Class: Bus, Double-deck — Model origin:
00:41:26
Minor action vehicle or used in only a short scene
Author | Message |
---|---|
◊ 2013-10-11 02:15 |
![]() |
◊ 2013-10-11 19:58 |
AEC Regent RT ? |
◊ 2013-10-29 14:53 |
Yes, the Leyland RTL had a deeper radiator shell |
◊ 2015-07-14 14:54 |
Used to recreate the moment that the Webley Mk VI Revolver was discovered hidden in one of seats on the top deck of the Number 19 bus. The revolver was used in the murder of a Battersea Power Station wages clerk who was shot in June 1953 and the team is re-investigating the case due to allegations made by the granddaughter of the man who was hung for the crime that he was the wrong man hung due to police incompetence and corruption. If the original cops who were on the case at the time were still alive to hear this, they would either take this allegation as a insult and threaten to sue her for defamation of each of their character or would dismissed her as a silly twit wasting her time poking holes in their old cases. I also checked the bus advertisement sticker for Typhoo and there was a company in Britain in the 1950s called Typhoo, it was a tea company formed at Digbeth in Central Birmingham in 1903. The company merged with Schweppes in 1968 and was later merged with Cadbury when they merged with Schweppes the following year to form Cadbury Schweppes. In 1986, Cadbury Schweppes sold Typhoo to form Premier Brand before being Premier Brand itself was acquired by Premier Food in 1990, by 2005, Typhoo was sold to the Apeejay Surrendra Group in India for £80 million. Typhoo is still in business in Britain as The Typhoo Tea Company. Part of the complex at Digbeth where the main office was has since been demolished into a vacant lot but part of the former factory is still there with the company's canal basin. Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Typhoo -- Last edit: 2017-01-20 13:56:55 |
◊ 2022-07-13 11:14 |
![]() It has the Leyland radiator and from its appearance it is a most probably London Bus Museum's KGK 803 RTL139 Link to "www.londonbusmuseum.com" ![]() Buses on Screen also came to the same conclusion here http://www.busesonscreen.net/screen/index.php?p=screentv.tvn.newt |