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  2. Freightliner FS-65 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freightliner_FS-65

    The Freightliner FS-65 is a cowled school bus chassis (conventional style) that was manufactured by Freightliner from 1997 to 2008. Derived from the Freightliner FL-Series medium-duty trucks, the FS-65 was produced primarily for school bus applications, though commercial-use buses and cutaway-cab buses were also built using the FS-65 chassis.

  3. Thomas Minotour - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Minotour

    The Thomas Minotour is a bus body manufactured by Thomas Built Buses since 1980. The smallest vehicle sold by the company, the Minotour is a bus body designed for cutaway van chassis. Primarily sold for school bus usage, the Minotour is also produced as a MFSAB (activity bus) or in specialized configurations specified by the customer.

  4. School bus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/School_bus

    Marking the length, width, height, and in some cases, identifying the bus as a school bus, reflective tape makes the vehicle easier to see in low light, also marking all emergency exits (so rescue personnel can quickly find them in darkness). [38] Other requirements include reflective "School Bus" lettering (or the use of a front-lighted sign).

  5. Gillig Transit Coach School Bus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Gillig_Transit_Coach_School_Bus

    The Transit Coach was the first school bus produced with a mid-engine layout and would be among the first to use a diesel-fueled engine. The model line also offered the highest-capacity school bus ever produced, offering up to 97-passenger seating (current design standards restrict maximum capacity to 90).

  6. Gillig Phantom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gillig_Phantom

    Gillig offered the Phantom School Bus in two body lengths during its production: 37 feet (78 passenger capacity) and 40 feet (84 or 87 passenger capacity). As federal regulations of the time did not permit the use of a 102" width body for a school bus, the Phantom School Bus used the narrower 96" body width of the Phantom (discontinued in 2004).

  7. International S series (bus chassis) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_S_series...

    The bus chassis variant of the International S series is a cowled bus chassis (conventional style) that was produced by International Harvester (later Navistar International) from 1979 to 2004. Produced primarily for school bus applications, the chassis was also produced for other applications, including commercial-use buses and cutaway-cab buses.

  8. Thomas Built Buses - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Built_Buses

    To demonstrate the strength of its internal roof bows, Thomas stacked a full-size school bus on the roof of another (using a crane) in 1964; [2] the company has subsequently repeated the demonstration several times using more recent product lines. For 1967, to reduce blind spots in front of the bus, Thomas developed a convex blind-spot mirror. [2]

  9. Ford B series - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ford_B_series

    The Ford B series is a bus chassis that was manufactured by the Ford Motor Company. Produced across six generations from 1948 to 1998, the B series was a variant of the medium-duty Ford F series . As a cowled-chassis design, the B series was a bare chassis aft of the firewall, intended for bodywork from a second-stage manufacturer .