Rover SD1 circa 1979, featuring "jam sandwich" livery encompassing most of the vehicle's midline The term "jam sandwich" came into common use in the 1970s, as police cars changed from block colour schemes such as the blue and white "
panda car" to broad fluorescent sidestriped liveries on white or grey base paint. A thin amber sidestripe, fitted using
fluorescent tape and vinyl sheeting, was first applied to vehicles of the
East Sussex Constabulary in 1965, introduced on the recommendation of Chief Constable
George Terry. Some forces, such as the
Hertfordshire Constabulary, would later introduce a blue border around the sidestripe. This livery scheme was seen as reminiscent of
jam sandwiched between two slices of white bread, hence the name. The slang was popularised on
TV shows such as
The Bill,
The Sweeney and
Minder; as well as spreading through the use of
CB radio. with "jam sandwich" stripe, silver base paint and large 'POLICE' lettering The "jam sandwich" first came into use with London's
Metropolitan Police in 1978, first applied on a fleet of new high-performance
Rover SD1 traffic cars. Marked vehicles were initially finished in base white paint with "jam sandwich" livery applied on each side, however the base colour was changed to silver from 2002 to help improve a vehicle's resale value when it was retired from police use.
Replacement in jam sandwich livery and vans from
West Midlands Police in
Battenburg markings The "jam sandwich" livery on police vehicles across the United Kingdom has today been replaced by
Battenburg markings, first introduced in 1998 following research that the livery makes the vehicle easily identifiable by oncoming drivers as a police vehicle from at least . As part of a move to promote "High Visibility Policing", by 2003 76% of forces had begun adopting the markings as well as a "half battenburg" variant for urban and suburban patrols. This livery began to be introduced on new vehicles delivered to the Metropolitan Police from November 2012, while other police forces adopted the livery more widely earlier. In the Metropolitan Police, the term 'jam sandwich' now colloquially refers to the car's livery only, as worn by remaining older vehicles and public order
carriers that have not yet been replaced. ==Use outside the United Kingdom==