Referring to my earleir message, i caught a peek of the top of one of DT's refurbished route 126 pointer dart's last night on the 286 at Queen Marty's and it appears that Arriva Kent Thameside are using ART as well as AKT.
Dan. On 8 Dec, 02:15, Busgroup <[email protected]> wrote: > Nick > > If you mean the code on the roof it is the code for First Group. > > Arriva IIRC has ARL for Arriva London > > Regards > > Paul > On 7 Dec 2009, at 15:14, [email protected] wrote: > > > > > Could anybody explain what the FRG on top of the Enviro stands for. > > > Thanks in advance > > > Nick > > Sent from my BlackBerry® wireless device > > > -- > > You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google > > Groups "London Bus Scene" group. > > To post to this group, send email to [email protected] > > To unsubscribe from this group, send email to > > [email protected] > > > IMAGE SIZES are important, as is QUALITY. Try not to post very large > > photos or very small ones. Pixel width should be no bigger than 1600 > > and no smaller than 800. This allows members to view the images full > > screen, depending on their monitor settings. > > > Quality should be sharp and maintained when resizing images. File > > sizes should be around the 250KB - 600KB mark, but not bigger than > > 800KB. Try to keep somewhere in the middle of all this, around 400KB > > can produce good images with no loss of quality. > > > You can easily reduce the size of images using > > Google's own picassahttp://picasa.google.com/or > > Irfanviewhttp://www.irfanview.com/- Hide quoted text - > > - Show quoted text - -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "London Bus Scene" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected] To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected] IMAGE SIZES are important, as is QUALITY. Try not to post very large photos or very small ones. Pixel width should be no bigger than 1600 and no smaller than 800. This allows members to view the images full screen, depending on their monitor settings. Quality should be sharp and maintained when resizing images. File sizes should be around the 250KB - 600KB mark, but not bigger than 800KB. Try to keep somewhere in the middle of all this, around 400KB can produce good images with no loss of quality. You can easily reduce the size of images using Google's own picassa http://picasa.google.com/ or Irfanview http://www.irfanview.com/ -- Experience the Devil
