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Neoplan USA

Neoplan USA was a major transit bus manufacturing company based in Denver, Colorado. It started as a subsidiary of the German corporation Neoplan in 1981 with its main factory and headquarters in Lamar, Colorado. In 1998, Neoplan USA was acquired by Willis Stein & Partners and became an independent licensee of designs from the German company Neoplan. The company declared bankruptcy in 2006.[1]

Neoplan USA
IndustryTransit
Founded1981 (Lamar, Colorado as a subsidiary of Neoplan)
Defunct2006
FateBankruptcy/liquidation
Headquarters
ProductsBuses
Number of employees
625

The headquarters were moved to Denver in 2004.[2] Neoplan USA also had production facilities in Honey Brook, Pennsylvania (1986), and Brownsville, Texas (2001–02); the Honey Brook site was retained as a parts distribution center.

History edit

 
"Intermediate Size Bus" assembled by Gillig under a license from Neoplan, during testing with AC Transit

Prior to opening its own factory, Neoplan broke into the United States transit market by licensing a 30-foot (9 m) long bus design to Gillig, who assembled and sold it as the Gillig-Neoplan from 1976 to 1978.[3][4]: 4–72, 4–94, 4–96  At the time Neoplan was better known for its intercity coaches rather than its transit buses. The company participated in the development of the VöV-Standard-Bus in the late 1970s and built transit buses for Saudi Arabia in 1979 and 1980.[4]: 4–95, 4–96  In February 1980, company officials announced they would open a plant in either Lamar or Clearfield, Pennsylvania, ultimately selecting Lamar for its mild winters and sunny weather.[5] After announcing its intentions to build its factory, Neoplan USA began soliciting bids for transit buses.[4]: 4–96 

Origin and expansion edit

Neoplan USA opened its first American manufacturing facility in May 1981. It was Neoplan's fifth factory worldwide, a 139,000-square-foot (12,900 m2) plant on an 18-acre (7.3 ha) site; construction took just four months.[6] The city of Lamar, a farming town of 8,000 that faced tough economic times, pushed to have the plant built in the town in the hope of diversifying their economic base. It donated land and roads for the manufacturing site. The street that went to the plant was renamed Gottlob Auwaerter [de] Drive for the founder of Neoplan. Company officials reportedly sought a rural site "because of their conviction, based on experience in Europe, that rural workers have a better work ethic and are more reliable and productive employees".[7] An additional incentive was the hot water supplied from the city's neighboring power plant to heat the factory.[8] Neoplan started a program at the local community college to train workers, and trainee foremen were sent to West Germany for eight weeks; at the end of the overseas program, the foremen had to build a bus that would take them to the airport.[5]

Neoplan USA manufactured standard-floor buses, low-floor buses, and articulated buses, with each bus taking 14 days to build. After each bus was completed, the workers were given a ride to their homes in the bus to critique their work.[9] When Neoplan USA opened in 1981, company officials said the plant would employ up to 500 people, and manufacture as many as 500 vehicles a year on two assembly lines. Their first contracts included 50 transit buses for Metropolitan Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority (MARTA)[10] and 40 for the Milwaukee County Transit System (MCTS). Contracts for another 500 were being bid on.[5] The buses built for Atlanta and Milwaukee were conventional "New Look"-type buses designated "Atlantis" or N-416, and were the only "New Look" buses assembled by Neoplan USA, which also was offering the "Transliner" or N412, an "Advanced Design" bus to compete with the GM Rapid Transit Series and Flxible Metro.[4]: 4–97, 4–99, 4–101 

 
PA Transit #3564, part of the 1982 order from PennDOT

Later in 1981, its first year of operation, Neoplan USA sold 46 articulated buses to MARTA. This was also a year when articulated buses, 60-foot-long (18 m) buses that bent in the middle, were gaining interest with transit departments. As the federal government was phasing out subsidies for mass transit, these buses got attention because they were cost effective. They carried more passengers and saved on labor costs, as they required only one driver.[11] Another significant early contract was awarded for 1,000 "Transliner" buses as a pooled purchase coordinated by PennDOT in 1982 for 16 transit agencies in the state of Pennsylvania, primarily to PA Transit (410) and SEPTA (450), which led to Neoplan exploring locations for a second factory in that state.[12] It was the largest single bus contract in the U.S. to date.[13] The first buses, nicknamed "Pennliners", were delivered to Pennsylvania in October 1982, and were assembled in Colorado.[14]

Neoplan USA's share of the United States bus market was 1.3 percent in 1981, grew to 10.4 percent in 1982, and went to 25.2 percent in 1983 based on production orders.[15] By December 1982, Neoplan USA had completed more than 250 buses.[9] After announcing plans to open a second plant in Pennsylvania in 1982,[16] Neoplan USA showed a model of the bus assembly factory it planned to build in 1984, located in Honey Brook, a 70,000-square-foot (6,500 m2) facility sited on 25 acres (10 ha).[17] By 1986, Neoplan USA had claimed 40% of the United States transit bus market.[18] However, structural cracking issues would lead to a voluntary recall of buses in 1985.[19]

Defects and reputation edit

Neoplan USA buses had a history of manufacturing defects. One Milwaukee transit official called Neoplan USA "totally disorganized" and lacking quality control.[20] Early production Transliner buses were prone to cracking at the rear A-frame, first discovered in buses sold to transit agencies in Washington, D.C., and Los Angeles. In addition, a defective defroster unit led to an electrical fire and passenger evacuation.[21] The National Highway and Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) wrote to Neoplan USA President Bob Lee on December 27, 1984, urging a voluntary recall for the cracking and electrical issues "in the interest of safety", or it would face a formal investigation and possible mandatory recall.[22][23] Neoplan USA stated it "has never, nor does it now, consider these cracks safety-related" in its written response.[24] In March 1985, Neoplan USA followed the recommendations of the NHTSA and recalled all 2,000 buses then in service nationwide. Neoplan USA continued to deny the cracks were safety issues.[25]

Washington, D.C. edit

In June 1983 76 Transliner buses from Neoplan USA were purchased by the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (WMATA) of Washington, D.C., for $12.5 million. Fairfax County Supervisor Joseph Alexander, a member of the WMATA Board and then-president of the American Public Transportation Association, criticized the decision to proceed with Neoplan USA bus purchases, stating Neoplan USA buses were frequently defective and that other transit systems had filed complaints.[20] Neoplan USA won the bid for Metro because they had underbid General Motors, a competing bus manufacturer, by $275,000.[26] Metro officials were also given tours by Neoplan USA of their manufacturing facilities and were convinced to buy the buses afterwards.

In March 1984 Metro found hairline cracks in 32 Neoplan USA buses.[27] The cracks were in the undercarriage of the buses, "...in a weld joining a steel frame above the rear axle with a component that helps support the bus suspension system."[28] At the time, the cracks were not judged to pose significant a safety hazard.[29]

On December 23, 1984, a Neoplan USA bus in operation was destroyed in a fire, caused by a faulty electrical circuit. A NHTSA investigation found the fire was due to excessive amperage in a protective circuit breaker and an absence of a cutoff switch.[21]

In February 1985 cracks were found in all of the remaining 75 Neoplan USA buses in service in D.C. These cracks were near the front axles and could have led to loss of steering control. Other cracks were found in steel plates, tubes and welds. This led to Metro halting the service of all Neoplan buses, which mainly served the southeastern Washington, D.C., area.[30]

Neoplan USA president Robert Lee pledged to repair the buses at the company's expense, saying it was a minor repair that did not create safety problems. In May 1985 an agreement was reached for Neoplan USA to pay for repairs to Metro buses, costing about $1 million. Neoplan USA was criticized for failing to meet deadlines agreed to with the authority. In a letter dated May 3, 1985, Neoplan USA stated there "is no safety-related basis for the vehicles currently being held out of service", adding the actions by Metro were "unreasonable and unjustified."[31]

Los Angeles edit

Since the early 1980s Neoplan USA assembled buses for Southern California Rapid Transit District (SCRTD), which later became the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority (LACMTA). In September 1984, like the buses sold to WMATA, cracks were found in 128 SCRTD Neoplan USA buses,[32] and more cracks were found in 92 buses through February 1985.

In the 1990s, Neoplan USA had a high rate of problems occurring in many of its methanol and ethanol fueled buses. On January 4, 2000, a report by LACMTA Inspector General Arthur Sinai cited multiple issues with 250 new Neoplan USA buses delivered between 1997 and 1999.[33] They included a dozen chronic defects on clutches, problems with exhaust pipes and engine oil reservoirs, failing door structures and defective wheelchair lifts. The report also noted that "none of these problems were remedied by the manufacturer."

The report also noted problems went unfixed for long periods, and if repaired, were often performed at LACMTA expense instead of under warranty. Some warranty claims were refused by Neoplan USA due to lateness in processing complaints.

The report also noted conflicts of interest with MTA inspectors. Three inspectors took jobs with Neoplan USA after leaving the LACMTA, with one of them working with Neoplan USA one month after their resignation. Many inspectors who traveled to the Lamar plant were caught falsifying travel and expense accounts for nearly $10,000 over a 7-month period ending in 1997. One LACMTA engineer accused of account padding was charged with grand theft in Los Angeles in 1999.

Pittsburgh edit

Buses delivered under the 1982 PennDOT contract were subject to premature corrosion and required costly repairs, prompting a state investigation.[34] Port Authority of Allegheny County (PA Transit), serving Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, negotiated a settlement for $1.7 million in 1990 relating to the premature corrosion issues.[35]

PA Transit later bought 159 low floor buses from Neoplan USA that entered service in 1999, at a total cost of $47.7 million, or up to $300,000 apiece. The Pittsburgh buses were the first serially produced new AN440LF low-floor transit bus. Cracks in the frame were found shortly after the buses were delivered in August 1999, and the buses were pulled out of service by September 2000.[35] Neoplan USA agreed to pay for repairs for buses under warranty, and compensated the Port Authority for additional costs associated with the defects on the buses.[36][37]

It was reported that these same bus models had undergone testing by the Federal Transit Administration in 1994 and 1995, and problems were detected in these tests. One bus broke down shortly after testing started in May 1994, after being driven 94 miles (151 km), and structural cracks were found after 482 miles (776 km). By the time testing concluded in May 1995 with 15,000 miles (24,000 km) accumulated, numerous cracks had been found in 10 different places in the steel frame, air cooler outlet and axle mounts.[38][39]: 82–99  The repairs involved significant rework, adding plates and gussets to reinforce the existing structure.[40]

PA Transit retired its last Neoplan USA buses in December 2019.[41]

San Francisco edit

The San Francisco Municipal Railway (Muni) began taking delivery of 230 Neoplan USA buses in April 2000, equipped with cleaner-burning diesel engines.[42] Residents complained about the noise from engine cooling system and called the new buses "screaming banshees", with tests showing noise levels of 88 to 90 dB, exceeding the 83 dB contract requirement. The engine cooling fan was modified and sound-deadening material was added to reduce noise.[43] The original fans also proved to provide inadequate engine cooling, requiring the installation of electric fans, consuming 32 labor hours per bus.[44] By the end of 2001, the Neoplan USA buses for Muni were breaking down, with one driver declaring that "every one of those buses is a piece of garbage" and up to two per day required towing back to the bus yards.[45]

Articulated buses from Neoplan USA acquired by Muni in 2001 also exhibited issues, with the brake slack adjusters requiring replacement after 5,000 miles (8,000 km) of service, just 110th of the typical maintenance interval.[46]

 
Muni #6413, articulated AN460 (2015)

Muni withheld the final payment to Neoplan USA for the 330 buses over a missed deadline to correct issues. After the June 30, 2005 deadline passed, Neoplan USA stated it could not continue its operations without payment and abandoned its bus overhaul yard in San Francisco in late September, leaving behind 98 unrepaired buses but taking all of its spare parts away.[47]

Boston edit

The Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) idled its entire fleet of newly delivered Transliner AN440LF low-floor transit buses in July 2005 after discovering damage on 21 buses that had traversed the same massive pothole. The pothole damaged the torque rods connecting the steering and suspension linkages, leading to two steering-related crashes.[48][49] Additional cracks in suspension components were discovered in 2006 and 2007.[50]

Acquisition and bankruptcy edit

Neoplan USA was acquired by Willis Stein & Partners, a Chicago-based private investment firm in 1998,[51] making it independent of its German parent Neoplan,[52] although one source states it was spun off in 1989.[53]

The company opened a third US plant, occupying the space previously used by Eagle Bus at Brownsville, Texas in June 2001,[54] but that plant closed shortly afterward in June 2002[55] as part of a restructuring that began under new President John Russell, who came on board in April 2002.[51] Neoplan USA also discontinued its entire luxury motorcoach line (Cityliner, Skyliner, Starliner, and Spaceliner) in 2002, concentrating on its transit buses.[54] In August 2003, the company sold a small equity share to its lenders to reduce its outstanding loans by 75 percent, and announced its corporate headquarters would move from Lamar to Denver one year later, saving customers and suppliers a three-hour drive.[51] Neoplan USA moved into office spaces previously occupied by Frontier Airlines.[56]

In 2003–2006 it also built 28 40-foot (12 m) electric trolley buses and 32 articulated dual-mode buses for Boston's MBTA.[1] Neoplan USA was the sole bidder; because of the small size and specialized manufacturing needed for the order, MBTA was granted a waiver to Buy America requirements, as the buses would be assembled in Germany.[57]: 25  Neoplan USA reached a peak of 625 employees and revenue of $810 million before it ceased operations in January 2006.

On November 15, 2005, Neoplan USA announced it would close its Lamar plant on January 13 after failing to raise $10 million in new capital.[58] Neoplan USA filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in August 2006,[59] listing assets of $13.7 million and debts of $59 million.[52] In its last few months of operation, Neoplan USA had fallen on hard times, such as warranty issues with San Francisco's MUNI and cash-flow problems after Boston's MBTA canceled an order due to late deliveries.[53] A manufacturing company based in Texas purchased the Neoplan factory in Lamar, promising to reopen in 2008.[60]

The company still technically continued to exist until selling its parts-supply division, Neopart. Once Neopart was sold, in October 2007,[61][62] Neoplan USA ceased to exist.

Models edit

  • Atlantis (transit buses)[4]: 4–101 
     Powered by Detroit Diesel 6V71N, 8V71N, or 6V92TA[4]: 4–97 
    • N-416-35/N-416-40 [de] (35/40-foot, early model 1981–1982)[63]
  • Metroliner (over the road "suburban" coach buses)[64]
     Powered by Detroit Diesel Series 60 diesel engine
    • AN340/3 / AN345/3 (40 / 45-foot (12 / 14 m) nominal length, 3-axle)[65]
  • Transliner (transit buses)[64]
     Powered by Detroit Diesel Series 6V92TA/ 50 / 60, Cummins, CAT diesel or CNG engines
    • AN430/AN435/AN440 (30/35/40-foot, high-floor model)[66][67]
    • AN435LF/AN440LF (35/40-foot, low-floor)[68]
    • AN440/3 (40-foot, high floor, 3 axle suburban made only for SCRTD/LACMTA)
    • AN440TLF/AN445TLF (40/45-foot, true low-floor, aka Intraliner)[69]
    • AN440LF-ETB (40-foot, low floor trolleybus, made only for MBTA)[70]
  • Articulated (transit buses)[64]
     Powered by Detroit Diesel Series 6V92TA/ 50 / 60, Cummins, CAT diesel or CNG engines
  • Luxury coaches (licensed from Neoplan Bus Germany)[75]
     Powered by Detroit Diesel Series 60 engine
    • Jetliner AN240/3 [de] (40- or 45-foot)[67]
    • Starliner AN516/3 [de] (45-foot model)[76]
    • Cityliner AN116/3 [de] (40- or 45-foot)[77]
    • Skyliner AN122/3 (40-foot, double-decker tour/coach bus)[78]
    • Spaceliner AN117/3 [de] (40- or 45-foot, double-decker motor home bus)[79]

Gallery edit

References edit

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External links edit

  • (American Public Transportation Association article, December 5, 2005)
  • Jeroen (July 5, 2014). . Myn Transport Blog. Archived from the original on October 23, 2017. Retrieved November 23, 2020.
  • "NEOPLAN transit buses". 1983.
  • "NEOPLAN over-the-road coaches". 1983.

38°05′44″N 102°36′38″W / 38.09554°N 102.61051°W / 38.09554; -102.61051

neoplan, this, article, about, defunct, builder, german, builder, neoplan, major, transit, manufacturing, company, based, denver, colorado, started, subsidiary, german, corporation, neoplan, 1981, with, main, factory, headquarters, lamar, colorado, 1998, acqui. This article is about the defunct U S bus builder For the German bus builder see Neoplan Neoplan USA was a major transit bus manufacturing company based in Denver Colorado It started as a subsidiary of the German corporation Neoplan in 1981 with its main factory and headquarters in Lamar Colorado In 1998 Neoplan USA was acquired by Willis Stein amp Partners and became an independent licensee of designs from the German company Neoplan The company declared bankruptcy in 2006 1 Neoplan USAIndustryTransitFounded1981 Lamar Colorado as a subsidiary of Neoplan Defunct2006FateBankruptcy liquidationHeadquartersDenver Colorado U S ProductsBusesNumber of employees625 The headquarters were moved to Denver in 2004 2 Neoplan USA also had production facilities in Honey Brook Pennsylvania 1986 and Brownsville Texas 2001 02 the Honey Brook site was retained as a parts distribution center Contents 1 History 1 1 Origin and expansion 1 2 Defects and reputation 1 2 1 Washington D C 1 2 2 Los Angeles 1 2 3 Pittsburgh 1 2 4 San Francisco 1 2 5 Boston 1 3 Acquisition and bankruptcy 2 Models 3 Gallery 4 References 5 External linksHistory edit nbsp Intermediate Size Bus assembled by Gillig under a license from Neoplan during testing with AC Transit Prior to opening its own factory Neoplan broke into the United States transit market by licensing a 30 foot 9 m long bus design to Gillig who assembled and sold it as the Gillig Neoplan from 1976 to 1978 3 4 4 72 4 94 4 96 At the time Neoplan was better known for its intercity coaches rather than its transit buses The company participated in the development of the VoV Standard Bus in the late 1970s and built transit buses for Saudi Arabia in 1979 and 1980 4 4 95 4 96 In February 1980 company officials announced they would open a plant in either Lamar or Clearfield Pennsylvania ultimately selecting Lamar for its mild winters and sunny weather 5 After announcing its intentions to build its factory Neoplan USA began soliciting bids for transit buses 4 4 96 Origin and expansion edit Neoplan USA opened its first American manufacturing facility in May 1981 It was Neoplan s fifth factory worldwide a 139 000 square foot 12 900 m2 plant on an 18 acre 7 3 ha site construction took just four months 6 The city of Lamar a farming town of 8 000 that faced tough economic times pushed to have the plant built in the town in the hope of diversifying their economic base It donated land and roads for the manufacturing site The street that went to the plant was renamed Gottlob Auwaerter de Drive for the founder of Neoplan Company officials reportedly sought a rural site because of their conviction based on experience in Europe that rural workers have a better work ethic and are more reliable and productive employees 7 An additional incentive was the hot water supplied from the city s neighboring power plant to heat the factory 8 Neoplan started a program at the local community college to train workers and trainee foremen were sent to West Germany for eight weeks at the end of the overseas program the foremen had to build a bus that would take them to the airport 5 Neoplan USA manufactured standard floor buses low floor buses and articulated buses with each bus taking 14 days to build After each bus was completed the workers were given a ride to their homes in the bus to critique their work 9 When Neoplan USA opened in 1981 company officials said the plant would employ up to 500 people and manufacture as many as 500 vehicles a year on two assembly lines Their first contracts included 50 transit buses for Metropolitan Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority MARTA 10 and 40 for the Milwaukee County Transit System MCTS Contracts for another 500 were being bid on 5 The buses built for Atlanta and Milwaukee were conventional New Look type buses designated Atlantis or N 416 and were the only New Look buses assembled by Neoplan USA which also was offering the Transliner or N412 an Advanced Design bus to compete with the GM Rapid Transit Series and Flxible Metro 4 4 97 4 99 4 101 nbsp PA Transit 3564 part of the 1982 order from PennDOT Later in 1981 its first year of operation Neoplan USA sold 46 articulated buses to MARTA This was also a year when articulated buses 60 foot long 18 m buses that bent in the middle were gaining interest with transit departments As the federal government was phasing out subsidies for mass transit these buses got attention because they were cost effective They carried more passengers and saved on labor costs as they required only one driver 11 Another significant early contract was awarded for 1 000 Transliner buses as a pooled purchase coordinated by PennDOT in 1982 for 16 transit agencies in the state of Pennsylvania primarily to PA Transit 410 and SEPTA 450 which led to Neoplan exploring locations for a second factory in that state 12 It was the largest single bus contract in the U S to date 13 The first buses nicknamed Pennliners were delivered to Pennsylvania in October 1982 and were assembled in Colorado 14 Neoplan USA s share of the United States bus market was 1 3 percent in 1981 grew to 10 4 percent in 1982 and went to 25 2 percent in 1983 based on production orders 15 By December 1982 Neoplan USA had completed more than 250 buses 9 After announcing plans to open a second plant in Pennsylvania in 1982 16 Neoplan USA showed a model of the bus assembly factory it planned to build in 1984 located in Honey Brook a 70 000 square foot 6 500 m2 facility sited on 25 acres 10 ha 17 By 1986 Neoplan USA had claimed 40 of the United States transit bus market 18 However structural cracking issues would lead to a voluntary recall of buses in 1985 19 Defects and reputation edit Neoplan USA buses had a history of manufacturing defects One Milwaukee transit official called Neoplan USA totally disorganized and lacking quality control 20 Early production Transliner buses were prone to cracking at the rear A frame first discovered in buses sold to transit agencies in Washington D C and Los Angeles In addition a defective defroster unit led to an electrical fire and passenger evacuation 21 The National Highway and Traffic Safety Administration NHTSA wrote to Neoplan USA President Bob Lee on December 27 1984 urging a voluntary recall for the cracking and electrical issues in the interest of safety or it would face a formal investigation and possible mandatory recall 22 23 Neoplan USA stated it has never nor does it now consider these cracks safety related in its written response 24 In March 1985 Neoplan USA followed the recommendations of the NHTSA and recalled all 2 000 buses then in service nationwide Neoplan USA continued to deny the cracks were safety issues 25 Washington D C edit In June 1983 76 Transliner buses from Neoplan USA were purchased by the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority WMATA of Washington D C for 12 5 million Fairfax County Supervisor Joseph Alexander a member of the WMATA Board and then president of the American Public Transportation Association criticized the decision to proceed with Neoplan USA bus purchases stating Neoplan USA buses were frequently defective and that other transit systems had filed complaints 20 Neoplan USA won the bid for Metro because they had underbid General Motors a competing bus manufacturer by 275 000 26 Metro officials were also given tours by Neoplan USA of their manufacturing facilities and were convinced to buy the buses afterwards In March 1984 Metro found hairline cracks in 32 Neoplan USA buses 27 The cracks were in the undercarriage of the buses in a weld joining a steel frame above the rear axle with a component that helps support the bus suspension system 28 At the time the cracks were not judged to pose significant a safety hazard 29 On December 23 1984 a Neoplan USA bus in operation was destroyed in a fire caused by a faulty electrical circuit A NHTSA investigation found the fire was due to excessive amperage in a protective circuit breaker and an absence of a cutoff switch 21 In February 1985 cracks were found in all of the remaining 75 Neoplan USA buses in service in D C These cracks were near the front axles and could have led to loss of steering control Other cracks were found in steel plates tubes and welds This led to Metro halting the service of all Neoplan buses which mainly served the southeastern Washington D C area 30 Neoplan USA president Robert Lee pledged to repair the buses at the company s expense saying it was a minor repair that did not create safety problems In May 1985 an agreement was reached for Neoplan USA to pay for repairs to Metro buses costing about 1 million Neoplan USA was criticized for failing to meet deadlines agreed to with the authority In a letter dated May 3 1985 Neoplan USA stated there is no safety related basis for the vehicles currently being held out of service adding the actions by Metro were unreasonable and unjustified 31 Los Angeles edit Since the early 1980s Neoplan USA assembled buses for Southern California Rapid Transit District SCRTD which later became the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority LACMTA In September 1984 like the buses sold to WMATA cracks were found in 128 SCRTD Neoplan USA buses 32 and more cracks were found in 92 buses through February 1985 In the 1990s Neoplan USA had a high rate of problems occurring in many of its methanol and ethanol fueled buses On January 4 2000 a report by LACMTA Inspector General Arthur Sinai cited multiple issues with 250 new Neoplan USA buses delivered between 1997 and 1999 33 They included a dozen chronic defects on clutches problems with exhaust pipes and engine oil reservoirs failing door structures and defective wheelchair lifts The report also noted that none of these problems were remedied by the manufacturer The report also noted problems went unfixed for long periods and if repaired were often performed at LACMTA expense instead of under warranty Some warranty claims were refused by Neoplan USA due to lateness in processing complaints The report also noted conflicts of interest with MTA inspectors Three inspectors took jobs with Neoplan USA after leaving the LACMTA with one of them working with Neoplan USA one month after their resignation Many inspectors who traveled to the Lamar plant were caught falsifying travel and expense accounts for nearly 10 000 over a 7 month period ending in 1997 One LACMTA engineer accused of account padding was charged with grand theft in Los Angeles in 1999 Pittsburgh edit Buses delivered under the 1982 PennDOT contract were subject to premature corrosion and required costly repairs prompting a state investigation 34 Port Authority of Allegheny County PA Transit serving Pittsburgh Pennsylvania negotiated a settlement for 1 7 million in 1990 relating to the premature corrosion issues 35 PA Transit later bought 159 low floor buses from Neoplan USA that entered service in 1999 at a total cost of 47 7 million or up to 300 000 apiece The Pittsburgh buses were the first serially produced new AN440LF low floor transit bus Cracks in the frame were found shortly after the buses were delivered in August 1999 and the buses were pulled out of service by September 2000 35 Neoplan USA agreed to pay for repairs for buses under warranty and compensated the Port Authority for additional costs associated with the defects on the buses 36 37 It was reported that these same bus models had undergone testing by the Federal Transit Administration in 1994 and 1995 and problems were detected in these tests One bus broke down shortly after testing started in May 1994 after being driven 94 miles 151 km and structural cracks were found after 482 miles 776 km By the time testing concluded in May 1995 with 15 000 miles 24 000 km accumulated numerous cracks had been found in 10 different places in the steel frame air cooler outlet and axle mounts 38 39 82 99 The repairs involved significant rework adding plates and gussets to reinforce the existing structure 40 PA Transit retired its last Neoplan USA buses in December 2019 41 San Francisco edit The San Francisco Municipal Railway Muni began taking delivery of 230 Neoplan USA buses in April 2000 equipped with cleaner burning diesel engines 42 Residents complained about the noise from engine cooling system and called the new buses screaming banshees with tests showing noise levels of 88 to 90 dB exceeding the 83 dB contract requirement The engine cooling fan was modified and sound deadening material was added to reduce noise 43 The original fans also proved to provide inadequate engine cooling requiring the installation of electric fans consuming 32 labor hours per bus 44 By the end of 2001 the Neoplan USA buses for Muni were breaking down with one driver declaring that every one of those buses is a piece of garbage and up to two per day required towing back to the bus yards 45 Articulated buses from Neoplan USA acquired by Muni in 2001 also exhibited issues with the brake slack adjusters requiring replacement after 5 000 miles 8 000 km of service just 1 10 th of the typical maintenance interval 46 nbsp Muni 6413 articulated AN460 2015 Muni withheld the final payment to Neoplan USA for the 330 buses over a missed deadline to correct issues After the June 30 2005 deadline passed Neoplan USA stated it could not continue its operations without payment and abandoned its bus overhaul yard in San Francisco in late September leaving behind 98 unrepaired buses but taking all of its spare parts away 47 Boston edit The Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority MBTA idled its entire fleet of newly delivered Transliner AN440LF low floor transit buses in July 2005 after discovering damage on 21 buses that had traversed the same massive pothole The pothole damaged the torque rods connecting the steering and suspension linkages leading to two steering related crashes 48 49 Additional cracks in suspension components were discovered in 2006 and 2007 50 Acquisition and bankruptcy edit Neoplan USA was acquired by Willis Stein amp Partners a Chicago based private investment firm in 1998 51 making it independent of its German parent Neoplan 52 although one source states it was spun off in 1989 53 The company opened a third US plant occupying the space previously used by Eagle Bus at Brownsville Texas in June 2001 54 but that plant closed shortly afterward in June 2002 55 as part of a restructuring that began under new President John Russell who came on board in April 2002 51 Neoplan USA also discontinued its entire luxury motorcoach line Cityliner Skyliner Starliner and Spaceliner in 2002 concentrating on its transit buses 54 In August 2003 the company sold a small equity share to its lenders to reduce its outstanding loans by 75 percent and announced its corporate headquarters would move from Lamar to Denver one year later saving customers and suppliers a three hour drive 51 Neoplan USA moved into office spaces previously occupied by Frontier Airlines 56 In 2003 2006 it also built 28 40 foot 12 m electric trolley buses and 32 articulated dual mode buses for Boston s MBTA 1 Neoplan USA was the sole bidder because of the small size and specialized manufacturing needed for the order MBTA was granted a waiver to Buy America requirements as the buses would be assembled in Germany 57 25 Neoplan USA reached a peak of 625 employees and revenue of 810 million before it ceased operations in January 2006 On November 15 2005 Neoplan USA announced it would close its Lamar plant on January 13 after failing to raise 10 million in new capital 58 Neoplan USA filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in August 2006 59 listing assets of 13 7 million and debts of 59 million 52 In its last few months of operation Neoplan USA had fallen on hard times such as warranty issues with San Francisco s MUNI and cash flow problems after Boston s MBTA canceled an order due to late deliveries 53 A manufacturing company based in Texas purchased the Neoplan factory in Lamar promising to reopen in 2008 60 The company still technically continued to exist until selling its parts supply division Neopart Once Neopart was sold in October 2007 61 62 Neoplan USA ceased to exist Models editAtlantis transit buses 4 4 101 Powered by Detroit Diesel 6V71N 8V71N or 6V92TA 4 4 97 N 416 35 N 416 40 de 35 40 foot early model 1981 1982 63 Metroliner over the road suburban coach buses 64 Powered by Detroit Diesel Series 60 diesel engine AN340 3 AN345 3 40 45 foot 12 14 m nominal length 3 axle 65 Transliner transit buses 64 Powered by Detroit Diesel Series 6V92TA 50 60 Cummins CAT diesel or CNG engines AN430 AN435 AN440 30 35 40 foot high floor model 66 67 AN435LF AN440LF 35 40 foot low floor 68 AN440 3 40 foot high floor 3 axle suburban made only for SCRTD LACMTA AN440TLF AN445TLF 40 45 foot true low floor aka Intraliner 69 AN440LF ETB 40 foot low floor trolleybus made only for MBTA 70 Articulated transit buses 64 Powered by Detroit Diesel Series 6V92TA 50 60 Cummins CAT diesel or CNG engines AN460 60 foot 18 m high floor 71 72 AN460RC 59 foot high floor model made only for NJ Transit AN460LF 60 foot low floor 73 74 DMA 460LF 60 foot low floor dual mode diesel trolleybus only made for Silver Line MBTA Luxury coaches licensed from Neoplan Bus Germany 75 Powered by Detroit Diesel Series 60 engine Jetliner AN240 3 de 40 or 45 foot 67 Starliner AN516 3 de 45 foot model 76 Cityliner AN116 3 de 40 or 45 foot 77 Skyliner AN122 3 40 foot double decker tour coach bus 78 Spaceliner AN117 3 de 40 or 45 foot double decker motor home bus 79 Gallery edit nbsp A CNG powered AN440A standard floor of LACMTA in Los Angeles California nbsp A Diesel powered AN460 standard floor of WMATA Metrobus in Silver Spring Maryland nbsp An electric trolleybus AN440LF low floor of MBTA in Boston Massachusetts nbsp An Ultra Low Sulfur Diesel powered AN460LF low floor of RTC Transit in Las Vegas Nevada nbsp Neoplan Skyliner AN122 3 under evaluation by AC Transit c 1983 nbsp Dual mode electric trolleybus and diesel DMA 460LF low floor of MBTA Silver Line in Boston MassachusettsReferences edit a b Trolleybus Magazine No 268 July August 2006 p 92 National Trolleybus Association UK ISSN 0266 7452 Neoplan USA to Move Headquarters to Denver Passenger Transport APTA August 9 2004 ISSN 0364 345X Retrieved December 24 2018 Mid size coach gets test on some routes PDF Transit Times Vol 20 no 1 Alameda Contra Costa Transit District July 1977 Retrieved 22 November 2020 a b c d e f Weiers Bruce J Rossetti Michael A March 1982 4 8 NEOPLAN Transit Bus Manufacturers Profiles Report National Highway Traffic Safety Administration Retrieved 24 November 2020 a b c German firm boosts town The Pantagraph Bloomington Illinois AP March 29 1981 Retrieved 22 November 2020 Salisbury David F June 19 1981 German bus builder picks town Out West for shootout with US competition The Christian Science Monitor Retrieved 23 November 2020 Schmidt William E May 25 1981 Colorado Town Looks to Better Days With A German Bus Factory The New York Times p A8 Retrieved December 24 2018 Browning William D Lovins L Hunter 1989 Energy Casebook United States Department of Energy Western Area Power Administration Retrieved 23 November 2020 a b Smith Brad December 7 1982 German bus maker in rural America UPI Archives Retrieved 23 November 2020 Feaver Douglas B February 11 1981 Federal Hand in Mass Transit Sows Standards Reaps Quirks The Washington Post Retrieved 23 November 2020 Karr Albert R November 12 1981 Buses That Bend Hold 60 More Riders Ring Bell for Cost Savings Across Nation Wall Street Journal p 8 Lizdas Connie March 9 1982 LCTA Urges Effort To Get Bus Builder Citizens Voice wilkes Barre Pennsylvania Retrieved 23 November 2020 8 7 1982 Blast from the Past 1000 Neoplan Bus order in PA Philadelphia Transit Vehicles blog September 14 2020 Retrieved 23 November 2020 Good News for PAT Riders New Buses Start Rolling In The Pittsburgh Press October 26 1982 Retrieved 23 November 2020 Betz Tom September 15 1983 Neoplan Marketshare Lamar Daily News p 1 Bus firm may locate plant in Pennsylvania UPI Archives March 26 1982 Retrieved 23 November 2020 Grata Joe April 21 1984 German bus firm turns on charm Pittsburgh Press Retrieved 23 November 2020 Newspaper farm life reflect progress struggle in Lamar Longview News Journal July 6 1986 Retrieved 22 November 2020 Neoplan USA was apparently winning bidding to supply Houston UPI Archives February 8 1985 Retrieved 23 November 2020 a b Lynton Stephen J June 3 193 Metro Board Member Protests Deal With Bus Firm Washington Post a b Lynton Stephen J February 12 1985 8 More Metrobuses Idled With Cracks Washington Post p D1 Merina Victor January 17 1985 Firm Ordered to Fix Buses Or Risk U S Recall Action Los Angeles Times Retrieved 23 November 2020 PAT has 410 buses on U S recall list Del Rio News AP January 17 1985 Retrieved 23 November 2020 U S insists Neoplan recall buses Dayton Daily News AP February 13 1985 Retrieved 23 November 2020 UPI March 22 1985 Neoplan Recalls Defective Buses United Press International Lynton Stephen J February 14 1985 Metro Officials Dismissed Warning About Neoplan Bus Company Washington Post p B1 Lynton Stephen J September 28 1984 Metro Funds Approved For Rail Safety on I 66 Washington Post p B9 Lynton Stephen J March 9 1984 Transit Authority Locates Hairline Cracks on 32 Buses Washington Post p B3 Cracks found in D C buses no problems here Green Bay Press Gazette AP March 10 1984 Retrieved 23 November 2020 Lynton Stephen J February 13 1985 Metro Halts Use of All Neoplan Buses Washington Post p A1 Lynton Stephen J May 15 1985 Metro Nears Agreement on Repairs for 76 Buses Colorado Based Manufacturer May Pay 1 Million to Fix Cracks and Defects Washington Post p C1 Sappell Joel October 2 1984 Cracks Force New RTS Buses to Make Pit Stops Los Angeles Times Retrieved 23 November 2020 Haefele Marc B January 14 20 2000 Smelly Buses LA Weekly Retrieved 27 December 2018 Kirkpatrick Rich June 1 1989 Pa House panel approves bill to study bus problems The Gettysburg Times AP Retrieved 23 November 2020 a b Grata Joe September 28 2000 Cracking in frames plagues 160 new buses Pittsburgh Post Gazette P G Publishing Co Retrieved 3 January 2019 Editorial January 24 2001 Uncracking the Case Good News About Buses That Developed Fractures Pittsburgh Post Gazette P G Publishing Co p A10 Grata Joe October 23 2000 Port Authority Buses Showed Signs of Frame Problems in Pre Purchase Tests Pittsburgh Post Gazette P G Publishing Co Retrieved 3 January 2019 Editorial October 31 2000 Get Off The Bus The Port Authority Didn t Double Check For Cracks Pittsburgh Post Gazette P G Publishing Co p A18 STURAA TEST 12 Year 500 000 Mile bus from Neoplan Model AN 440L PTI BT R9411 13 PDF Report The Pennsylvania Transportation Institute Bus Testing and Research Center May 1995 Retrieved 23 November 2020 Grata Joe November 29 2000 Repairs progressing on steel frames of buses Pittsburgh Post Gazette P G Publishing Co Retrieved 3 January 2019 Retired Golden Triangle Bus Route Coming Back For Free This Weekend NewsRadio 1020 KDKA December 6 2019 Retrieved 23 November 2020 Muni Starting To Receive New Diesel Buses San Francisco Chronicle April 26 2000 Retrieved 23 November 2020 Epstein Edward February 8 2001 Muni s Screaming Banshees Costing City Folk Sleep New diesel fleet flunking purchase contract s noise standards San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved 23 November 2020 Epstein Edward May 24 2001 Muni s diesel buses in hot water again Engine cooling fans sideline 100 units San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved 23 November 2020 Matier Phillip Ross Andrew December 3 2001 New Muni buses look like medalists in dash for repairs Olympics better off without them San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved 23 November 2020 Matier Phillip Ross Andrew January 20 2003 Wayward nuts put Muni in a bind over new coaches San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved 23 November 2020 Matier Phillip Ross Andrew October 3 2005 Commissioner wants probe of police union chief San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved 23 November 2020 Daniel Mac July 19 2005 MBTA set to replace damaged bus parts The Boston Globe Retrieved 23 November 2020 Monster pothole ruining Boston buses UPI Archives July 19 2005 Retrieved 23 November 2020 Daniel Mac April 25 2007 T wrestles again with cracks in its buses The Boston Globe Retrieved 23 November 2020 a b c Proctor Cathy August 15 2004 Neoplan arrives in Denver Denver Business Journal Retrieved 23 November 2020 a b Meikle Brad December 29 2006 Bus maker deals with Chap 11 Buyouts Insider Retrieved 23 November 2020 a b Fitzgerald Patrick Bankruptcy judge approves bus maker Neoplan USA s Chapter 11 plan San Diego Source Dow Jones News Retrieved 23 November 2020 a b Manufacturer Neoplan to close early in 2006 competition takes toll PDF Bus amp Motorcoach News December 1 2005 Retrieved 23 November 2020 Enguita v Neoplan USA Corp S D Tex December 2 2005 Text NEOPLAN USA Chooses Denver for Headquarter Location New Leadership Team Accelerates Growth Plan Press release Business Wire July 30 2004 Retrieved 23 November 2020 Guide to Federal Buy America Requirements 2009 Supplement PDF Legal Research Digest Report Vol 31 Transit Cooperative Research Program March 2010 Retrieved 23 November 2020 Correll Deedee November 30 2005 Plant closure has workers wondering what s ahead Casper Star Tribune Retrieved 22 November 2020 Neoplan USA Files for Bankruptcy Cites Debt Load Passenger Transport APTA September 4 2006 Retrieved December 24 2018 Mestas Anthony A August 14 2007 Texas company purchases Neoplan building The Pueblo Chieftain Retrieved 23 November 2020 Let us share our supply chain insight Neopart LLC December 2009 Archived from the original on July 21 2010 Retrieved July 24 2016 Pinon Purchases Neopart LLC Passenger Transport APTA October 29 2007 Retrieved July 24 2016 Kristopans Andre October 5 2014 Neoplan USA UtahRails net Retrieved 23 November 2020 a b c Transit Buses Neoplan USA Archived from the original on October 10 2000 Metroliner Neoplan USA Archived from the original on October 29 2000 AN440T Neoplan USA Archived from the original on October 29 2000 a b Neoplan USA Produktionsprogramm 1999 2000 auwaerter neoplan fotoarchive de Retrieved 23 November 2020 AN440L Neoplan USA Archived from the original on September 18 2000 AN440TLF Neoplan USA Archived from the original on October 30 2000 NEOPLAN Electric Trolley Bus PDF Neoplan USA Archived from the original PDF on October 23 2005 AN460 Neoplan USA Archived from the original on October 30 2000 NEOPLAN Articulated AN460 PDF Neoplan USA Archived from the original PDF on October 23 2005 NEOPLAN Articulated AN460 LF PDF Neoplan USA Archived from the original PDF on January 15 2006 NEOPLAN Articulated AN460 LF CNG PDF Neoplan USA Archived from the original PDF on October 23 2005 Luxury Coaches Neoplan USA Archived from the original on October 27 2000 Starliner Neoplan USA Archived from the original on September 18 2000 Cityliner Neoplan USA Archived from the original on September 18 2000 Skyliner Neoplan USA Archived from the original on September 18 2000 Spaceliner Neoplan USA Archived from the original on September 18 2000 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Neoplan USA vehicles Neoplan USA Reports Manufacturing Plant Shutdown American Public Transportation Association article December 5 2005 Jeroen July 5 2014 Buses NEOPLAN 1935 2008 Stuttgart Germany Myn Transport Blog Archived from the original on October 23 2017 Retrieved November 23 2020 NEOPLAN transit buses 1983 NEOPLAN over the road coaches 1983 38 05 44 N 102 36 38 W 38 09554 N 102 61051 W 38 09554 102 61051 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Neoplan USA amp oldid 1184585976, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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