spankthecrumpet wrote:
What are your priorities? In order of preference, where should you put the car? How should you crash into things? What should you crash into? What should you definitely not do? Is there a better way to be seated to reduce the damage caused by the crash?
Most people freeze in the run up to a crash. If someone pulls out in front and there's no time to stop, the most common reaction is to apply max brakes and
stare at the expected point of collision. You might hold on tight, but little in the way of avoiding or minimising action takes place.
If you can learn to habitually
look for an escape route you have a far better chance of minimising the impact. I've been doing this for 20 years (at least), but I can't tell you that it works because I've not got into that sort of position.
There's a certain truth in the saying:
"you go where you look". So the first battle is looking for an escape route.
After that you're looking for a miss, and that can't be achieved then you're loking for the gentlest impact or the most glancing impact.
As far as looking for a miss is concerned, it's good to remember that
roads are wider than you think. A standard motorway lane, for example, is 12 feet wide - room for two cars side by side. We're not used to accepting a 6 foot gap at 70mph, but if you've got one, it's a free ticket to avoid crashing altogether.
See the Safe Speed page on braking:
http://www.safespeed.org.uk/braking.html and note this graph:
See how the fatality risk at 60mph halves in the first quarter second of braking? This leads us to the certain conclusion that we want to brake first and brake hard in an emergency. Assuming we haven't planned one already, the best time to plan an escape is while we're losing speed. If we decide to steer to safety at some point during the braking, at least we'll have dumped as much energy as possible and have earned ourselves a few more precious milliseconds.
The Roadcraft fans will have been taught to
always consider "position" before "speed" but in a full blown emergency they are
wrong.
Accidents often go on longer than you might think. Suppose you've just managed to brake and skid to a stop on a motorway.
You're not safe yet. Traffic behind may well not be able to stop either. Let's hope you kept the engine running (see "Two Foot Panic" on
http://www.safespeed.org.uk/braking.html ) - if you did, and you're not too busy breathing sighs of relief, you may still have time to
drive to safety.
[just a brief short stab at a vast subject - I hope it helps.]