Trains are blessed with the fact that apart from the enthusiast fraternity, the age of a unit or set is pretty much hidden by repainting, high quality refurbishments and can fool almost anyone into believing it is a new train. Take the Class 319s which were hard at work with Thameslink from the late '80s which have recently found work in the North West where electrification is apace.
Following refurbishment and its shoes removed (they will only require a pantograph in their new life) they appear to be a completely new train and for the people who have suffered some awful trains from Northern Rail, they are magnificent compared to the old order.
So what has this got to do with buses I hear you shout? Well most passengers thought that these were new trains. Hard to believe when you're an enthusiast admittedly but customers see things differently. A view shared by many intelligent bus managers and they don't come much more switched on than the great Phil Stockley, once of Eastleigh's Velvet which sadly disappeared last year.
Phil is now at Wellglade and he has done wonders for TM Travel who are thinking outside of the box, thanks to Phil and are upgrading their vehicles to a standard that makes their buses look like new.
Service 218 which runs from Sheffield to Bakewell has had investment in ex-Trent Barton (the really good bus company of course!) Scanias. Coming from TB the vehicles have been looked after during their lives and are now 12 years old.
Transport for London and their Borismasters all have Northern Ireland-style private plates (LTZ 1017 featured in yesterday's blog) so you would have to do some serious digging to find its age. The average passenger wouldn't necessarily be interested but it is worth noting that a quick look at the registration will automatically make some customers view this and make assumptions before joining.
If it was me, I would replace every bus in my fleet that has been upgraded and bang on a private plate to hide this piece of information. It's actually not that relevant on a bus as it is the ongoing refurbishments and refresh programmes that can keep vehicles looking like new.
It's an easy and quick way to encourage bus travel by keeping your fleet clean, fresh and modern. The number plate detracts from that. Come on DVLA, let's have buses exempt from the usual number plate and have special ones instead.
Just out of interest, a certain bus group is now running vehicles just a few years old which look awful. Panels are marked or replaced but still in white (or worse, base aluminium) and the surprise is reversed when the plate shows '62' and it is in this state already.
Who said an old bird can't look like new?!