School Bus Video Surveillance Camera installations often require installation when the school is at recess, like summer or winter break, so freezing cold or steamy and hot are the times we get to work on the buses.
Students With Disabilities & Special Needs Transportation Video Camera systems are often the toughest in summer, as their windows are tinted and they have large A/C units blocking the cable access.

Mocking the Fashion Police and taunting the judges of "Best Dressed Lists" nationwide. Neil in summer uniform, complete with a police-issue SWAT vest full of electrical connectors, screws, tools, tape, and fasteners. 26 pockets in all, and all full. Note the cordless drill mounted in the "low-slung" holster and the stylish rappelling gloves to protect my hands from the common sharp edges of sheet metal. Columbia "river shorts," Danner steel-toe boots, and Wiley safety glasses complete the disaster.

If that were not enough to convince you I spend too much time in buses, hidden from view is the Camelback water supply fitted into the back of the SWAT vest, with a straw over my right shoulder. Sounds extreme, but in the summer in GA, the measured temps in buses we work on are between 140-154 degrees, and parts of Florida are even hotter. We work on the buses in the yard to speed up the installations, so there is no shade or electricity for fans. At least the X-terra still looks good. The X-terra was one of the "1999 Father of the Year" awards from a contest my wife and son entered with an Atlanta radio station. It's like a "truck"........only smaller!