Home Game: Driving A Minibus In The Uk

Home Game: Driving a Minibus in the UK

by

Louise Slee

Here’s a question: if a minibus is just like a car, why am I reading about driving one in the UK? Good question but the answer might surprise you. Yes, a minibus is like a car in that it has four wheels and the expected controls, lights and so forth. However, there are elements of using a minibus in the UK that differ from those applying to driving a car. This is especially important, as will become clear, when passengers are being carried, although the requirements are sensible enough to be met permanently.

The first piece of advice is a simple one: carry a fire extinguisher and a first aid kit. The reasons for doing his are obvious but the principle can be extended. A good torch, a warning triangle and a reflective waistcoat or jacket take up very little room and could be life-savers in certain circumstances; carry these items too.

Next on the list are practices concerning the use of a minibus’s onboard equipment. Switching on the sidelights when parking by the roadside after dark is a fairly obvious move, as is the use of the vehicle’s hazard warnings lights as and when necessary. However, there are less evident tips. For example, using the minibus’s hooter between 2300 and 0700 is frowned upon but don’t forget that doors and diesel engines are noisy too. When passengers are alighting in residential areas late at night, don’t keep the engine ticking over for minutes and take over the responsibility of opening and closing doors yourself. If in any doubt about why, imagine it is you who are nodding off to sleep behind those curtained bedroom windows!

Now for the dynamic aspect of minibus driving. Unless you’ve had access to Count Zobrowski’s original Chitty Chitty Bang Bang (raced at Brooklands in 1921, with a 23-litre, 6-cylinder engine), you’ll find a minibus feels very big and heavy at first. All you need to remember is that a minibus doesn’t accelerate or stop as quickly as a car can, isn’t designed to take corners fast and takes up more road space.

Next, speed limits. These can best be understood by consulting the following list.

Urban and residential areas: 30mph

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vVkDrIacHJM[/youtube]

A-class (single carriageway) roads: 50mph

Dual carriageways: 60mph

Motorways: 70mph

Motorways while towing a trailer: 60mph; you cannot use the fast lane while towing

What some minibus drivers forget, particularly when passengers are carried, is the matter of responsibility. As the driver, you are responsible for the comfort and safety of your passengers, and there are some simple tips to help you with this.

Thinks of the situation in terms of ‘pre-flight checks’ before setting off –

Are your route and stops planned out?

Are the windows and windscreen clean?

Have you enough fuel on board?

Are the tyres and lights all fine?

Are all the passengers seated?

Are they wearing their seatbelts?

Are all the doors closed?

When actually on the road, you need to keep a weather eye on how you drive. This may seem self-evident but many drivers tend to think in terms of themselves only. Harsh acceleration and braking, overenthusiastic cornering and excessive speed can do more than merely make passengers uncomfortable; it might make them sick!

Driving a minibus is easy but requires a little forethought. Attend to the above and you’ll find it makes the going that much easier.

Louise Slee is a Web Marketer and driving enthusiast for over 25 years, with no penalty points to date! See her articles at

Minibus Club

where she imparts some useful driving and travel tips when you are out and about in your

minibus

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Home Game: Driving a Minibus in the UK