johnsher wrote:
handy wrote:
You can't, it can't be done, time and distance covered are inextricably linked in a moving body, that's why we have those pesky devices in our vehicles marked in a time / distance scale (you know the one, usually has MPH and KmPH on it).
hmm, wonder why track vehicles don't have them then. How do all those drivers work out where to brake without having the faintest idea how fast they are going?
you've missed the point ... I'll give you the benefit of the doubt and say that it was by accident rather than on purpose ...
TIME and DISTANCE are INEXTRICABLY LINKED in a moving body. The important part of the reference to the speedometer is the "p" bit ... stands for "per".
Now Observer gets the point:
observer wrote:
The mathematical model can accurately describe the outcome of a given situation with two vehicles, travelling at different speeds, and reacting at precisely the same moment to a developing hazard all else being equal. But, in the real world, all else is never equal. What's important in road safety, the difference between crashing and not crashing, or between fatal crash and minor crash, is what drivers do. That comes from inside their heads and cannot be described in mathematical terms.
[my bold]
and this is quite crucial. On this site there is a common tendency to state that the driver who is going faster is always going to be paying better attention to the road, therefore (as the "other things", like time taken to spot hazard, are NOT equal). I have seen no proof to support this statement (paragraphs starting "when I drive faster ..." don't count as proof), or to put it a different way, it's just as likely that the driver with a higher velocity is distracted as the driver with the lower velocity.
So, given that a percentage of drivers are not paying adequate attention to the road, and there is NO proof that those driving fastest on public roads have any different distribution of adequate attention, those driving even a little bit slower have by definition given themselves MORE time (remember, TIME and DISTANCE are
still INEXTRICABLY LINKED, even if a speed measuring device is not present, Johnsher) to deal with issues.
Driving AT the limit, where limit is the capability of the car, driver, road, other road users ability, gives no safety margin. Driving UNDER the limit of capability, driver etc. gives a safety margin in terms of more time and required braking effort. This is true regardless of the posted speed limit.
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COAST Not just somewhere to keep a beach.
A young loner on a crusade to champion the cause of the innocent, the helpless, the powerless, in a world of criminals who operate above the law.