BUSWORLD PHOTOGRAPHY

I AM CHRISTOPHER LEACH THE ARTIST. I started this blog so that I can share with everyone my vast collection of transport photographs showing a personal and nostalgic view of the industry with images that span some 45 years taking in the U.K and some of Europe. I have no darkroom and so rather than being the perfectionist after tidying them up I upload the images warts and all, and even those that won't scan squarely or are scratched. In a way it adds age and character. You are all free to download these for your personal use but please remember I still own them and you are not just free to use them without prior permission for any knd of publishing. Click on images to enlarge them and if you want to see more leave your comments or visit my website for the mother-site with galleries including those Buses & Girls: PICTUREWORLD

Tuesday 14 July 2009

GET OUT OF THE WAY! It's Special


Yes a Honda Tonka van almost totally spoilt my lovely shot but I didn't want this old Globus Gateway bus to get away as it started life as a rather glamorous MCW Demonstrator. The Metropolitan has largely been forgotten but it was the first decent attempt to market something better than the Leyland Monopoly wanted to offer at that time in the early Seventies. The Birmingham built Swedish bus certainly wooed the major operators as London and nearly all the PTE's took some, and not forgetting those forward looking Municipals like Reading, Newport and Leicester. And why not for these Anglo-Swedish buses had bags of power and floated on air, but sadly enviable sophistication was not enough and as they quickly aged they became troublesome and even more costly to run. Consequently the industry in it's quest to break away from the Government controlled Leyland then sought something rather more down to earth and old-fashioned enough to be Gardner Powered. So MCW gave them the Metrobus which might have resembled the Metropolitan but now fitted the bill. However the Metropolitan was ahead of it's time and the big low-floor double-deckers of today from Dennis and Volvo seem to just plod along like gutless dinosaurs when compared to the 1974 MCW/Scania battle-bus from Washwood Heath.

2 comments:

Andy R said...

Hi Christopher,

Reading seemed to have no problem keeping it Metropolitans running and even topped up its fleet with second hand ones from London and later also from Tyne and Wear. I don't think they would have done that if the bus didn't have its merits. Maybe the operators that didn't like them just didn't have the right approach. Just a thought?

Andrew

christopher said...

I know they had cost problems with the Metro-Scania single-deckers at Leicester and wasn't there corrosion issues too. No doubt when an operator likes a bus they go out of their way to get the best from them.