Colindale
Running Day
The RF
London Transport AEC Regal IV single-decker
Buses planned for
operation include RF366, RF395, RF406, RF453, RF486,
RF489, RF491, RF503
RF322 has just arrived at
Edgware on the 251.
Photo © D
Battams
After the war, London Transport’s fleet needed major
renewal. First to be dealt with were the double-deckers,
involving the production of nearly 7,000 of the RT family. Once these were nearing
completion, LT turned its attention to the single-deck fleet.
Using ideas from the pre-war Q and
underfloor-engined TF classes, the RF used a similar 9.6 litre AEC
diesel engine to the RT, but laid on its side under the
floor. The first of 700 was delivered in 1951.
Following the
introduction of RFs on Green Line services,
the red RFs were delivered in 1952 and
1953. Initially, the red buses had no doors (or
heaters), the absence of doors being a requirement of the
Metropolitan Police as it was supposed they would slow down
boarding and delay the traffic. Doors were fitted
progressively to the fleet as buses were converted for one-person
operation, with the last doorless buses, the last running with
conductors, on route 236 in 1971.
At 30 feet, the red buses were built to the then maximum permitted
length and carried 41 (later 39)
passengers.
The one-person buses continued in service through the 1970s,
outlasting some of their successors, with the last few
finishing on Kingston's semi-rural routes in March 1979.
Just two RF routes operated in this area, the 240A and the 251. The latter is one of the longest
lasting single-deck routes in London and still operates
today.
A more detailed history of the RF class is here. Details of the routes worked by red
RFs are in the Routes section.
General background to the London Transport route structure is
here.
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