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Dennis Lance

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Dennis Lance
Dennis Arrow
Arriva North West & WalesPlaxton Verdebodied Dennis Lance inLiverpoolin March 2007
Overview
ManufacturerDennis
Production1991–2000
AssemblyGuildford,Surrey,England
Body and chassis
Doors1 or 2
Floor type
RelatedDennis Trident 3
Powertrain
EngineCummins C6T
Capacity
  • Lance/Lance SLF
  • Up to 74 passengers
  • Arrow
  • 76-84 seated, 11-16 standing
TransmissionZF Ecomat4HP500
ZF Ecomat 5HP500
Dimensions
Length10–11.6 metres (33–38 ft)
Width2.5 metres (8 ft 2 in)
Curb weight
  • Lance
  • 5,410–5,580 kilograms (11,930–12,300 lb)
  • Lance SLF
  • 6,240 kilograms (13,760 lb)
  • Arrow
  • 5,610 kilograms (12,370 lb)
[1]
Chronology
PredecessorDennis Falcon
Dennis Dominator
SuccessorDennis Dart
Dennis Trident 2

TheDennis Lancewas asingle-decker buschassis manufactured byDennisbetween 1991 and 2000, replacing theDennis Falcon.Itslow floorvariant, theDennis Lance SLF(Super Low Floor) was built between 1993 and 1996. Between 1995 and 1998, Dennis also built its double-deck variant, the Dennis Arrow (initially marketed as a double-deck Dennis Lance), as the replacement of theDennis Dominator.

History

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Lance

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Arriva Guildford & West SurreyEast Lancs EL2000bodied Dennis Lance inDorkingin July 2008
First EssexNorthern Counties Paladinbodied Dennis Lance inColchesterin October 2008

The Dennis Lance was unveiled at the 1991 Coach & Bus Show as both a larger version of theDennis Dartand the successor to theDennis Falconchassis. The first Dennis product to be developed at the manufacturer's newGuildfordfactory withcomputer-aided design,the rear-engined Lance chassis was designed with an inline driveline and longitudinally-mountedCummins C6Tengine, claimed to improve fuel economy by 15% when compared to conventional "angle drive" drivelines. It was also developed to fit the recommendations of theDisabled Persons Transport Advisory Committee(DiPTAC) on improving accessibility, equipped with 275 millimetres (10.8 in) entrance and interior steps as standard.[2][1]

The Dennis Lance was available with a number of bodies, including theAlexander PSandStrider,theEast Lancs EL2000,theNorthern Counties Paladin,theOptare SigmaandDelta,[3]and thePlaxton Verde.Ipswich Buseswas the first operator in the United Kingdom to order the Dennis Lance, taking delivery of a single example with East Lancs EL2000 bodywork in 1991;[4]the operator would subsequently take delivery of two more EL2000s and an Optare Sigma built on the Lance chassis during 1994.[5][6]London BusessubsidiarySelkentlater took delivery of 16 Alexander PS bodied Lances in April 1992 for use onroute 36B,replacingAEC Routemastersused on the service.[7]

The Dennis Lance was most popular on the Plaxton Verde chassis, with the largest orders coming fromBadgerline GroupcompaniesMidland Red WestandYorkshire Rider,the latter of which were delivered toHuddersfieldfor 'Flagship' services.[8][9][10]Orders of Verde-bodied Lances continued underFirstBus,with a further 30 delivered underFirstBusfor the rebrandedLeeds City Linkoperation.[11]London Buses subsidiarySelkent'sCatfordgarage would also delivery of twelve dual-door Verdes on Dennis Lance chassis in 1994 for use onLondon Buses route 208.[12][better source needed]Other operators of Verde-bodied Lances includedBusways Travel Services,Clydeside 2000,North Western,Nottingham City Transport,Potteries Motor Traction,[citation needed]andSouth Wales Transport.[13]

Lances built on other bodies proved particularly popular during 1993. The Caldaire Group took delivery of 30 Lances with Alexander Strider bodywork in 1993, distributing 18 of the order to Yorkshire Woollen and the remaining 12 toWest Riding.[14]with municipal bus companiesGrimsby-Cleethorpes TransportandYellow BusesofBournemouthtaking fleets of nine and six Lances with East Lancs EL2000 bodies respectively in the same year.[15][16]31 Lances with Northern Counties Paladin bodywork were delivered toMetroline'sCricklewood bus garagefor routes113and302,[17]five with Northern Counties Paladin bodies were delivered toEastern Countiesin 1993.[citation needed]

Towards the end of the step-entrance Lance's production,Go-Ahead Northern's Gateshead & District operation took delivery of fifteen Lances with Optare Delta bodywork in 1994,[6]and on the Optare Sigma body, fellowGo-Ahead GroupsubsidiaryBrighton & Hovetook delivery of 20 during 1996 whileWellglade GroupoperatorTrent Busestook delivery of seventeen between 1994 and 1995.[18]British BussubsidiaryLondon & Countrytook delivery of fifteen East Lancs EL2000 bodied Lances in April 1996,[19]while the last step-entrance Lances produced for the United Kingdom were thirteen with Northern Counties Paladin bodies forFirst Eastern National,followed by three forFirst PMT,in 1997.[citation needed]

Lance SLF

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MetrolineWright Pathfinderbodied Dennis Lance SLF onroute 186
A-LineBerkhofbodied Dennis Lance SLF in May 2009

In March 1993, the"Super Low Floor"Dennis Lance SLF was unveiled, becoming the first low-floor bus chassis manufactured in the United Kingdom. the Lance SLF came with an independent kneeling front suspension as standard, capable of lowering the step-free entrance from 320 millimetres (13 in) to 250 millimetres (9.8 in). A wheelchair ramp was also provided as standard. The Lance SLF was also the first new bus chassis in the United Kingdom to be fitted withdisc brakesas standard, which were manufactured byGirling.[20][21][22]

Of around 105 Dennis Lance SLFs built, the majority were built withWright Pathfinderbodywork. The most notable of these were 38 dual-doored examples forLondon Busesfor use on the first London bus routes to be converted to low-floor operation. The recipients of this order wereLondon Unitedfor use onroute 120,Metrolinefor use onroute 186,andCentreWestfor use onroute 222.[23]A single-door Pathfinder would later be launched in 1994, marketed towards bus operators based outside London. The first of these, part of a trial project funded by theDepartment of Transport,would be delivered toGo-Ahead Northern's Coastline Buses operation for use on services linkingWhitley Bay,TynemouthandNorth Shields,[24]making Coastline one of the first bus operators in the United Kingdom outside of London to place low-floor buses into service.[25]

Further Pathfinder-bodied Lance SLFs included five delivered to London & Country,[26]with six also delivered toBadgerlinefor service inBath,[27]and a sole example delivered toWestern Nationalduring 1995. Ten Pathfinder bodied Lance SLFs were supplied with 40% funding fromEssex County CounciltoWest Midlands Travel'sCounty Bus & Coachsubsidiary,[28]Southend TransportandHedingham Omnibusin 1994, part of the UK's first low-floor project to be funded by a county council without funding from the government or the European Union.[29]Some Pathfinder-bodied Lance SLFs would eventually be prematurely withdrawn from service due to suspension strut failures, a result of water ingress caused by outside storage of the chassis at Wright'sBallymenafactory before the bodies were built.[1]

The Lance SLF chassis was also built withBerkhof Excellence 1000NL bodywork, with 30 dual-purpose specialist vehicles delivered to theBritish Airports Authorityfor use on staff shuttle duties atHeathrow Airportbetween 1994 and 1995.[30]Five each were also delivered toStagecoach East KentandStagecoach Ribble,[31]the latter of which were the last Lance SLFs produced before the type was discontinued in 1996.[1]

Arrow

[edit]
Aintree CoachlineNorthern Counties Palatine IIbodied Dennis Arrow in April 2017

A double-deck version of the Lance was launched in 1995 as a replacement for theDennis Dominatorchassis. Later renamed to theDennis Arrow,[19]it was available withNorthern Counties Palatine IIandEast Lancs E TypeandPyoneerbodywork, and only differed from the step-entrance single-deck Lance through the addition of an anti-roll bar and shock absorbers being moved towards the rear of the chassis.[1]At a maximum capacity of 84 seats and 16 standing passengers, the Arrow could carry a total of 100 passengers.[32][33]

The Arrow was sold to just five operators in the United Kingdom, withCapital Citybustaking a total 54 of the 73 Arrows built with both Palatine II and Pyoneer bodywork,[34][35]London & Countrywho took ten with EL2000 bodywork,[19]andNottingham City Transportwho took four with Palatine II bodywork.[36]Smaller operators included Aintree Coachline, who took a single Arrow with Palatine II bodywork, London Coachlines, who took a single Arrow with Pyoneer bodywork, and two purpose-built playbuses built with both bodies.[37]The Dennis Arrow would be superseded by thelow-floorDennis Trident 2.

Exports

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SMRT BusesDuple Metsecbodied in August 2009

The step-entrance single-deck Dennis Lance had a level of export success toContinental Europe.In the Netherlands, a single Lance with Berkhof Excellence 1000 NL bodies were delivered toNoord-Zuid-Hollandsche Stoomtramweg-Maatschappij(NZH) in 1995, resulting in a repeat order for six being delivered to the operator for use inHaarlemduring 1996.[38]Three Lances withDuple Metsecbodywork were also exported toMiejskie Zakłady Autobusowe(MZA) ofWarsaw,Poland between 1992 and 1993.

The Lance also proved popular in the Asian export market. A joint venture between Dennis and Malaysian manufacturer UMW Specialist Vehicles would buildcomplete knock-downLance chassis (known as theUMW-Dennis Lance) for the Southeast Asian market.[1]In Malaysia, a fleet ofDuple Metsecbodied UMW-Dennis Lances were delivered to Naeila Corps, shortly before the company was bought over byCauseway Link,while Transit Link JB also operated a small number of similar examples. In Singapore, meanwhile,Trans-Island Bus Servicesordered 72 Lances, of which 52 were built by UMW-Dennis; most were fitted with Duple Metsec bodywork while the last two were fitted withVolgrenbodywork. A single UMW-Dennis Lance with Duple Metsec bodywork was also operated byRitchies Coachlinesin New Zealand.

In Hong Kong, 24 Lances withAlexander PSbodywork were delivered toKowloon Motor Busin 1992.[39][40]

References

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  1. ^abcdefGoundry, Andy (23 March 2020).Dennis Buses and Other Vehicles.Crowood. pp. 141–147.ISBN978-1-78500-708-8.Retrieved14 May2024.
  2. ^"Lance creates a stir".Commercial Motor.Temple Press. 7 March 1991. p. 22.Retrieved2 December2014.
  3. ^Cole, Martin (15 April 1994)."Vehicle Preview: Optare Sigma Dennis Lance".Bus & Coach Buyer.No. 251. Spalding. p. 40.Retrieved15 May2024.
  4. ^"Dennis Lance: first order".Commercial Motor.Temple Press. 5 September 1991. p. 18.Retrieved2 December2014.
  5. ^"Grants for upgrade".Coach & Bus Week.No. 61. Peterborough: Emap. 17 April 1993. p. 7.Retrieved15 May2024.
  6. ^ab"First Lances".Coach & Bus Week.No. 109. Peterborough: Emap. 26 March 1994. p. 11.Retrieved20 May2024.
  7. ^"Selkent - new look".Coach & Bus Week.No. 11. Peterborough: Emap. 2 May 1992. p. 14.Retrieved15 May2024.
  8. ^"Plaxton for Badgerline".Commercial Motor.Temple Press. 20 August 1992. p. 16.Retrieved15 May2024.
  9. ^"Rider launch flagship".Bus & Coach Buyer.No. 294. Spalding. 17 February 1995. p. 17.Retrieved15 May2024.
  10. ^"First orders".Coach & Bus Week.No. 157. Peterborough: Emap. 4 March 1995. p. 12.Retrieved15 May2024.Yorkshire Rider has become Britain's biggest Plaxton Verde user, with the delivery of 48 on Dennis Lance chassis.
  11. ^"New buses and a facelift for Leeds City Link".Bus & Coach Buyer.No. 348. Spalding: Glen-Holland Ltd. 8 March 1996. p. 20.The order includes the delivery of 30 Dennis Lance single-deck buses with Plaxton Verde bodywork and 30 9.8 metre Dennis Darts with Plaxton Pointer bodies.
  12. ^Smith, Ian (5 April 2000)."LV".Ian's Bus Stop.Archived fromthe originalon 13 April 2008.Retrieved15 May2024.
  13. ^Isaacs, Jonathan (21 October 1993)."£1m buses to take on BR".South Wales Evening Post.Swansea. p. 1.Retrieved15 May2024– viaNewspapers.com.
  14. ^"Caldaire: £4m orders".Coach & Bus Week.No. 44. Peterborough: Emap. 19 December 1992. p. 8.Retrieved15 May2024.
  15. ^Jarosz, Andrew (17 April 1993)."East Lancs Lances delivered".Coach & Bus Week.No. 61. Peterborough: Emap. p. 10.Retrieved15 May2024.
  16. ^Millar, Alan (15 April 1994). "In Service Report: Dennis Lance - East Lancs EL2000".Bus & Coach Buyer.No. 251. Spalding. p. 40.
  17. ^"More Northern Counties body orders".Bus & Coach Buyer.No. 180. Spalding. 6 November 1992. p. 5.Metroline will receive 31 Dennis Lances with 37 seats, two of which will have coach style seating.
  18. ^Jones, Stuart (3 May 1996). "Manufacturer Focus: EXCEL - Optare's low floor takes to the road".Bus & Coach Buyer.No. 356. Spalding: Glen-Holland Ltd. pp. 9–13.Among recent deliveries have been [...] Sigmas to Trent and the Brighton & Hove subsidiary of the Go Ahead group which is in the process of taking a batch of 20.
  19. ^abcMorgan, Mike (20 April 1996)."Dominator makes way for the lighter Lance".Coach & Bus Week.No. 214. Peterborough: Emap. p. 31.Retrieved1 June2024.
  20. ^"Dennis gets lowdown on Lance".Commercial Motor.Temple Press. 4 March 1993. p. 11.Retrieved15 May2024.
  21. ^"Lowdown on a Lance".Commercial Motor.Temple Press. 27 May 1993. p. 27.Retrieved2 December2014.
  22. ^Simpson, Richard (12 September 1992)."Details out of first UK low-floor bus".Coach & Bus Week.No. 30. Peterborough: Emap. p. 4.Retrieved15 May2024.
  23. ^"38 Lance SLF Pathfinders for LT mobility trial routes".Bus & Coach Buyer.No. 182. Spalding. 20 November 1992. p. 4.
  24. ^"Wright launches single-door Pathfinder".Commercial Motor.Temple Press. 14 April 1994. p. 15.Retrieved15 May2024.
  25. ^Lyons, Mark (30 June 2022). "Go-Ahead Northern becomes Go-Ahead Group".The Go-Ahead Group: The First 25 Years.Key Publishing.pp. 18–19.ISBN978-1-80282-082-9.Retrieved15 May2024.
  26. ^"More Dennises ordered by British Bus".Bus & Coach Buyer.No. 307. Spalding. 19 May 1995. p. 4.A 26th Lance will be an additional low floor SLF version, with Wright Pathfinder body, similar to four already running on the company's Croydon-Guildford service.
  27. ^Curtis, Martin; Walker, Mike (2013).Badgerline: Bristol's Country Buses.Hersham: Ian Allan Publishing. p. 75.ISBN978-0-7110-3634-5.Retrieved15 May2024.
  28. ^"Essex low-floor service launched".Coach & Bus Week.No. 146. Peterborough: Emap. 10 December 1994. p. 5.
  29. ^"County awaits outcome".Coach & Bus Week.Peterborough: Emap. 1994.
  30. ^Cole, Martin (6 October 1995)."Coach & Bus '95 Stand Guide".Bus & Coach Buyer.No. 327. Spalding. p. 16.Retrieved15 May2024.
  31. ^"Bullocks gets first five Manchester grant-aided low-floors".Coach & Bus Week.No. 195. Peterborough: Emap. 25 November 1995. p. 27.
  32. ^Morgan, Mike (11 May 1996)."Making a valid point".Coach & Bus Week.No. 217. Peterborough: Emap. pp. 24–26.Retrieved1 June2024.
  33. ^Morris, Stephen (July 1996)."Arrow takes a bow".Buses.No. 496. Hersham: Ian Allan Publishing. pp. 27–29.Retrieved15 May2024.
  34. ^Smith, Ian (5 November 2014)."Dennis Arrow".Ian's Bus Stop.Archived fromthe originalon 12 November 2016.Retrieved2 December2014.
  35. ^"Arrows 'right on target'".Coach & Bus Week.No. 299. Peterborough: Emap. 11 December 1997. p. 30.Retrieved1 June2024.
  36. ^"NCT hits the bullseye".Coach & Bus Week.No. 226. Peterborough: Emap. 13 July 1996. p. 24.Retrieved15 May2024.
  37. ^Morgan, Mike (11 May 1996)."Targeting a ton".Coach & Bus Week.No. 217. Peterborough: Emap. p. 10.Retrieved1 June2024.
  38. ^Lidstone, John G. (July 1996)."Fleet News International".Buses.No. 496. Hersham: Ian Allan Publishing. p. 54.Retrieved15 May2024.
  39. ^"Kneeling tests for Lance".Commercial Motor.Temple Press. 9 July 1992.Retrieved15 May2024.
  40. ^"Hong Kong Buses Part 3: Kowloon Motor Bus".Fleetline.No. 249. Sydney: Transport Enthusiasts Society of South Australia. July 1997. p. 118.
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