-based
Mr. Whippy van in
Clacton There are mainly two types of ice cream vans in the United Kingdom: • a
hard van, which sells scoop ice cream and is only equipped with a freezer. • a
soft van, which has a freezer and also a soft serve "
whippy" machine for serving
ice cream cones and
screwballs. They are usually converted from factory standard vans with the rear cut away and replaced with a fibre glass body (to reduce the weight). The traditional song played by ice cream vans in the United Kingdom, Ireland, Australia, and New Zealand is "
Greensleeves". Other songs include "
Waltzing Matilda", "
Danny Boy", and "
O Sole Mio". Because of the
British climate, not only is running an ice cream van profitably very difficult outside summer, but it is also an unpredictable business. A summer
heatwave can provoke a massive upturn in fortunes for a few days, but after the weather has cooled sales drop off dramatically. The need to take advantage of rare and short-lived opportunities can result in the fierce rivalry between ice cream vans in coterminous areas, with the main disputes being over who is entitled to sell ice cream in a particular 'patch'. This has also led to some ice cream van vendors
diversifying and selling other products such as
crisps,
chips, burgers, or
hot dogs from their vehicles at other times of the year. In several local authority areas, particularly in London Boroughs with existing street markets, street trading regulations prohibit ice cream vans from remaining in one static location. The legislation also contains powers to ban ice cream vans from specific streets. Proposals in the current London Local Authorities Bill would allow only 15 minutes of trading per vehicle per street each day. Ice cream van chimes are regulated under a national code of practice that limits the sound level to 80 decibels and the duration of chimes to twelve seconds. Chimes should not be played more often than once every three minutes near sensitive locations such as schools, hospitals, and places of worship when they are in use. However, these rules are rarely observed or enforced. In Scotland, ice cream vans have been used to sell smuggled cigarettes and, in the 1980s
Glasgow ice cream wars, as
front organizations to sell illicit drugs.
Ice cream van manufacturer Whitby Morrison, based in
Crewe,
Cheshire, was founded by Bryan Whitby, who filed a UK patent in 1965 for mobile ice cream-producing equipment through which
soft serve units were powered off the van's drive mechanism. Today, the company is the UK's biggest ice cream van manufacturer, producing around 100 vans a year; its products have been exported to over 60 countries. The company has also been developing a fully electric on-board battery system to power the soft-scoop machines it fits; the first all-electric van was expected to be delivered in the summer of 2019. ==In the United States and Canada==