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Classic Military Vehicle Magazine No.116 The Money Pit Edição anterior

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My name is John Blackman and I am a bus enthusiast.
Actually, I’m not. But I was once. During my schooldays
it was quite the thing to go bus spotting. You could buy books
listing all the serial numbers and cross them off as each was
‘spotted’. Train spotters (I admit to that too) did the same
thing. It was all good innocent fun that would probably seem
quaint if not a little weird to most youngsters nowadays.
Looking back, I’m not sure why we did it. But I do remember
Saturdays and Sundays buying a Red Rover ticket and
travelling back and forth across London with a few similarly
inclined friends, our duffel bags stuffed with sandwiches,
going from one bus garage to another in the hope of sneaking
inside when no one was looking and ‘cabbing’ (getting up into
the driver’s seat) as many buses as possible.
I was reminded of these simple pleasures when I visited
Ensignbus to shoot the Clubmobile recreation on page 24,
because inside the garages that housed its vintage fleet
there were rows of just the sort of buses I remember from
my Red-Roving days. I’m better behaved now than I used to
be, so didn’t attempt to ‘cab’ any of them, but I did climb the
stairs up to the top deck of RT8, the red double-decker posed
alongside the Clubmobile in my photos. I don’t mind admitting
to the rush of emotion that it gave me; the sight and smell of
the bus took me straight back to my schooldays when, at a
few minutes after 4pm, my friends and I would jump aboard
a bus exactly like RT8 and scramble up the stairs to grab the
best seats, either at the very front or the very back. The point of all the
foregoing biographical waffle is that if I got such a kick out revisiting my past via a big red bus, what must veterans feel when they come across a
restored duplicate of the vehicle they once served on? These things
we all have a passion for... they’re not just mechanical artefacts are they? There’s much more to it than that.
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Classic Military Vehicle

No.116 The Money Pit My name is John Blackman and I am a bus enthusiast. Actually, I’m not. But I was once. During my schooldays it was quite the thing to go bus spotting. You could buy books listing all the serial numbers and cross them off as each was ‘spotted’. Train spotters (I admit to that too) did the same thing. It was all good innocent fun that would probably seem quaint if not a little weird to most youngsters nowadays. Looking back, I’m not sure why we did it. But I do remember Saturdays and Sundays buying a Red Rover ticket and travelling back and forth across London with a few similarly inclined friends, our duffel bags stuffed with sandwiches, going from one bus garage to another in the hope of sneaking inside when no one was looking and ‘cabbing’ (getting up into the driver’s seat) as many buses as possible. I was reminded of these simple pleasures when I visited Ensignbus to shoot the Clubmobile recreation on page 24, because inside the garages that housed its vintage fleet there were rows of just the sort of buses I remember from my Red-Roving days. I’m better behaved now than I used to be, so didn’t attempt to ‘cab’ any of them, but I did climb the stairs up to the top deck of RT8, the red double-decker posed alongside the Clubmobile in my photos. I don’t mind admitting to the rush of emotion that it gave me; the sight and smell of the bus took me straight back to my schooldays when, at a few minutes after 4pm, my friends and I would jump aboard a bus exactly like RT8 and scramble up the stairs to grab the best seats, either at the very front or the very back. The point of all the foregoing biographical waffle is that if I got such a kick out revisiting my past via a big red bus, what must veterans feel when they come across a restored duplicate of the vehicle they once served on? These things we all have a passion for... they’re not just mechanical artefacts are they? There’s much more to it than that.


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Classic Military Vehicle  |  No.116 The Money Pit  


My name is John Blackman and I am a bus enthusiast.
Actually, I’m not. But I was once. During my schooldays
it was quite the thing to go bus spotting. You could buy books
listing all the serial numbers and cross them off as each was
‘spotted’. Train spotters (I admit to that too) did the same
thing. It was all good innocent fun that would probably seem
quaint if not a little weird to most youngsters nowadays.
Looking back, I’m not sure why we did it. But I do remember
Saturdays and Sundays buying a Red Rover ticket and
travelling back and forth across London with a few similarly
inclined friends, our duffel bags stuffed with sandwiches,
going from one bus garage to another in the hope of sneaking
inside when no one was looking and ‘cabbing’ (getting up into
the driver’s seat) as many buses as possible.
I was reminded of these simple pleasures when I visited
Ensignbus to shoot the Clubmobile recreation on page 24,
because inside the garages that housed its vintage fleet
there were rows of just the sort of buses I remember from
my Red-Roving days. I’m better behaved now than I used to
be, so didn’t attempt to ‘cab’ any of them, but I did climb the
stairs up to the top deck of RT8, the red double-decker posed
alongside the Clubmobile in my photos. I don’t mind admitting
to the rush of emotion that it gave me; the sight and smell of
the bus took me straight back to my schooldays when, at a
few minutes after 4pm, my friends and I would jump aboard
a bus exactly like RT8 and scramble up the stairs to grab the
best seats, either at the very front or the very back. The point of all the
foregoing biographical waffle is that if I got such a kick out revisiting my past via a big red bus, what must veterans feel when they come across a
restored duplicate of the vehicle they once served on? These things
we all have a passion for... they’re not just mechanical artefacts are they? There’s much more to it than that.
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Classic Military Vehicle Magazine

Brought to you by Key Publishing Ltd, the Europe’s Leading Transport Publisher.

Now incorporating the best of Military Machines International magazine, Classic Military Vehicle is the best-selling publication in the UK dedicated to the coverage of all historic military vehicles. From the turn of the 20th century, when warfare started to become increasingly mechanised, right up to the Gulf War of the 1990s, all kinds of military hardware that featured in conflicts around the world is profiled extensively in Classic Military Vehicle magazine every month.

Regular features include:

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Classic Military Vehicle

wonderful magazine Revisto 16 abril 2020

Best Military Vehicle Mag Out there

There are many specialist military vehicle mags, but this one is still the best for the range of topics / articles and quality. Revisto 01 outubro 2018

Found it again

Didn't know this magazine was still going as its not in my local shop anymore. Great to find it still is and thinking about a digital subscription now as it is so much cheaper, and I think I prefer the digital version without the staples in it. Revisto 16 julho 2013

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