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Why Do Buses Come in Threes?

A photo of a London bus
London Bus - Source: David McKay, Wikimedia Commons

Why do Buses Come in Threes?​

We've all been there; you wait at the bus stop for ages, thinking that your bus will never turn up and then eventually three buses come along at once. But why? It turns out that maths provides a very simple explanation

Buses Actually Come in Twos​

First of all, a small disclaimer. It's actually far, far more likely that the buses will arrive in twos. The usual saying is great; we like to over-emphasise things when complaining and three is a very powerful number in the English language (think Goldilocks and the three Bears, three attempts to guess Rumpelstiltskin's name, the rule of three when using adjectives etc.). So in this article we will start by looking at why buses tend to arrive in twos.

So Why Do Buses Arrive in Twos?

Let's think about an example.
Bus 1 leaves the bus depot to set off on its route. The driver has been held up and the bus is already a few minutes late leaving the depot. It then hits some unexpected traffic and by the time the bus reaches the first stop, it is several minutes late.
As the bus is late, there are now more people at the stop than would be expected because several people have turned up after the bus's expected arrival time. Usually they would have missed this bus and caught the next one, but because of bus 1's lateness, they manage to get onto bus 1.
The more people there are at a stop, the more time the bus has to wait at the stop as the driver waits for people to get onto the bus and pay for their tickets. Therefore, the bus is now running even later than planned.
Bus 1 now leaves the first stop and drives towards the second stop. It is now running even later and so the same thing happens again at the next stop. There are more people waiting at the stop than expected and so bus 1 spends more time than usual here too. This continues on for the rest of the bus route.

How About the Second Bus?

Meanwhile bus 2 has left the bus depot exactly on time. When this bus reaches the first bus stop, there are now fewer passengers than expected as some of bus 2's potential passengers managed to get onto the delayed bus 1. This means that bus 2 spends less time at the first bus stop than expected as there are fewer people to get on and pay and so closes the gap between itself and bus 1.
This keeps happening at each stop. Bus 1 has run late, leaving a smaller amount of time between its arrival and bus 2's arrival, so each time bus 2 reaches a stop, there are fewer people waiting for it than would usually be expected.
After a few stops of this happening, bus 1 has been held up more and more, while bus 2 is potentially going around its route slightly quicker than planned. It doesn't take long before bus 2 catches up with bus 1 and there we have it, two buses arriving at once.

Does Three Buses at Once Ever Actually Happen?

The bigger the bus's route, the more stops there are to allow buses to catch each other up. Also, if it is a route with buses that run at small time intervals, then it doesn't take much for buses to start catching each other up.
So on a large route with small planned intervals between each bus, then yes, three buses at once can happen. It is just very unlikely, while two buses at once is much more likely than you would first expect.

Comments

Have you experienced this before? Do you have your own explanation of why it happens?
​Don't forget to leave your comments below.
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  • Home
  • Algebra
    • Algebraic expressions
    • Algebraic equations
    • Expanding brackets
    • Index notation
    • Inequalities
    • Quadratic equations
    • Sequences
    • Simultaneous equations
    • Straight line graphs
    • Substitution
  • Shapes, space and measures
    • Angles
    • Circles
    • Circle theorems
    • Compound measures
    • Construction
    • Distance/speed-time graphs
    • Length, area and volume
    • Metric and Imperial conversions
    • Metric units of measurement
    • Proof
    • Pythagoras' Theorem
    • Scale factors, similarity and congruence
    • Symmetry and reflection
    • Time
    • Trigonometry
  • Number
    • Primary Addition and Subtraction
    • Addition and subtraction
    • Basic number work
    • BODMAS/PEMDAS/BIDMAS
    • Compound percentage change
    • Decimals
    • Factors and Multiples
    • Fractions
    • Fractions, decimals and percentages
    • Money
    • Multiplication and division
    • Percentages
    • Ratio and Proportion
    • Rounding and estimating
    • Standard form
  • Statistics and Probability
    • Averages and the Range
    • Box plots
    • Collecting data
    • Pie charts
    • Probability
  • More
    • Starters >
      • Puzzles and riddles
      • Maths Wordsearches
      • More Maths Lesson Starter Ideas
    • Christmas Maths Activities
    • Maths Articles >
      • Revision and How-To Guides >
        • How do Scale Factors Work for Area and Volume?
        • Edexcel GCSE Maths 2023 Paper 2: The Final Question
        • How to Find the Average From a Frequency Table
        • What Do the Angles in a Polygon Add Up To?
        • How to Integrate by Parts: Calculus Help
        • How to Use Pythagoras' Theorem
        • How to Calculate Compound Percentage Changes
        • How to Find Equivalent Fractions
        • How to Find the Averages and Range From Grouped Data
        • How to Factorise a Quadratic Algebraic Equation
        • How to Expand a Pair of Brackets
        • How to Complete the Square
        • How to Find the Average of a Group of Numbers
        • Hannah's Sweets - Tricky GCSE Question
        • Why Do We Rationalise the Denominator?
        • How to Add, Subtract, Multiply and Divide Fractions
        • How to Answer the 'Impossible' Question on the Edexcel GCSE Maths Paper 2022
        • How to Draw Pie Charts
        • How to Differentiate From First Principles
        • How to Solve Direct Proportion Questions
        • How to Calculate a Percentage of an Amount Using a Decimal Multiplier
        • How to Find the Lowest Common Multiple and Highest Common Factor of Two Numbers
        • How to Write a Number as a Product of Its Prime Factors
        • How to Solve a Quadratic Equation: 3 Methods
        • How To Solve the GCSE Maths Question That's Leaving Parents Stumped
        • How to Multiply Decimal Numbers Without a Calculator
      • How Many Gifts Do I Get Over the Twelve Days of Christmas?
      • How to Find the Sum of a Geometric Sequence
      • The Maths Behind A4 Paper
      • The Monty Hall Problem
      • Rationalizing the Denominator
      • How Do Binary Numbers Work?
      • Rice on a Chessboard
      • How to Prove Pi Equals 2
      • What is the Maximum Score in Ten-Pin Bowling?
      • The Prisoner's Dilemma
      • How Many Socks Make a Pair?
      • Four Interesting Types of Mathematical Numbers
      • How to Add the Numbers 1-100 Quickly
      • What Is the Sum of the Sequence 1, 1/2, 1/4, 1/8, 1/16, ...?
      • Find the Answer to 8×9×10×11×12 Without Using a Calculator
      • How to Prove that the Square root of 2 is Irrational
      • Three Interesting Fractals From Koch, Sierpinski and Cantor
      • How Many Squares Are on a Chessboard?
      • Different Kinds of Prime Numbers
      • How to Do Long Multiplication Using Napier's Method
      • The Handshake Problem
      • Why You Should Always Order the Large Pizza
      • Maximizing the Area of a Rectangle
      • Speed Arithmetic - How to Multiply by 11 Without a Calculator
      • Speed Arithmetic - How to Multiply and Divide by 5 Without a Calculator
      • Pythagoras' Theorem - A Proof
      • How Large Is Infinity?
      • Interesting Facts About Pascal's Triangle
      • Why Does Time Slow Down as You Approach the Speed of Light?
      • Five of History's Most Influential Women in STEM
      • Five More of History's Most Influential Women in STEM
      • How Likely Are You to Hit the Centre of the Archery Target?
      • Find Four Primes Smaller Than 100 Which Are Factors Of 3^32 − 2^32
      • Bertrand's Paradox: A Problem in Probability Theory
      • What Is an Erdős Number?
      • Three of Isaac Newton's Most Important Contributions to the World
      • Mathematical Numbers: What Is 'e'?
      • Hilbert's Paradox of the Grand Hotel: Another Look at Infinity
      • Decreasing the Circumference of Differently Sized Circles: A Counterintuitive Cricket Problem
      • Zeno's Paradox: Achilles and the Tortoise
      • What Are Hexadecimal Numbers?
      • Why Do We Split a Circle Into 360 Degrees?
      • N-bonacci Sequences - Taking Fibonacci Further
      • Being Careful When You Average an Average: A Basketball Problem
      • What Is a Dudeney Number?
      • Every Prime Number Larger Than 3 Is 1 Away From a Multiple of 6: A Proof
      • Why Do Buses Come in Threes?
      • A Quick Way to Solve 1000^2 − 999^2: The Difference of Two Squares
      • What Are Triangular Numbers?
      • What Is the Collatz Conjecture?
      • How to Make a Mathematical Paper Snowflake
      • What Is the Unexpected Hanging Paradox?
      • What Is Pi?
      • Is There a Biggest Prime Number or Do They Continue Infinitely?
    • A-Level Maths Paper Walkthroughs >
      • A-Level Maths, Edexcel, June 2018, Paper Walkthroughs >
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