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Why school buses are yellow because you see yellow faster than any other color 1.24 times faster than red in fact?

Scientists have found that people are able to see yellow objects in their peripheral field 1.24 times better than red. Unlike red, yellow is also more easily noticed in a dark environment. This is one of the major reasons school bus yellow was chosen.



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Back in 1992, The New York Times reported on a study in North Carolina that found that school buses with white tops were roughly 10 degrees cooler inside on summer days than those with yellow tops. During the hottest hours, the contrast could rise to 17 degrees.

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The yellow-orange color, in three slight variants to allow for different paint formulations, was adopted by the National Bureau of Standards (now the National Institute of Standards and Technology) as Federal Standard No. 595a, Color 13432. Dr. Cyr became known as the Father of the Yellow School Bus.

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School bus yellow is a color that was specifically formulated for use on school buses in North America in 1939. Originally officially named National School Bus Chrome, the color is now officially known in Canada and the U.S. as National School Bus Glossy Yellow.

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Bus companies and paint companies deliberated to create one school bus model that could be used for all districts, and a crucial part of that process was picking a universal color. They, of course, picked yellow – a specific shade of yellow, in fact, which you'll see on all school buses to this day.

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The color of a school bus is yellow-orange. This color is a mixture of lemon yellow and orange ...

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In 1907 one company, the powers that be at London General Omnibus Company had a genius idea. They decided to paint the entire fleet red, making their buses stand out from their rivals, and place numbers on the front of the bus to tell people the route it would be taking.

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The official color is now known as “National School Bus Glossy Yellow.” It was chosen because people notice this color more quickly in their peripheral vision than they do other colors. This reduces the likelihood of other motorists colliding with a school bus.

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Initially christened National School Bus Chrome (a reference to the lead-chromate yellow in the original paint), the United States General Services Administration (GSA) now calls the color National School Bus Glossy Yellow, or Color 13432 in the Federal Standard 595a color collection that GSA uses for government ...

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The color school bus yellow with hexadecimal color code #ffd800 is a shade of yellow. In the RGB color model #ffd800 is comprised of 100% red, 84.71% green and 0% blue. In the HSL color space #ffd800 has a hue of 51° (degrees), 100% saturation and 50% lightness. This color has an approximate wavelength of 575.49 nm.

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Albert Luce, Sr., built his first bus in 1925 by mounting a purchased wood body to a Ford truck frame. The body could not withstand the Georgia roads. Luce, convinced he could make a better bus, applied a steel framework under the wood body. His success led him to make school buses full time.

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Israel is the only country in the developed world where children go to school six days a week.

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While buses in the U.K. aren't usually yellow, there is, in fact, a school transportation system. More than a million children in the nation use school transport provided by transit buses, contracted coaches, mini-buses and taxis each day.

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