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NEW DELHI (AP) ? A bus carrying wedding guests caught fire after touching a high-voltage wire in central India on Friday, killing 28 people, police said.

The electricity supply wire was overhanging the road in Mandla district in Madhya Pradesh state, police officer Ram Pyari Dhurwey said.

The area is nearly 295 miles (475 kilometers) west of Bhopal, the capital of the state.

It was the second such accident in India in as many days. At least 15 people were killed in eastern Bihar state on Thursday when the truck they were riding in touched a high-voltage wire.

source

But I thought inside if a vehicle was the safest place to be during a lightening storm

Richard Hammond (the one from top gear !) Parked his car under a 100,000v transformer with a wire to simulate lightening strikes and he was fine, as was the car

While this is sad, I can honestly say I am not surprised.

But I thought inside if a vehicle was the safest place to be during a lightening storm

Richard Hammond (the one from top gear !) Parked his car under a 100,000v transformer with a wire to simulate lightening strikes and he was fine, as was the car

Can tell you have never been to India, safety is not the biggest concern out there.

While this is sad, I can honestly say I am not surprised.

Can tell you have never been to India, safety is not the biggest concern out there.

Nope, but I have seen videos of the driving, so if the vehicles are anything like the driving I understand

But I thought inside if a vehicle was the safest place to be during a lightening storm

Richard Hammond (the one from top gear !) Parked his car under a 100,000v transformer with a wire to simulate lightening strikes and he was fine, as was the car

Yes, but the trains / cars / bus's in India are probably of alot lower quality and standards.

But I thought inside if a vehicle was the safest place to be during a lightening storm

Richard Hammond (the one from top gear !) Parked his car under a 100,000v transformer with a wire to simulate lightening strikes and he was fine, as was the car

Modern cars channel the electricity down the outside of the car and into the ground, while older cars didnt do this. So in older cars/buses the electricity hits the inside cabin. I dont know the science behind it, i just remember that it isnt just the tyres which shields you.

Richard hammond explains it at 1:50

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