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The Gillig Low Floor (originally named Gillig H2000LF and also nicknamed Gillig Advantage [1]) is a transit bus manufactured by Gillig since 1997. [2] Introduced as a second product range by the company (alongside the Gillig Phantom), the Low Floor later replaced the Phantom entirely. Since 2008, the model line has become the sole vehicle ...
Gillig (formerly Gillig Brothers) is an American designer and manufacturer of buses. The company headquarters, along with its manufacturing operations, is located in Livermore, California (in the East Bay region of the San Francisco Bay Area). By volume, Gillig is the second-largest transit bus manufacturer in North America (behind New Flyer). [1]
SolTrans operates a mixed fleet of buses. When SolTrans was fully integrated in 2011, it introduced Gillig Low Floor hybrid buses for local bus service, [25] while the intercity routes continue to use MCI D4500 buses. SolTrans continues to use a small number of Orion V buses previously used by Vallejo Transit.
Most of the GMT fleet is made up of Gillig low-floor transit buses, although a number of New Flyer and Proterra buses are used. MCI long-distance buses and various shuttle buses built on Ford E-350 chassis have been purchased for intercity routes and transit service in outlying towns, respectively. Note that this list is incomplete.
Gillig Transit Coach School Bus; L. Gillig Low Floor This page was last edited on 9 August 2020, at 21:05 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative ...
Gillig Corporation Phantom 40' 2801–2845 (1993) 2840 (training only) 45 2013 [166] Bought from AC Transit in 2005 for reserve fleet. 2840 was planned to be auctioned in 2019, but the auction was withdrawn. It has been used as a training bus since April 2018. Orion Bus Industries I Citycruiser: 9001-9045 (1990) 9010 45 2008
The Gillig Transit Coach School Bus is a series of buses that were produced by the American bus manufacturer Gillig from 1940 to 1982. Alongside its namesake usage as a yellow school bus , the Transit Coach also served as the basis of motorcoaches and other commercial-use vehicles.
Disney Transport operates a fleet of nearly 490 buses, [17] primarily 40-foot-long (12 m) Gillig Low Floor models. The fleet currently is the third largest fleet of any Florida transportation system, behind Miami's Metrobus and the Jacksonville Transportation Authority .