The London Merlins

£30.00

By Matthew Wharmby

In the 1960s, buffeted by falling ridership and increased operating costs, London Transport resolved to reshape its bus operations altogether. The success of the pioneering short-hop, flat-fare Red Arrow route 500 in 1966 prompted the Reshaping Plan, which aimed to introduce enough similar one-man-operated single-deckers fleetwide to replace LT’s venerable RT and Routemaster families. No longer able to develop its own chassis to meet London’s tough, stop-start traffic conditions, LT chose AEC’s existing Swift, adopting the name Merlin from an abortive export version. However, the entry into service of the resulting MB, MBA and MBS classes from 1968 proved fraught. The passengers struggled with the buses’ new automatic fare-collection (AFC) equipment and the Merlins themselves proved very unreliable in London service. Only those on Red Arrow services and examples inherited by London Country lived out full lifespans, lasting until 1981.This book offers a reappraisal of one of London Transport’s unhappier types and analyses the circumstances that necessitated their introduction.

144 Pages Hardback

ISBN 978-1-85414-492-8

Expected March 2025