Quote:
Originally Posted by GernB
Vid, I'm curious. I've been told by what I would consider a reliable source (a fairly high up transit employee) that the half size buses are considerably cheaper to buy and operate. Can you point me to some numbers? Now that I'm riding consistenly due to very poor night vision this has suddenly become an interest of mine.
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If by "half-size" buses he means the 20 foot cutaways, then yes, those are a lot cheaper to buy, maintain, and operate. It's just an F-350 with a modified body.
The comparison I was thinking of was between the 30 and 40 foot city buses.

A 30 foot bus. Note the lack of rear door.
Between the two, there is little difference in cost or mileage and the driver of either one has to have a class B licence (in Ontario) since both carry more than 24 people. It costs Thunder Bay about $450,000 per bus (brand new) or $12,000 per seat. The 30 foot models will be at least $350,000, or $13,000 per seat.
So basically, our argument wasn't so much about which option was cheaper overall, just which one met our particular needs and limitations better. If Lethbridge has routes that have no busy sections and doesn't interline buses, then having cutaways as community shuttles (which many larger cities do, most notably Vancouver) would be viable. Thunder Bay isn't in that situation, we've designed a transit system that gives us no choice but to run full-size buses. I referred to the 30 foot buses because that is what Thunder Bay considered several years ago; if you're thinking of cutaways, they're definitely cheaper.
Anyway, it's hard to find numbers that explain the costs of purchasing buses, but here are some links I found on line that might give you an idea:
http://www.coloradodot.info/programs/commuterchoices/documents/trandir_transit.pdf
http://www.triptac.org/Documents/RepositoryDocuments/Bus_Lifecycle_Guide.pdf
This one in particular (though US centric) has really good details on mileage, initial cost, capacity and lifespan of different types of buses.
http://publictransport.about.com/od/Tran...at-Buses-To-Purchase-Part-1-Bus-Size.htm