Pete317 wrote:
weepej wrote:
I think increased speed (given the same environment and level of driving skills) increases your chances of being killed/seriously injured or killing/seriously injuring somebody else.
You think wrong.
No he doesn't. It is too obvious to need stating and in the rest of your post you introduce a series of canards which are not relevant so I will not address them.
When driving on a familiar route we are all aware of the maximum speed at which certain parts of the route can be safely negotiated and stick below that speed. We even use phrases like "a 40mph" bend meaning that that is the maximum speed at which it can be negotiated and that an attempt to go round it at 50 mph will lead, at best, to a frightening skid; at worst to a fatal accident. Of course that speed varies with driver and road conditions but Weep has allowed for that in his parentheses. The faster you travel the smaller the margin for error and, beyond a certain point, that margin diminishes rapidly increasing the chances of a serious accident.
In the complete absence of hazards, any speed is 100% safe and one speed is no safer than another speed. Introduce hazards into the equation and suddenly no speed is 100% safe. Because it's hazards which make a road dangerous. Our faster roads are faster
because they're safer, and our slower roads are slower
because they're more dangerous. A lower speed will
not make a safe road any safer, nor will a lower speed on a dangerous road make the danger go away.
A lower speed may reduce the consequences of an accident, but, then again, it might not. It's in the lap of the gods. You may have one serious accident in your life, if you're unlucky. You have one throw of the dice if and when it does happen. You might throw a one, or you might throw a six. You may be KSI, or you might not be. Do you feel lucky?[/quote]