collection of minibus services to the Bilton estate ...

... for which fbb produced a leaflet hundreds if years ago. The picture above shows pre-privatisation West Yorkshire branding at Bilton.

The provider of the Boston Bs is Brylaine, a company which has been around for about 45 years. It operates a number of inter-urban routes ...
... centred on Boston; all of which, a while back, were renumbered into a tidy sequence and given a 'B' prefix, 'B' for Brylaine and/or (?) 'B' for Boston.

fbb does not know the history of the 96A, but it certainly doesn't enter Boston. 
It runs on schooldays and Saturdays with only a couple of 'short' journeys running Mon to Fri during school holidays. Sounds odd but it is rural Lincolnshire! 

What you would expect to be the 'main' service 96 isn't; it is one school journey run by Stagecoach!

Brylaine also runs a significant number of school contracts.

The company began with a blue and white livery and second hand DP coach bodied vehicles; this one being a Ford, ex Southdown.
A "bread van" ...
... came from West Yorkshire PTE ...
... via Compass Travel of Royston.
Indeed most of Brylaine's fleet is "pre-owned" but fettled up very nicely. This decker ...
... once plied the streets of London ...
... for the East London pre-franchise company.

A rather unhappy and cluttered Preston Bus paint job ...
... re-appeared as a smart but non-standard yellow with lovely blue bits!
Lothian buses ...
... begat a smart, mostly red, livery with a rebuilt destination display.
The livery used to be more complex ...
... incorporating diagonal yellow flashes listing the towns served.
Now it is a simpler red all over plus ...
... a touch of tasteful blue. The above was also known as a Konnectbus motor!
The name Brylaine derives from the first names (Bryan, Elaine???) of its founders but the logo is a bit of a mystery.
The 'ST' is, in fact, 'TS', standing for Transport Services - a concept which is even more baffling when the device is applied to an offside body panel!
'TZ' - To the Zoo?

The company provides excellent printed timetable leaflets ...
... as well as a profusion of on-line material via social media. It also advertises its own telephone enquiry service.
Well done!

One disappointment for fbb is that the company on-line "timetables" page is a right mess and simply doesn't work on fbb's tablet.
Stuff covers stuff and stuff will not uncover stuff!

Is it any better on the laptop?

Thankfully, yes. Stuff no longer covers stuff.

But of route B617, more tomorrow.

  Next Boston Bs Bus blog : Weds 9th July