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  2. School bus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/School_bus

    The rear-mounted emergency exit door is a design feature adopted from horse-drawn wagons (the entrance was rear-mounted to avoid disturbing the horses); in rear-engine school buses, the door is replaced by an exit window mounted above the engine compartment (supplemented by a side-mounted exit door).

  3. Crown Supercoach - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crown_Supercoach

    Featuring a wider and taller interior, the Supercoach gained additional emergency exits (a rear exit window and right-side emergency door), [2] following the standardization of school bus dimensions and exits in 1939. During World War II, Crown Coach produced few vehicles, with all production diverted towards military use.

  4. Carrollton bus collision - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carrollton_bus_collision

    The bus involved in the crash was a former school bus, configured with a bus body mated to a medium-duty truck chassis and frame. The 1977 model-year Ford B700 chassis was mated to a Superior school bus body. The vehicle was designed with a capacity of 66 passengers and a driver, including 11 rows of 39-inch wide seats, separated by a 12-inch ...

  5. Gillig Phantom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gillig_Phantom

    As it served as a rear emergency exit, the Phantom School Bus was fitted with a rear window; as a requirement for rear-engine buses, the bus was fitted with a left-side emergency-exit door. A number of changes were focused on the sides of the body.

  6. Bus doors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bus_doors

    A conventional door, also known as a regular door or vehicle door is a type of door that is hinged at the front-facing edge of the door, and so allows the door to swing outward from the hull of the bus. These doors are relatively safe, in that if they are opened during forward motion of the vehicle, the wind resistance will work against the ...

  7. Blue Bird All American - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_Bird_All_American

    The Blue Bird All American is a series of buses produced by American school bus manufacturer Blue Bird Corporation (originally Blue Bird Body Company) since 1948. Originally developed as a yellow school bus (its most common configuration), versions of the All American have been designed for a wide variety of applications, ranging from the Blue Bird Wanderlodge luxury motorhome to buses for law ...

  8. Thomas Saf-T-Liner C2 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Saf-T-Liner_C2

    Saf-T-Liner C2 Interior view, looking back. The Thomas Saf-T-Liner C2 (often shortened to Thomas C2) is a bus manufactured by Thomas Built Buses since 2004. The first cowled-chassis bus designed by Thomas following its acquisition by Freightliner, the C2 debuted the first all-new body design for the company in over three decades.

  9. Crown Coach Corporation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crown_Coach_Corporation

    Crown built the first dual-rear wheel school bus (1927) Crown built its first all-metal school bus body in 1930. Crown Metro/Metropolitan [1] 1935–c.1937 Ford Ford conventional-chassis bus Crown Super Coach [1] 1932–1947 (exc.WWII) Various First factory-produced forward control-school bus (1932) Mid-engine version (1937) Rear-engine version ...