{"id":3248,"date":"2023-10-10T09:11:56","date_gmt":"2023-10-10T09:11:56","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/camcab.co.uk\/redesign\/mr-k-does-it-again-review-part-2\/"},"modified":"2023-10-10T09:11:56","modified_gmt":"2023-10-10T09:11:56","slug":"mr-k-does-it-again-review-part-2","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/camcab.co.uk\/redesign\/mr-k-does-it-again-review-part-2\/","title":{"rendered":"Mr K Does It Again! Review Part 2"},"content":{"rendered":"
How To Run A Large Bus Company<\/span><\/p>\n There won’t be fuel or repair facilities at A G Harris’ Hall Farm, so the bus that sleeps there would have to be “cycled” back to its home depot and, usually, swapped with another from time to time. Mt K has a section showing how buses are allocated to a duty roster which makes all this happen – unless anything goes wrong when changes have to be made, often at short notice.<\/p><\/div>\n Apparently the above page makes up into a very comfy Aran jumper!\u00a0<\/p><\/div>\n fbb suspects that one of today’s young depot managers would be overcome with vicarious delight to have 19 spare vehicles to set against a peak vehicle requirement of 88<\/span>! (By the way, apologies for the blue tint on some of the screenshots.\u00a0 For some strange reason, closeups come out blue and fbb couldn’t be bothered to make them monochrome.)<\/p><\/div>\n Working timetables are the core of all bus operation as they include much more information than those issued to the public. Here is a local Lowestoft route<\/p><\/div>\n It shows the route number (in red); the type of vehicle allocated to that journey; the garage overseeing that journey and the “Car Line” which fbb assumes is the vehicle duty roster number.<\/p><\/div>\n Its a both ways round lollipop!<\/p><\/div>\n In this case, although this is a NOR (Norwich) route, we are given the “outstation” for each journey. You can go back and look these up and marvel at the clever scheduling that allowed such a rural service to be just that – a service to the rural areas.\u00a0<\/p><\/div>\n For the purpose of this blog, it doesn’t matter which these routes are; just look at the last two columns. The penultimate column is he cost of that service, and the end column is the profit or loss – mostly loss<\/span>.<\/p><\/div>\n Have fun with the Norfolk “map”!!<\/p><\/div>\n Note three different route numbers for these villages. And below we have a Friday only option.<\/p>\n Again, it is worth investigating which of these occasional routes is still in operation 53 years later.<\/p><\/div>\n