Most of the buses around me (both school and other buses) have flat fronts, which give essentially zero front blind spot. I don’t think I’ve seen a long bus that was shaped like that in a long time (at least around where I live)
I hope now that cameras are cheap and common that they will start adding them to busses to cover those blind spots. Not a perfect solution, but better than nothing.
It’s been a few years since I was doing that, so I didn’t get to drive them, but newer school busses my company was in the process of aquiring before I left did have blind spot camera systems.
Buses actually have better sight lines than modern trucks because the driver is much higher and the hood is sloped. This is also why they have a bar on the front that extends when unloading kids, to make them walk outside that zone.
The craziest part about that too, is that militaries typically acknowledge these poor sight lines and have procedures in place. I drove a Bison in the Canadian Army, and we had to have either a crew command (up higher on the vehicle with a better view) or a ground guide (literally a personal walking in front of the vehicle).
What about school busses? They have very high hoods and many danger areas where the driver cannot see, right?
Most of the buses around me (both school and other buses) have flat fronts, which give essentially zero front blind spot. I don’t think I’ve seen a long bus that was shaped like that in a long time (at least around where I live)
Yeah; but you also need a special license to operate a bus.
Interesting, I did not know that.
I hope now that cameras are cheap and common that they will start adding them to busses to cover those blind spots. Not a perfect solution, but better than nothing.
It’s been a few years since I was doing that, so I didn’t get to drive them, but newer school busses my company was in the process of aquiring before I left did have blind spot camera systems.
Buses actually have better sight lines than modern trucks because the driver is much higher and the hood is sloped. This is also why they have a bar on the front that extends when unloading kids, to make them walk outside that zone.
This Xeet has a picture someone stole from Mastodon that shows they’re actually worse than tractor trailers
The craziest part about that too, is that militaries typically acknowledge these poor sight lines and have procedures in place. I drove a Bison in the Canadian Army, and we had to have either a crew command (up higher on the vehicle with a better view) or a ground guide (literally a personal walking in front of the vehicle).