Plaxton Pointer | |
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Overview | |
Manufacturer | Reeve Burgess Plaxton TransBus Alexander Dennis |
Production | 1991–2006 |
Assembly | Scarborough, North Yorkshire, England |
Designer |
|
Body and chassis | |
Doors | 1 or 2 |
Floor type | Step entrance/Low-floor (SLF) |
Chassis | Pointer (Step entrance): Dennis Dart Volvo B6 Pointer (Low floor): Dennis Dart SLF Volvo B6LE Pointer 2 (Low floor): Dennis Dart SLF Blue Bird LFCC9 |
Powertrain | |
Engine | Cummins B Series (Dennis Dart) Cummins B Series/ISBe (Dennis Dart SLF) Volvo TD63 (Volvo B6) Volvo TD63/D6A (Volvo B6LE) |
Capacity | 44-62 (29-41 seated) |
Dimensions | |
Length | 8.5–11.3 metres (28–37 ft) |
Width | 2.3–2.4 metres (7 ft 7 in – 7 ft 10 in) [1] |
Chronology | |
Successor | Alexander Dennis Enviro200 |
The Plaxton Pointer (originally known as the Reeve Burgess Pointer, and later as the TransBus Pointer and Alexander Dennis Pointer) is a single-deck midibus body that was manufactured between 1991 and 2006, predominantly on the Dennis Dart chassis, by Reeve Burgess, Plaxton and latterly Alexander Dennis.
The Dennis Dart midibus chassis was launched in 1988, two years after the deregulation of the British bus industry, aimed at operators wanting to move away from van-based minibuses. Initially, the Dart chassis was only offered with Duple Dartline bodywork, [2] however by 1991, Dennis had opened the Dart up to be bodied by other manufacturers, including Wadham Stringer and Wrights of Ballymena. [3] [4]
Plaxton, through its Reeve Burgess subsidiary, launched its Pointer bodywork in 1991 for the 8.5 metres (28 ft) Dennis Dart chassis, designed by Capoco Design. Reusing aluminium extrusions from previous Reeve Burgess minibuses, the Pointer was assembled with a combination of an aluminium frame, as opposed to steel, and glass fibre mouldings, projected by Plaxton to give the body a 12 to 15-year design life. The front of the Pointer featured a two-piece split windscreen with a full-size destination display above, and the interior, fitted out to the recommendations of the Disabled Persons Transport Advisory Committee (DiPTAC), featured an optional split step entrance and a gradual series of steps towards the back of the bus, capable of holding a capacity of 39 seated and 15 standing passengers. Pointer bodies on longer 8.5 metres (28 ft), 9 metres (30 ft) and 9.8 metres (32 ft) Dart chassis were later introduced by the end of 1990. [5] [6]
At 2.3 metres (7 ft 7 in) metres wide, the Pointer-bodied Dart immediately proved popular with bus operators large and small across the United Kingdom, with Southampton Citybus taking delivery of the first example and London Regional Transport ordering 52 Pointer-bodied Darts for its subsidiaries upon the body's launch. [7] Although a handful of Pointer Darts were built by Reeve Burgess in their Derbyshire factory, production of the Pointer mainly took place at Plaxton's Scarborough factory due to demand outstripping Reeve Burgess' manufacturing capacity. [6] Eventually, the Reeve Burgess nameplate was dropped, with the bus being sold as the Plaxton Pointer. [8]
The Plaxton Pointer was also sold on the Volvo B6 chassis, launched in the United Kingdom market in 1992. [9] This body and chassis combination did not prove as popular as the Pointer on Dart chassis, however the Pointer-bodied B6 was received well by some UK bus operators, including Mainline Buses. [10]
The introduction of the Super Low Floor (SLF) version of the Dennis Dart in 1995, followed by the launch of the Volvo B6LE, saw the Pointer body receive a facelift, being widened to 2.4 metres (7 ft 10 in) and having the split-step entrance replaced with a step-free entrance featuring an electric wheelchair ramp. The facelifted Pointer 1 was aimed to be more curved than its predecessor, receiving a rounded roof dome and double-curvature windscreen, as well as having the headlights moved lower down the front panel. The first examples were delivered to CentreWest Buses following its launch at the Coach & Bus '95 expo, with FirstBus also immediately ordering of 70 examples for its subsidiaries. [11]
The first-generation Plaxton Pointer on Dennis and Volvo chassis received a number of export orders to some right-hand drive markets. In Hong Kong, air-conditioned Pointers proved highly popular with Citybus, taking delivery of 21 step-entrance Darts and 15 Dart SLFs, [12] as well as 20 on Volvo B6LE chassis. [11] [13] Kowloon Motor Bus, meanwhile, took delivery of two Pointers on Dart SLF chassis in 1996, followed by the delivery of a further ten in 1997, and Pointer bodied Dart SLFs were also delivered to Discovery Bay Transportation Services and New Lantao Bus during 1997. [14]
Macau municipal bus operator Transmac, meanwhile, took delivery of 10 dual-doored Pointers on step-entrance Dart chassis in 1995, [11] [15] while two Pointer-bodied Dart SLFs with Eaton six-speed manual transmissions were delivered to Paramount Garage of Malta in 1997. [16]
In August 1997, Plaxton launched the Pointer 2, a complete redesign of the original Pointer bodywork on 9.3 metres (31 ft), 10.1 metres (33 ft), 10.7 metres (35 ft) Dennis Dart SLF chassis. Designed by Ogle Design, the Pointer 2 received a new, more rounded front end featuring a revised headlight arrangement, adding 100 millimetres (3.9 in) of length to the new body, although the split windscreen was maintained to be interchangeable with the Pointer 1. The rear of the bus featured a new set of brake and indicator lights placed towards the roofline, while the roof-mounted air intake was moved into the nearside upper rear panels, and the rear ventilation above the engine cover was replaced with a mesh grille. Double-glazed bonded windows were made available as an option, and black covers around the wheel arches were also introduced. [17]
Made available for general purchase on the Dart SLF chassis from 1 January 1998, the first production examples of the Pointer 2 were delivered to FirstBus operators Bristol City Line, First Greater Manchester and Badgerline, with further orders upon being received by MTL North, Tellings-Golden Miller, Durham Travel Services, Metrobus and Metroline. [17] The Pointer 2 also became the Stagecoach Group's standard low-floor single-deck midibus, with numerous examples delivered to Stagecoach subsidiaries across the United Kingdom, including a £5.6 million (equivalent to £10,561,000in 2023) order for 75 in August 2005 as part of a major fleet replacement programme shortly after the group's purchase of Liverpool independent Glenvale Transport. [18]
Shortly after launching the standard Pointer 2, Plaxton launched the longer "Super Pointer Dart" (SPD) body variant for the 11.3 metres (37 ft) Dart SLF chassis at the Coach & Bus '97 expo, seating 41 passengers and marketed by Plaxton to compete with other full-sized single-deck buses. [19] The SPD Pointer was followed in 2000 by the "Mini Pointer Dart" (MPD) variant on the 8.8 metres (29 ft) chassis. A single Pointer 2 delivered to Arriva North East in 2003 was also built on an experimental Blue Bird LFCC9 chassis.[ citation needed ]
With the collapse of TransBus in 2004 and subsequent restructuring by the administrators, Plaxton and Alexander Dennis were sold to different parties. As Pointer production had been transferred to the former Alexander plant at Falkirk, it became an Alexander Dennis product. Plaxton, once again an independent company, signalled its return to the bus market by developing the Centro on VDL and MAN chassis in 2005 to join its Primo low-floor minibus in competition with the Pointer. [20] The Pointer Dart was eventually discontinued following the launch of its successor, the Alexander Dennis Enviro200. [21]
In 1998, the Mayflower Group, owner of Alexander Coachbuilders, took over Dennis. The future of the Pointer at that time appeared uncertain as it was thought the Dart may be solely bodied by Alexander, and as a result, Plaxton built two Pointer bodies on the Volvo B6BLE chassis known as the Concept 2000. The project, however, was scrapped when Mayflower also purchased Plaxton, forming TransBus International. Certain design features of the scrapped Concept 2000 project have since been used on other designs, most notably the Alexander Dennis Enviro300 and Enviro500.[ citation needed ]
Like the original Pointer, air-conditioned Pointer 2 bodied Dart SLFs proved popular with Hong Kong bus operators. Following the awarding of Hong Kong Island's franchised bus services to New World First Bus by the government in 1998, the operator took delivery of a total 76 Pointer 2 bodied Dart SLFs between 1998 and 1999 for use on the new network; some of these were later sold to Kowloon Motor Bus as surplus to requirements. [14]
Hong Kong's first Super Pointer Darts were delivered to Park Island Passenger Transport, all of which were painted yellow and equipped with luggage racks. Eight were first delivered in 2003, these being the only Pointer Darts for Hong Kong produced by TransBus, followed by three produced by Alexander Dennis in 2007. The final two Plaxton Pointers produced were delivered to Park Island Passenger Transport in 2008. [14]
A small number of Pointer 2s were also exported to left-hand drive markets. The largest of these was Canadian provincial bus operator BC Transit, who took delivery of 90 air-conditioned Pointer 2s on Dart SLF chassis between 1999 and 2001 for lower-density routes in and around Whistler, British Columbia and the wider Lower Mainland region. [22] Two Pointer 2 bodied Dart SLFs were also supplied to Icelandic operator Hagvagnar in 1999 for use on Strætó bs services. [23]
Wrightbus is a Northern Irish bus manufacturer and a pioneer of the low-floor bus. The company was established in 1946 by Robert Wright and was later run by his son William Wright, until it was acquired in 2019 by British businessman Jo Bamford.
Alexander Dennis is a British bus manufacturing company based in Larbert, Scotland. The largest bus and coach manufacturer in the United Kingdom, with a 50% market share in 2019, it has manufacturing plants and partnerships in Canada, China, Europe, Hong Kong, Malaysia, New Zealand, Singapore, South Africa and the United States.
The Dennis Dart is a rear-engined single-decker midibus chassis that was introduced by Dennis of Guildford, England, in 1989, replacing the Dennis Domino. Initially built as a high-floor design, in 1996 the low-floor second generation Dennis Dart SLF was launched. In 2001, production of the Dart SLF passed to TransBus International, during which time it was sold as the TransBus Dart SLF; Alexander Dennis took over production in 2004, renaming the product as the Alexander Dennis Dart SLF.
The Alexander ALX200 was a single-decker bus body built by Alexander of the United Kingdom. It was created for low-floor bus chassis produced from the late 1990s and was launched in spring 1996 as a low-floor replacement of the Alexander Dash. It was marketed in Alexander's 'ALX' series to fill in the gap between the ALX100 minibus and the ALX300 full-size single-decker.
The Plaxton President is a low floor double-decker bus body built by Plaxton at the former Northern Counties factory in Wigan, England. It was first unveiled in 1997 on the longitudinal Volvo B7L chassis and later built between 1999 and 2005 following a body redesign. When it became part of TransBus International, the body was sold under the TransBus name. The President was built on the Dennis/TransBus Trident, the DAF DB250 and the Volvo B7TL chassis.
A midibus is a classification of single-decker minibuses which are generally larger than a traditional minibus but smaller than a full-size single decker and can be anywhere between 8 metres and 11 metres long. While used in many parts of the world, the midibus is perhaps most common in the United Kingdom, where operators have found them more economical, and to have a sufficient number of seats compared to full size single-decker buses.
The Alexander Dennis Enviro200 is a midibus that was manufactured by TransBus International and later Alexander Dennis between 2003 and 2018. The original TransBus Enviro200 design was innovative but ultimately unsuccessful, with few being sold before the introduction of the second generation Enviro200 revived sales for the product from 2006. It was supposed to be positioned in between a minibus and a rigid single-decker bus.
The VDL SB120 was a low floor light-weight midibus produced from 1999 by VDL Bus & Coach of the Netherlands primarily for the United Kingdom market.
Reeve Burgess was a bus body manufacturer based in Pilsley, North East Derbyshire in the United Kingdom. It was a subsidiary of Plaxton from 1980 until its closure in 1991.
The Volvo B6 was a 5.5-litre (1.2-imperial-gallon) engined midibus chassis manufactured by Volvo between 1991 and 1999. It was also available as the low-entry Volvo B6LE.
The Dennis Lance was a single-decker bus chassis manufactured by Dennis between 1991 and 2000, replacing the Dennis Falcon. Its low floor variant, the Dennis Lance SLF was built between 1993 and 1996. Between 1995 and 1998, Dennis also built its double-deck variant, the Dennis Arrow, as the replacement of the Dennis Dominator.
The East Lancs Spryte was a low floor single-decker bus body built by East Lancashire Coachbuilders primarily for construction on the Dennis Dart SLF chassis.
Probus Management was a bus company in the West Midlands which was acquired by the Go-Ahead Group in March 2006.
The Plaxton Verde was a step-entrance full-size single-decker bus body built by Plaxton between 1991 and 1997. It was built on a rear-engined chassis, the most popular of which was the Dennis Lance which accounted for over half of the Verdes built. The rest were on Volvo B10B, DAF SB220 and Scania N113 chassis.
The Wright Crusader was a single-deck midibus body built on Dennis Dart SLF, Volvo B6LE and Volvo B6BLE chassis by Wrightbus between 1995 and 2002.
The Plaxton Prestige is a low-floor single-decker bus body built by manufacturers Northern Counties and Plaxton between 1996 and 1999.
The Northern Counties Paladin, also badged as the Plaxton Paladin towards the end of production, is a step-entrance single-decker bus body built by Northern Counties of Wigan, UK, between 1991 and 1998. The replacements for the Paladin are the Prestige and the Pointer as low-floor models for the Paladin LF.
The Marshall Capital was a single-decker bus body built originally by Marshall Bus between 1996 and 2002, and later by MCV Bus & Coach between 2002 and 2003. Initially launched on the step-entrance MAN 11.220 and then Iveco Eurorider chassis, the Capital found greater success after being launched on the low-floor Dennis Dart SLF chassis from 1997. Marshall also produced a related, integral midibus, known as the Marshall Minibus, between 1996 and 1998.
The Northern Counties Palatine was a step-entrance 2-axle and 3-axle double-decker bus body built by Northern Counties from 1988 to 1999 in Wigan, England.
The Alexander Dash is a step-entrance midibus body built by Walter Alexander Coachbuilders of Scotland from 1991 to 1997. Unveiled by Alexander at the 1991 Coach and Bus exhibition in Birmingham, it was one of the variants of Alexander's AM-type body, also using components from the Alexander PS type, and was usually combined with the Dennis Dart and Volvo B6 step-entrance single-decker bus chassis.