Depends on the size of the school bus, size of the fuel tank, if it has a diesel or gasoline engine, and the mpg it will get. None of which you list.
It depends of the MPG of the bus and the milleage it travels a day. You can do it very easy. If the bus is travelling 100 miles a day, the average mpg is 10, so the bus needs 10 gallons of fuel a day, multuply it on the gas price and you will get the exact money
It depends upon several factors, such as the weight of the bus, the number of passengers, the frontal area of the bus, the size of the engine, the type of road, uphill or downhill, number of stoplights, transmission in the bus, rear end ratio, habits and skill of the driver. Let's assume an average of 6 mpg. 150 miles / 6 mpg = 25 gallons
There are four tires on a school bus because there are four wheels on a school bus. that is true ^ Where I am from, they have 6.
There are about 10 magic school bus books.
On the average trip through the mountains of B.C.: 6 mpg
I understand it's 6-8 mpg though don't have documented evidence for this.
"The Magic School Bus at the Waterworks" by Joanna Cole has 32 pages.
it is about 10 miles to the gallon!
Passing a stopped school bus carries a penalty of how many point
You would have to know the size and type of engine, the age of the engine, the age of the bus and weight of the bus. As a general rule, a diesel engine on a bus would get around 6-15 miles per gallon.
it depends on how big the dogs or the bus is