Speaking about safety, have you ever thought why buses stop and open their doors at railroad tracks? It’s actually a must for any vehicle to stop at a designated point before railroad tracks and check if there’s a train coming. For a bus driver, it’s also important to open the doors. But why? Well, let’s find out the answers to these questions and more!
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TIMESTAMPS:
Why don’t buses have seatbelts? 0:21
Why are there dedicated bus lanes? 1:08
Why won’t buses stop and open the doors when someone’s late? 1:45
Why is there a “do not speak to the driver” sign? 2:15
How do bus doors open and close when the driver isn’t inside? 2:54
Why are buses considered safer than cars? 3:31
Why do buses stop and open their doors at railroad tracks? 4:29
Why are bus depots often located in rough neighborhoods? 5:00
How do displays in buses know when to show the next stop? 5:40
How do you see through a bus window from inside when there’s an ad on the outside? 6:24
Why are bus steering wheels almost parallel to the ground? 7:26
Why don’t buses have a more aerodynamic shape? 8:11
#buses #safety #brightside
SUMMARY:
- In case of emergency, passengers need to get off a bus as fast as possible. With seatbelts on, they’ll waste precious time on unbuckling them.
- Like any other public transport, buses have a schedule to meet, and in big cities, traffic jams aren’t rare. So to reduce delays caused by heavy traffic, dedicated bus lanes were introduced.
- When a bus has already closed its doors and moved a few feet away from the stop, halting it again creates difficulties for the rest of the vehicles on the road.
- There’s a mechanism that opens and closes the driver’s door from the outside. The button that activates it is usually hidden and located under the door.
- Buses are heavy, and it takes a really serious impact to stop them in their tracks. They’re also long, so even if a bus crashes into a brick wall, passengers will fall, but no one will probably get seriously hurt.
- Public transport depots need a lot of land, and land in big cities is costly. So when a transport company buys a turf to park its vehicles, it normally chooses a piece of land that’s relatively cheap.
- When a bus approaches its next stop, the GPS sends a signal to the display, and it changes the name of the stop.
- The steering wheel is connected directly to the wheels of the vehicle with a rod. In a car, the front wheels are further ahead of the driver, so the rod goes smoothly back and up to the steering wheel.
- Aerodynamics allows vehicles to move faster with less opposing force of the air. It’s fine with transport that’s made to be fast, but buses aren’t about speed; they’re more about safety.
Music by Epidemic Sound
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