The Dennis Dart is a rear-engined single-decker midibus chassis that was introduced by Dennis of Guildford, England, in 1989, replacing the Dennis Domino. Initially built as a high-floor design, in 1996 the Low-floor bus second generation Dennis Dart SLF was launched. In 2001, production of the Dart SLF passed to TransBus International, during which time it was sold as the TransBus Dart SLF; Alexander Dennis took over production in 2004, renaming the product as the Alexander Dennis Dart SLF.
More than 12,600Darts were produced in total during a 19-year production run. Most were purchased by United Kingdom operators, although examples were sold in Europe, North America, Australia and Hong Kong. In the United States, the Dart SLF, with Alexander ALX200 bodywork, was built and sold by Thomas Built Buses as the Thomas SLF 200.
The first generation Dart ceased production in 1998. Production of the Dart SLF continued until 2008, when it was replaced by the Alexander Dennis Enviro200.
It was launched in October 1988 at the British International Motor Show and was originally only available with Duple Dartline bodywork. It was wide and was initially available in the length of , but later available in lengths of and . It was powered by a Cummins UK 6BT engine and coupled to the Allison AT545 gearbox.
In 1989, the Dart chassis was made available for bodying by other manufacturers. In 1990, Wadham Stringer became the next builder to body the Dart with a body called the Portsdown, but it was sold in small numbers and replaced by the Caetano Compass in 1995. In the same year, Wrightbus bodied the Dart with the Wright Handybus. In early 1991, Plaxton launched the Plaxton Pointer (which was initially designated as Reeve Burgess Pointer as it was built at Reeve Burgess's plant, until later in the same year when it was transferred to Plaxton's Scarborough plant). Later in 1991, East Lancs bodied the Dart with its EL2000. In the latter half of 1991, Alexander launched the Alexander Dash.
As the Low-floor bus single-decker buses became more popular in late 1990s, orders for High-floor Dart dropped heavily and production ceased in 1998. Over 3,400 first generation Darts were produced.
First Cityline in Bristol trialled a pair of Plaxton Pointer bodied Dart MPDs in 1996, which were powered by six CNG canisters mounted on their roofs. These buses were branded by First as 'GasBus'.
It was initially offered with the low-floor bus version of the Pointer bodywork (which was notable for being wider), replaced by the updated Pointer 2 in 1997. It was also offered with a wide variety of bodies, namely the East Lancs Spryte, UVG Urbanstar (later renamed as the Caetano Compass; replaced by the Caetano Nimbus in 1999), the Wright Crusader, Alexander ALX200 (discontinued in 2001 with the formation of TransBus International and being replaced by the Pointer 2), Marshall Capital (developed from the C37; later built by MCV), Caetano Nimbus and MCV Evolution (since 2005 - a further evolution of the Marshall bodywork).
With the move to Euro III emissions in October 2001, the new Cummins ISBe engine was launched, with the four-cylinder -litre model being used in all lengths except the version, which uses the more powerful six-cylinder, version. The Cummins ISBe Euro IV engine became available on the Dart SLF chassis since late 2006. In 2007, the Dennis Dart SLF was superseded by the Alexander Dennis Enviro200. Over 9,100 low floor Darts were built, the last entering service with Park Island Transport in March 2008.
It was launched at the American Public Transportation Association Expo 1999. Initially built with a Cummins engine, it was later sold with a Mercedes-Benz engine. After sales failed to line up to expectations, the joint venture was dissolved in 2003.
In Macau, Transmac took delivery of ten dual-door and air-conditioned Pointer-bodied Darts in January 1996.
A Transbus Dart SLF built with Neobus bodywork was delivered to Malta in 2002 by Gasan Transport Systems Ltd and presented to members of the Maltese Public Transport Association. A second demonstrator was built by Transbus but was not exported to Malta, later entering service in the United Kingdom with Flimwell independent operator Hams Travel.
Alternative fuels
Second generation (Dart SLF)
Dart SPD
Dart MPD
Narrow width Dart SLF
Thomas SLF 200
Exports
Australia
Canada
Hong Kong & Macau
Malta
Netherlands
Portugal
Singapore
Further reading
External links
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