South Strip Transfer Terminal, located at 6675 S. If you left an item on the Deuce, contact a Public Service Specialist at (702) 228-RIDE (7433) or1-80 and provide the following information:ġ) Route number of the bus you were riding and bus number if possible Īll lost and found items, including bicycles, left on transit vehicles may be picked up only at the For TDD call (702) 676-1834 Deuce Lost and found Seating and space for up to two wheelchairs is reserved in the front of the vehicle, just behind the operator's seat. The Deuce, along with all public transit vehicles in Southern Nevada, is ADA accessible. Mariana's Supermarkets, 7 Eleven, Moneytree, Walgreens, Albertsons, Check City, and Cash Land Contact RTC BusĪll Deuce buses are lift-equipped, kneel to the curb, and have low floors to accommodate passengers using mobility devices. Look through the list of the available passes here.ĥ-Day and 30-Day Residential All-Access Passes are now available at these stores: If you plan to be in Las Vegas for a month or so, you may benefit more from one of the extended passes offered by the RTC. and 3-Day passes Ticket Vending Machine (TVM) locations FSE (on Las Vegas Blvd)
South Strip Transit Terminal (SSTT) 2-Hr., 24-Hr. Fremont Street Experience (on Las Vegas Blvd) and 3-Day passes are sold at the Ticket Vending Machine (TVM) at these stops: This means a 2-Hr pass purchased will expire 2 hours from the time it was purchased. Please beware that all tickets are validated with a time stamp and are ready to use at the time of purchase from a Ticket Vending Machine (TVM). Ticket Vending Machines (TVMs) will accept $1, $2, $5, $10 and $20 bills but do not give change. TVMs accept bills, coins or Visa, MasterCard, Discover, American Express and debit cards. TVMs are located at the various Deuce stops (listed below), as well as the Bonneville Transit Center (BTC), and the South Strip Transit Terminal (SSTT). Using the TVM to purchase fares and passes prior to taking the bus can help speed up the boarding process. RTC's Ticket Vending Machine (TVM) offers a quick and easy way to purchase one way and 2-Hr., 24-Hr. You can also take any of the other 37 buses to see more of Las Vegas. It accommodates up to 97 people, it's air-conditioned, spacious and begins the trip at the south end from a terminal close to the Harry Reid International Airport and ends at a terminal close to Fremont Street. The RTC Transit has 51 routes and if you'll be spending most of your time on the Strip you'll want to take this San Francisco-style double-decker bus that is dedicated to the Strip. Las Vegas buses are more accessible than taxis, which can't pick passengers up off the street. The Deuce runs 24 hours a day from the South Strip Transit Terminal, to the Vegas Strip with many stops up and down the resort corridor, and continuing to the Fremont Street Experience in Downtown Las Vegas, and Las Vegas Premium Outlets South.ĭeuce on the Strip stops at virtually every hotel and casino along the Las Vegas strip with stops located about every quarter mile in each direction of the Vegas strip and are marked with signs or by bus shelters. Run by the Regional Transportation Commission (RTC), the Las Vegas Deuce is probably the least expensive way to sight-see along the Vegas Strip. The red lights could be from Resorts world, and the other white lights from the Wynn, Encore, Strat, and Palace Station.The Las Vegas Deuce on the Strip, also referred to as The Deuce, is the Las Vegas bus service for both locals and visitors along the famous Las Vegas Strip. Other people online have even matched up the lights to some of the large hotel casinos along the strip. Light can come from the sun, moon, cities, street lights - any strong light source. The light hitting it gets reflected up and up (or down and down, depending on the source), and becomes a radiant column in the sky. That means we get these vertically stacked mirrors floating in the atmosphere. Ice is very reflective, so when light hits those wider faces, it bounces around and reflects off more ice crystals. At the top and bottom are the faces with more area. When ice drifts down through the air, it falls close to horizontally. Ice is very thin, shaped like plates with hexagonal faces. They do come from above - not extraterrestrials, but tiny crystals of ice hanging in the atmosphere.
Long pillars of multicolored light streaking the sky seem like the perfect backdrop for impending alien invasion, but in reality, light pillars are a common effect that can be found all over the world. Valley residents mistake skydivers’ parachutes for possible UFOs, meteorĪccording to one National Weather Service web page, light pillars are described as the following: