Author | Message |
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◊ 2014-09-29 11:55 |
TN4A, TN4B, TN6A? |
◊ 2014-09-29 17:22 |
With this long nose it has to be a TN6. Because of the rather low 'auvent' (the body part between bonnet and windscreen) it'll be a 1934 TN6C2 Type Paris. 160 of these were built, the last one was taken out of service in 1969... Edit: others are listed just as TN6C. -- Last edit: 2014-09-29 17:25:39 |
◊ 2014-09-29 17:32 |
Well, when they are easy to discriminate, maybe could we give the right names. |
◊ 2014-09-29 18:21 |
I think TN6C is enough. The '2' only means there were two persons needed (driver and ticket seller), type Paris or type Banlieu indicates the area the bus was used and the difference between open or closed balcony at therear. |
◊ 2016-01-26 03:05 |
Mmmh… The moving wheels forbid to tell if they are "full disk" (TN6A) or "artillery" (TN6C). |