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The AEC Regent III RT was a variant of the AEC Regent III. It was a double-decker bus produced jointly between AEC and London Transport. It was the standard red London bus during the 1950s.
The prototypeThe prototype (London Transport RT 1) was built in 1938 with AEC's 8.8-litre engine (a stopgap measure until the new 9.6-litre was available) and air-operated pre-selective gearbox. Finding a satisfactory British substitute for the German air compressor, bought from Bosch, was to cause problems for AEC, once war broke out. A prototype was placed into service disguised as an old vehicle. It carried a secondhand open-staircase body previously carried on Leyland Titan TD 111, dating from 1931. Thus bodied, RT 1 entered service in July 1938 as ST 1140 even though it was nothing like a standard ST vehicle. It continued in service until December 1938. While the chassis was on trial, a new body was constructed at London Transport's Chiswick works. Its four-bay body resembled that of the conventional Roe body exhibited at the 1937 Commercial Motor Show, though the overall impression of modern design and the features included marked a big step forward. This body replaced the old one on RT 1 and the bus re-entered service in 1939. Pre-war production vehiclesLondon Transport ordered 338 (later cut to 150) chassis which were in production when the war broke out in September 1939. The last of the batch, RT 151, did not reach London Transport until January 1942. The only other RT-type chassis constructed before the end of the war was destined for Glasgow, originally intended to be an exhibit at the 1939 Commercial Motor show, but cancelled due to the outbreak of war. It differed from the pre-war London examples in having a body built by Weymann, though the cab area was very similar to the London vehicles. Post-war production vehicles
RT624 (JXC432) seen on Silvertown Way in August 2008 on park & ride duty to/from the ExCeL exhibition centre.
The Leyland Titan RTW, 8 feet wide Leyland version of the RT
Production of the RT recommenced in late 1946. The new vehicles were built to a modified version of the pre-war London Transport design and were similar in appearance to their predecessors. The main visual differences were:
London Transport received 4,674 post-war RT-type buses between 1947 and 1954, and a small number of similar buses were sold to operators outside London. However, the London "RT" family of vehicles could be considered to have numbered 6,956 in total which consisted of 4,825 RTs; 1,631 RTLs and 500 RTWs. The latter two types had a variant of the Leyland Titan chassis and in addition the RTW were 8 feet wide (as opposed to 7 feet 6 inches). The whole family were never all in operation at the same time. The very last RT (RT624, now preserved by Ensignbus) operated on route 62 from Barking Garage on 7 April 1979. See alsoExternal links
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