โJul-17-2021 11:18 PM
โJul-20-2021 09:59 AM
โJul-20-2021 09:34 AM
MFL wrote:When I took Driver Ed if any of the instructors caught you driving to Driver Ed, you automatically failed and had to wait a year to take it again. Many of us grew up on farms and had been driving big equipment and trucks for years before we were old enough to get a license.Cummins12V98 wrote:
"but as you increase speed you also need more distance to give enough time to react"
My statement does exactly that! Faster you drive there will be more distance between you. Two seconds at 90 the distance between will be greater than at 55.
I stand by Mr Purvis' drivers ed recommendations many years later.
Exactly...I knew someone would question this, not thinking it through! I drove to drivers ed, but was not old enough to have a license yet. D's ed was fun, and I did learn from the experience.
Jerry
โJul-20-2021 08:19 AM
Cummins12V98 wrote:
"but as you increase speed you also need more distance to give enough time to react"
My statement does exactly that! Faster you drive there will be more distance between you. Two seconds at 90 the distance between will be greater than at 55.
I stand by Mr Purvis' drivers ed recommendations many years later.
โJul-20-2021 08:09 AM
โJul-20-2021 07:43 AM
Cummins12V98 wrote:
I was taught in drivers ed to pick a landmark next to the vehicle ahead of you and count "one thousand one, one thousand two". Now you should be at that landmark. Any less than two seconds you are following too close. This applies at any speed.
โJul-20-2021 06:19 AM
JRscooby wrote:
I do not think I said a cop should be fired for speeding. My suggestion he be fired was when he is in a position to see speeders, is not on a more important call, and does not enforce the law
If the cop is just watching traffic go by over the limit, he is not earning his pay. Sure, he can't stop all, and likely doesn't need to write a ticket on every stop.
โJul-20-2021 05:35 AM
toedtoes wrote:wing_zealot wrote:
While there may be no evidence that differential speed causes accidents, there is certainly empirical evidence that the greater the differential speed, the greater the potential for having accidents and the greater the severity of the accidents.
Hence there is a reason why there is a minimum speed limit on freeways and why you can't drive your moped on them.
Yes, there are minimum speed limits on freeways. But that minimum is "waived" all the time. Stop and go traffic, road work, icy roads, fog, stormy weather, etc.
One person driving too slow may be annoying. But as long as others are driving an appropriate speed for the conditions and are paying attention, there will be no accident. It's when all those other "people factors" come in that accidents happen. Like the driver who chooses not to slow down but instead swerve around the slow driver on a crowded freeway.
โJul-20-2021 05:24 AM
toedtoes wrote:valhalla360 wrote:bgum wrote:
If you don't believe speed kills just look at the pileups with 40-50 cars. Those who are driving the limit are not the problem the speeder is the problem.
Typically, that is poor visibility. They are rarely doing the speed limit. It's more often someone nervous who is traveling substantially below the average of nearby traffic (high differential speed).
Of course, until we have wide spread adaptive speed limits, the limits posted for normal conditions will be too much for icy white out conditions.
According to the NHTSA, approx 94% of car crashes are caused by drivers.
Of those, over 40% are "recognition mistakes" - this is distracted driving or simply not paying attention.
"Decision errors" cause 33.3% of crashes - this includes speeding, tailgating, driving recklessly, and incorrectly judging the speed of other cars or space the driver has to complete an action (e.g., passing another vehicle).
"Driver performance" causes more than 10% - this is oversteering, losing control, etc.
Other errors not related to performance, which mostly is the driver falling asleep causes 7%.
Unknown or unspecified reasons cause 8%.
Note that "driving too slowly" is not listed in any of these categories.
That suggests that your claim that those pile ups are caused by some nervous nellie is inaccurate. It is NOT the nervous nellie who causes the accident - it is the driver who is distracted or is making decision mistakes. If that driver were not distracted, speeding, tailgating, miscalculating speed of or space between other vehicles, then the collision would not have occurred.
The nervous nellie does NOT hit other vehicles - other drivers hit the nervous nellie. And they do so because they are distracted or making bad decisions.
In a foggy situation, with a speed limit of 55mph, one should expect and be extra observant of vehicles driving much slower, or even stopped traffic. A driver who chooses to drive 55 in that situation has no one to blame but himself if he hits a car going 45mph.
โJul-20-2021 05:17 AM
BobsYourUncle wrote:
A point perhaps worth considering regarding a LEO and driving is that they are not an average driver taught by mom and dad how to pilot a car.
They undergo rigorous training behind the wheel. They are taught to be observant of all things and situations. They are taught to be keenly aware of their surroundings and more.
Their drivers ed teaches them by actual scenarios how to react in a multitude of traffic situations. Things like a pursuit chase - they learn by controlled training how to react to their surroundings, what to expect from other drivers etc etc.
Bottom line is that a LEO is far better equipped to handle a vehicle than the average driver is.
โJul-20-2021 05:14 AM
rhagfo wrote:
I have seen drivers doing 60 to 70 in pea soup fog, that they can't see much more than three car lengths in front of them.
โJul-20-2021 04:39 AM
spoon059 wrote:
So... you want him fired for not enforcing the law... but you agree with Lynmor and fj12ryder that he should be fired for speeding. Which is it? By the way, enforcing the law doesn't mean enforcing EVERY SINGLE LAW, EVERY SINGLE TIME. Otherwise he would have to pull you over for doing 56 in a 55, thus not being available to pull the next guy over for doing 90 in a 55. Maybe he isn't making a traffic stop for speeding because he is headed to a call for service, or maybe he's headed to someone's house to tell them that their child is dead, or maybe he's going to a call for a missing child, or maybe he's gotta go to the bathroom.
You can't catch every traffic violator and have to strike a balance between those that are worth pulling over and those that aren't. There are plenty of threads on RV.net complaining about that "a-hole cop" that stopped someone for rolling through a stop sign or some other "minor" offense. But you want him FIRED if he doesn't stop someone for a traffic violation?
But then you contradict yourself and indicate you DO want him fired for speeding. It would be easier to follow your logic if you kept it straight yourself.
โJul-20-2021 12:14 AM
toedtoes wrote:4x4ord wrote:toedtoes wrote:
I have no problem with a marked emergency vehicle driving over the speed limit. The assumption is that they are doing so in the performance of their duties and that the excess speed is necessary. I am willing to accept that assumption.
I do take issue with off duty law enforcement officers (or off duty emergency personnel) in private vehicles speeding and not being ticketed if stopped. The "good ole boy" wave 'em on attitude is wrong.
Do you stand opposed to the 1500 private jets landing in Sun Valley bringing billionaires together to talk about climate change?:)
What does that have to do with this?
โJul-19-2021 07:37 PM
โJul-19-2021 07:27 PM
โJul-19-2021 06:19 PM
MFL wrote:
Not to stir the pot, but no matter how fast they drive, you can never have a cop show up when you need one! When you don't want to see one... you guessed it!
No offence to officer Putman! ๐
Jerry