Higher vehicle hoods significantly increase pedestrian deaths, study finds

https://lemmy.world/post/11085878

Higher vehicle hoods significantly increase pedestrian deaths, study finds - Lemmy.World

What about school busses? They have very high hoods and many danger areas where the driver cannot see, right?

Yeah; but you also need a special license to operate a bus that requires more training than driving an 18-wheeler for logistics. You also still have much more visibility over the hood in a bus.

Source: Was a school bus driver.

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.

Itโ€™s been a few years since I was doing that, so I didnโ€™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

@[email protected] (@dannyman) on X

From Mastodon: it is unfair to compare a modern pickup truck to a tank because the M1 Abrams battle tank has better forward visibility and is less likely to run over our kids than a street legal consumer truck.

X (formerly Twitter)
The craziest part about that too, is that militaries typically acknowledge and have procedures for these poor sight lines. 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).
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)

Schools buses are usually required a CDL to drive, and there are even more stringent checks required if you actually drive children around.

There is nothing stopping a just licensed 16 year old, or a repeat drunk driver from jumping behind the wheel of a huge truck or SUV and operating it in pedestrian-rich areas, with no oversight.

Thereโ€™s also like 30 adults outside the school looking out for children who are being dumbasses. And when theyโ€™re not in the school they have those swingy arms to push them out of the way/give them a hint.
I believe they also have mirrors to see in front of the hood.