The first bogie tramcars came to Ballarat in 1945 and Jean Maxwell recalled: "They were better than the small tramcars to work on. They were harder to connie, they'd all queue up and you'd have two in the back and a packed load up front. You'd have to be tactful. Sebas people were the worst for that, they were like a lot of sheep. I said one of you gets in the front and you all stop in the front. Get inside, you make it too hard'. They'd all go in the front for some reason when they came in. People said 'you've got a new tram, where did it come from?' People liked them though, they weren't quiet as high. I liked them because they didn't have that sway all the time." The bogie tramcar came to Ballarat just after the end of the Second World War in Oct. 1945. They carried more passengers than the earlier tramcars and had a smoother ride. While they may have been called new tramcars', they were just as old or older than most of the four wheelers in Ballarat having being built for Melbourne in period just before and during the first world war.
Photo: State Electricity Commission of Victoria, late 1940's
The bogie tramcar is an eight-wheeled vehicle. All previous tramcars had only four wheels, these are known in tramway parlance as 'single trucks'. Bogie tramcars are also be known as double truck' tramcars. The Museum has two of this type of tramcar, including the one featured in the photo of loading the pram (No. 38) in its collection. For more details see the Ballarat Tramway Museum's Tramcar Register.
Photo: The Ballarat Courier |
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