โJul-17-2021 11:18 PM
โJul-20-2021 05:50 PM
JRscooby wrote:
This is 1 reason I always say the best vehicle for first car is a regular cab small pickup with 4 cyl, manual transmission. The low power reduces chance of showing off. Manual transmission mean pay more attention to driving. The frame IMHO is better when (not if) they wreck.
And most important; Think back, every time you got in trouble, or should of got in trouble, there was 3-4 friends in the car with you. The little cab reduces that chance.
โJul-20-2021 04:54 PM
โJul-20-2021 03:27 PM
Bumpyroad wrote:
I haven't checked back to see if any body has mentioned it yet, but if every one dropped back the "recommended" spacing, 1 car length per 10 mph or whatever, you would end up with the traffic moving backwards as new cars got into the mix.
bumpy
Bumpyroad wrote:toedtoes wrote:
My Mom wouldn't let us drive home after getting our permits or licenses. Her observations showed a lot of kids getting into accidents on those two days - so she removed them from the equation.
I can certainly agree on not letting a kid drive solo. I remember some states restricting driving with two young drivers. If one kid has an IQ of 100 and another gets in with an IQ of 100 the combined IQ would total out to about 60.
bumpy
โJul-20-2021 02:11 PM
Bumpyroad wrote:Nah. Those that cut in usually don't last long. They pop over to the fast lane and you can move forward again. Even if you let 105 cars in front of you at 4 second spacing you lose max 7 minutes at 60mph. Hardly going backward on a 6 hour drive.
I haven't checked back to see if any body has mentioned it yet, but if every one dropped back the "recommended" spacing, 1 car length per 10 mph or whatever, you would end up with the traffic moving backwards as new cars got into the mix.
bumpy
โJul-20-2021 02:07 PM
Bumpyroad wrote:toedtoes wrote:
My Mom wouldn't let us drive home after getting our permits or licenses. Her observations showed a lot of kids getting into accidents on those two days - so she removed them from the equation.
I can certainly agree on not letting a kid drive solo. I remember some states restricting driving with two young drivers. If one kid has an IQ of 100 and another gets in with an IQ of 100 the combined IQ would total out to about 60.
bumpy
โJul-20-2021 02:05 PM
Bumpyroad wrote:
If one kid has an IQ of 100 and another gets in with an IQ of 100 the combined IQ would total out to about 60.
bumpy
โJul-20-2021 02:02 PM
Bumpyroad wrote:
I haven't checked back to see if any body has mentioned it yet, but if every one dropped back the "recommended" spacing, 1 car length per 10 mph or whatever, you would end up with the traffic moving backwards as new cars got into the mix.
bumpy
โJul-20-2021 01:19 PM
toedtoes wrote:
My Mom wouldn't let us drive home after getting our permits or licenses. Her observations showed a lot of kids getting into accidents on those two days - so she removed them from the equation.
โJul-20-2021 01:14 PM
โJul-20-2021 01:08 PM
spoon059 wrote:toedtoes wrote:
As such, the report shows that no one stated "he was driving too slow" as the cause of the accident. Yet many many people stated they were distracted, speeding, tailgating, or had fallen asleep, etc. and that's why they hit the other car.
What if the at-fault driver was tailgating because the other driver was "driving too slow"?
โJul-20-2021 12:42 PM
toedtoes wrote:
As such, the report shows that no one stated "he was driving too slow" as the cause of the accident. Yet many many people stated they were distracted, speeding, tailgating, or had fallen asleep, etc. and that's why they hit the other car.
โJul-20-2021 12:32 PM
valhalla360 wrote: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.
https://www.michigan.gov/documents/mdot/RC-1609_478401_7.pdf
There is plenty of evidence. See pg7 of the attached (right side graph)
- About 7mph above the average speed (not speed limit) is the safest speed, though obviously, everyone can't go 7mph above the average or the average would move.
- 20mph below average is far worse than 20mph above average (around 3 times as likely to be in a crash).
This graph is from the 1960's but I've seen similar studies that show the same basic pattern.
Going significantly slower than average is dangerous.
โJul-20-2021 12:09 PM
Bumpyroad wrote:wing_zealot 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.
reminds me of when I went to the court house to take my test. I drove there on my learner's permit and my mom was with me. she went shopping, I went in the court house. when the officer giving me the test and I went out to the car he was surprised no body was with me. he did accept the fact that my mom had been with me and went shopping but I don't think I totally convinced him. ๐
bumpy
โJul-20-2021 12:05 PM
valhalla360 wrote: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.
You've found a flaw in the way crashes are reported. The cop is almost never present to see the accident unfold. They typically have little or no evidence to go off of (usually conflicting he said/she said), so they typically fall back following to closely for conditions or driving too fast for conditions...well because if they weren't there wouldn't have been a crash.
That's great in terms of handing out a ticket or determining who's insurance pays up. It's not very useful in determining how to fix the problem.
If there is a 100 car pile up, that suggests 99 cars selected a speed they felt was reasonable and 1 felt they needed a significantly slower speed...but again, if the average speed is 50mph in a 70mph zone, it's not relevant to setting the speed limit.
โJul-20-2021 10:55 AM
wing_zealot 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.