Class: Bus, Single-deck — Model origin:
Background vehicle
Author | Message |
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◊ 2022-01-09 14:58 |
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◊ 2022-01-09 15:29 |
Must not be very comfortable with footballs for wheels! |
◊ 2022-01-09 15:31 |
Ford Transit? |
◊ 2022-01-09 15:51 |
Unlikely in a film dated 1950. |
◊ 2022-01-09 15:53 |
No, the one that's actually a bus: /vehicle_1597209-Ford-Transit-09-B-1939.html |
◊ 2022-01-09 16:04 |
Not the van since the Transit bus is in the USA, while Transit vans are in UK & Germany |
◊ 2022-01-09 16:17 |
The Ford Transit is a relatively small bus and this one's bigger. I believe this is a Yellow Coach/GMC of some kind, similar to this. With the number (4420) in plain sight it should be easy to find out what this is, but I do not have a fleet list on me. |
◊ 2022-01-09 17:29 |
Interesting the way that these names get recycled. |
◊ 2022-01-09 17:42 |
Oh, you have no idea! https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ford_Escort_(China) |
◊ 2022-01-09 17:51 |
"Transit" is the American term for public transport, so it would have been an obvious name for a bus. |
◊ 2022-01-09 18:05 |
i wonder if its less comfortable than square ones ... |
◊ 2022-01-09 18:13 |
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◊ 2022-01-09 18:23 |
Depends on the football |
◊ 2022-01-09 18:31 |
i bet the owner of that one screams " GGOOOAAALLL ! " each times he gets it inside his garage... |
◊ 2022-01-11 01:25 |
Not sure of the livery. Could it be Los Angeles Motor Coach Company? Their #4420 was a 1945 GMC (Yellow Coach?) TD-4506: https://cptdb.ca/wiki/index.php/Los_Angeles_Motor_Coach_Company |