Flxible
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Image:Flx on J20.jpg The Flxible Company, (1913-1995), was a motorcycle sidecar, funeral car, ambulance, intercity coach and transit bus manufacturing company based in the United States which went out of business in 1995.
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The Flxible Name
The Flxible Company started manufacturing sidecars for motorcycles with a flexible mounting to the motorcycle. The 'e' was dropped for use as a trademark. The name is pronounced "flexible".
History
Hugo H. Young's and Carl F. Dudte's Flxible Side Car Co. was founded in 1913 to manufacture motorcycle sidecars. After low-priced cars became available the motorcycle sidecar demand dropped and Flxible turned to production of hearses and ambulances. The Flxible Co., Loudonville, Ohio was founded in 1924 to produce buses from Studebaker and Buick car chassis. The Flxible Co. was purchased by the Rohr Industries in 1970. The factory was moved to Delaware, Ohio in 1974. Flxible was sold to Grumman Corporation in 1978 and became known as Grumman Flxible. The name reverted to Flxible when Grumman sold the company in 1983 to General Automotive Corporation. Then in 1996 they went bankrupt. The last official Flxible Metros were eight 35-footers, that went to Monterey Salinas Transit, in Monterey, California. They are powered by Compressed Natural Gas. The molds and plans for the Metro are said to be owned by Motor Coach Industries. The front ends of the Orion 05.501 and the Gillig Phantom bear a somewhat close resemblance to the Metro. It is also believed that a low-floor version of the Metro was under development when Flxible closed its doors.
The 870 Frame Fiasco
In the mid 1980s, several MTA New York City Transit 870 buses developed cracks in the underframes. This prompted then-president David Gunn to pull the entire fleet of buses off the street. Soon several other companies reported cracked 870 frames. However, it seemed that the frame issues only affected NYCT 870s and not the 870s owned by NYCDOT-franchised carriers. NYCT attempted to get the remainder of the order transferred to General Motors, but was barred from doing so unless they could prove that the 870s were flawed and unsafe. The buses were eventually returned to Flxible and resold to Queen City Metro and New Jersey Transit. Grumman blamed the problems with the NYCT 870s on NYCT's maintenance practices despite Chicago, Houston, and Los Angeles also reporting problems with their 870s. Ironically, NYCT would order fifty Metros in 1995. However, Flxible would close their doors while the order was being produced. NYCT would order new buses from Orion.
Flxible Customers
Flxible sold a lot of buses to many major urban transit agencies including the Maryland Transit Administration in Baltimore, Maryland during the 1970s and 1980s. They also sold a small number of liquified natural gas (LNG) powered buses to the Maryland Transit Administration in 1994, but they had many problems, and in 1998, they were sold to Montgomery County, Maryland and converted to diesel.
When Flxible closed, it was said that there were still buses on the assembly line ready to be shipped to the Maryland Transit Administration and other transit agencies.
Some big customers were:
- Central Ohio Transit Authority
- Chicago Transit Authority
- Fort Worth Transportation Authority
- Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority
- Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority
- Maryland Transit Administration
- Metropolitan Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority
- Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County, Texas
- Miami-Dade Transit
- New Jersey DOT who ordered over 800 buses during the late 1970s.
- New Jersey Transit
- North County Transit District
- Port Authority of Allegheny County (They were the last transit system in the United States to receive the last of the Flxibles off the assembly line; They ordered 150 in 1995 but received 98)
- Spokane Transit Authority
- Suffolk County (NY) Transit
- TriMet
- Vaughan Transit - now York Region Transit
- Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority
The former Flxible factory in Loudonville, Ohio is now a bus maintenance facility of Motor Coach Industries (MCI) while the former Flxible parts facility in nearby Delaware, Ohio now is home to similar duties for North American Bus Industries (NABI) which was one of the companies which grew at the expense of Flxible's demise.
Products
- Airway intercity coach (1936)
- Clipper intercity coach (1940)
- Visicoach intercity coach (1950)
- VL-100 intercity coach (1955)
- Starliner intercity coach (1957)
- Hi-Level intercity coach (1960)
- "New Look" transit coach (1961) - copy of GMC New Look and later copied by Flyer Industries of Winnipeg MB (as D700-800 series)
- Flxliner intercity coach (1963)
- 870 advanced design transit bus (1978)
- Metro transit coach (1981)
- ADB
- L10 Diesel Pusher
- Twin Level Models 228JT-1 and 228F-1 coach
Flxible Owners International
Flxible Owners International was founded in the mid-1980s as an offshoot of the Family Motor Coach Association. This organization is dedicated to the preservation of buses and coaches produced by Flxible.
The organization holds a rally in Loudonville every even year, normally in mid-July, where many preserved Flxible coaches and buses may be seen.
The majority of vehicles owned by members are of the Clipper series (Clipper, Visicoach, Starliner) that were produced from the 1930s until 1967. However, there are also quite a few "non-clipper" Flxible coaches that are owned, maintained, and operated by proud Flxible owners. This includes the Visicoach, VL100 (VistaLiner), Hi Level, and Flxliner as well as some of the more modern transit buses.Most of these vehicles have been converted to motorhomes, however there are still a few examples of seated coaches belonging to members.
External links
- Flxible New Look
- Images of Flxible buses in busexplorer.com
- Flxible Owners International, an organization dedicated to the preservation of Flxible buses and coaches
References
- Georgano, G. N., Editor {1978). The Complete Encyclopedia of Commercial Vehicles. Krause Publications. ISBN 0-87341-024-6.