American bus manufacturer
This article is about the American bus bodywork supplier. For the Finno-Czechian rail vehicle builder, see
?koda Transtech
.
TransTech Bus
![](//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/2/24/Trans_Tech_Bus_logo.png/220px-Trans_Tech_Bus_logo.png) |
Industry
| Transportation, manufacturing
|
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Predecessor
| US Bus
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Founded
| November 2007
|
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Headquarters
| 7 Lake Station Road
[1]
Warwick, New York 10990
|
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Products
| Electric School Buses
School Buses
Commercial Buses
MFSAB Buses
|
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Parent
| Transportation Collaborative, Inc.
|
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Website
| www.transtechbus.com
|
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Trans Tech Bus
, a division of Transportation Collaborative Inc., is an American manufacturer of conventional and
environmentally friendly
electric Type A school buses. Established in 2007 as a successor to the defunct
U.S. Bus Corporation
, the company produces Type A & Type A-II School Buses and various models of commercial buses, all built on
cutaway vehicle chassis
.
Trans Tech Bus headquarters and production are located in a 70,000-square-foot (6,500 m
2
) facility located in
Warwick, New York
, United States.
History
[
edit
]
In November 2007, the shuttered school bus manufacturer U.S. Bus Corporation was reorganized and re-located to Warwick, New York. Renamed Trans Tech Bus, the new company introduced three different models of school buses. Single and Dual Rear Wheel models were based on Ford and GM van chassis, while the Medium-Duty model was built on a GM medium-duty truck chassis. The Medium-Duty bus was discontinued after 2009 following the end of General Motors production of the C4500/5500 chassis.
For 2012, the Trans Tech model line saw a complete redesign. The new ST Aero, SST, and Roadstar feature a redesigned bodyshell with a focus on aerodynamics. The CST (Child-Safe Transporter) is a version of the SST available for MFSAB (Multi-Function School Activity Bus) use.
A new bus on
Ford Transit
chassis was introduced. and is set to begin production in April 2017 named "Trans Star" with up to 20 passengers.
Models
[
edit
]
- 2012?present
Model Name
|
ST Aero
|
SST
|
Roadstar
|
Trans Star
|
eTrans
[2]
|
Pictures of the
Specific Buses
|
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Available Versions
|
School Bus
|
|
School Bus
|
School Bus
MFSAB
|
School Bus
|
Configuration
|
Type A
|
Type A
|
Type A
|
Type A
|
Type A-2
|
Chassis Provider
|
General Motors
|
Ford Motor Company
General Motors
|
Ford Motor Company
Transit
|
Motiv Power Systems
|
Notes
|
Single rear-wheel Type A school bus
|
- Standard dual rear-wheel Type A bus
- MFSAB model sold as CST (Child-Safe Transporter)
|
Narrow-body dual-wheel Type A school bus
|
Narrow- Body SRW and DRW Both Type A Bus
|
Battery-powered fully electric school bus.
|
- 2007-2011
Model Name
|
Single Rear Wheel
[3]
|
Dual Rear Wheel
[4]
[5]
|
Medium-Duty
|
Pictures of the
Specific Buses
|
Trans Tech SRW
|
Trans Tech DRW
|
Medium Duty Trans Tech
|
Available Versions
|
- School Bus
- Commercial Bus
- MFSAB (activity bus)
|
- School Bus
- Commercial Bus
- MFSAB (activity bus)
|
- School Bus
- Commercial Bus
- MFSAB (activity bus)
|
Configuration
|
Type A
|
Type A
|
Type A-2
|
Maximum Seating Capacity
|
20
|
|
42
[1]
|
Chassis Provider
|
Ford Motor Company
General Motors
|
Ford Motor Company
General Motors
|
General Motors
|
Trans Tech Dual Rear Wheel on Ford E-450 chassis
TransTech Bus has a flexible manufacturing facility which allow a wide variety of options, TransTech Buses may include:
- Flat-Floor Configurations
- Wheelchair Lifts (Ricon, Braun, etc.)
- Track Seating (L-Track or Slide-Track)
- Air Conditioning (Bus-Air, MCC, ACT, etc.)
- Acoustic Ceilings
- Child Check Systems
- Camera Installations
- Electric Bi-fold Doors (Including Street-side Bi-fold mounting)
- Complete LED lighting options
- Vandal Lock Systems
e-Trans
[
edit
]
In October 2011, at the yearly conference of the National Association of Pupil Transportation, Trans Tech debuted the first factory-built battery-powered electric school bus.
[2]
A 42-passenger vehicle based on the
Newton electric truck
from Smith Electric Vehicles. With the chassis manufactured in the Bronx, New York City, the entire bus was manufactured in New York State. A set of two Lithium-ion batteries give the eTrans an approximate range of up to 130 miles between charges, taking an average of eight hours to fully recharge.
[2]
This initial vehicle was never certified to operate, and the grant project
[6]
was later taken over by
Motiv Power Systems
.
[7]
The Motiv Powered SSTe has been shown at shows including the Green California Summit
[8]
and is commercially available from TransTech.
[9]
References
[
edit
]
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Active manufacturers
| Full-size and small buses
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Small buses only
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Defunct manufacturers
(including date of closure
or last school bus manufacture)
| 2010s
|
- Corbeil Bus Corporation (
2016
)
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2000s
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1990s
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1980s
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1970s
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1960s
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1950s
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