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  2. Gillig Low Floor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gillig_Low_Floor

    The Gillig Low Floor (originally named Gillig H2000LF and also nicknamed Gillig Advantage [1]) is a transit bus manufactured by Gillig since 1997. [2] The second low-floor bus design introduced in the United States (after the New Flyer Low Floor), the Low Floor originally served as a second product range for the company alongside the Gillig Phantom.

  3. New Flyer High Floor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Flyer_High_Floor

    For example, a New Flyer D40-88 is a 40-foot (nominal) rigid high-floor bus with conventional diesel power, built in 1988. The -## suffix was used between 1987 and 1990. . After this time, no suffix was added to the model number, while buses from the Low Floor series, which were introduced in 1991, did have LF for a suf

  4. Gillig - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gillig

    Length Notes Gillig Low Floor. 1996–present: Low-floor transit bus: 29, 35, 40 ft (8.8, 10.7, 12.2 m) [25] Originally designed as airport shuttle bus (Gillig H2000LF); released as the Gillig Advantage transit bus in 1998. Front end-cap (windshield and destination sign) redesigned in 2002.

  5. North American Bus Industries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_American_Bus_Industries

    These metal-structured buses consisted of the standard-floor model 416 (40-foot length), the low-floor Model LFW (produced in 31-foot, 35-foot and 40-foot lengths) and the low-floor BRT (produced in 42-foot and 60-foot lengths). CompoBus shells were assembled at Kapsovár and finished in Anniston until the end of production in 2013. [35] [36]

  6. New Flyer Low Floor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Flyer_Low_Floor

    The New Flyer Low Floor is a line of low-floor transit buses that was manufactured by New Flyer Industries between 1991 and 2014. It was available in 30-foot rigid, 35-foot rigid, 40-foot rigid, and 60-foot articulated lengths.

  7. NABI LFW - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NABI_LFW

    For example, a NABI 40-LFW is a 40' (nominal) rigid low floor transit bus. At launch, 35-foot and 40-foot nominal lengths were announced, with the 40-LFW more popular with fixed-route transit agencies. A 60-foot articulated variant (60-LFW) was ordered in 2001. The 31-foot NABI 31-LFW was introduced with the first 'Gen II' restyle in 2008.

  8. Ride On (bus) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ride_On_(bus)

    That same year, 39 of the 29 feet buses (42001D-42039D) and 9 of the 40 feet Gillig Advantage Diesel buses (44145D-44153D) entered service. 42022D-42039D were Gaithersburgs first 29 ft gilligs assigned to this bus depot to operate on lower capacity routes, including 4 Nicholson routes on the weekends. 42003D-42021D were at the Gaithersburg bus ...

  9. Gillig Transit Coach School Bus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Gillig_Transit_Coach_School_Bus

    After 1982, Gillig discontinued the Transit Coach after 42 years of production, concentrating its resources on the Gillig Phantom transit bus. For 1986, the company reentered school bus production, developing a school bus variant of the Phantom that was offered from 1986 through 1993; the high-floor Phantom was manufactured through 2008.