camera operator wrote:
to take this thread further the British army team currently climbing mount everest, obviously the team are very experience mountaineers but there will be a heirachy of climbing experience,
do the party climb to the pace of the strongest or weakest member of the team, an old phrase springs to mind " a chain is only as strong as its weakest link", so why should driving be any different
Ithink (but am open to correction) that they will climb according to a master instructor. If they are to go up in one group, they will have to do so to suit the capability of the least experienced. However, with each run (or part of a run) hopefully there is educational intent. A better way surely would be to split the group into two or more streams. In skiing you have different colour runs, black being the most difficult. Mountaineering I assume has similar gradings for different climbs. The more experienced skiers will naturally want to stretch their abilities by choosing blacks; Motorists typically can't choose different runs going about their daily business.
camera operator wrote:
there are 1759 members of Safespeed, lets say 1758 are of the advanced driver stage (i do not class myself as an advanced driver), does this mean that road policys are set to the minority or to the majority of drivers who may not be so highly skilled.
I still want to leave ADs aside in this thread. However, the principle you are trying to rub in - I think - is continuing the chain/weakest link. Let's explore that for a moment, but lower the overall to a more realistic level. For a given group, there will be a small percentage of ADs, the large majority of SD1s, some SD2s, the odd chav (whom for this purpose I'll ignore), plus a small number of complete beginners - passed the test last week. I won't ignore those - everyone goes through that phase whereas thankfully not many of us go via the chav route in our life. Should policies be set for the beginners - make all motorists crawl at the speed above which beginners can't cope? I say not, but policy must allow for such motorists and accommodate them while they gain experience. Should policy apply restrictions to, say, 20 mph in areas where pedestrians might roam in case SD2s do not observe pedestrians correctly and scrub off no speed at all prior to impact with one who "suddenly" appears in their trajectory? Restricting to 20 with 100% compliance would, we are told, ensure a very large survival rate in pedestrian collisions. I say not because doing so engenders complacency in both motorist and pedestrian. However - and this is also important - this is a good starting point for beginners and SD2s as they build up their observational skills, be it with formal post-test training or just experience.
camera operator wrote:
another one- a disco / dance / tea dance
we have John Travolta standard disco dancers all the way down the scale to a Mr blobby, how many of us hit the dance floor thinking in our heads we are of Travoltas standard but look like blobby or is that just the beer

This one I'm struggling with! I am not quite up to Blobby standard myself - even with the beer
