mosis wrote:
{snip}
We all have to refocus if looking from a distant object to a near one. I didn't deny that. I just said that it takes me an imperceptibly short time - since you have such a problem doing this basic (and important) task repeatedly, shouldn't you be trying to fix this problem?
{my bold}
I have a means to fix it - the glasses which I take off and swap for monofocals the moment I get in the driving seat of the car. I dispute "important".
mosis wrote:
Can you see your rev. counter?
The rev counter has a defined red zone, and a trained glance without refocussing is adequate to determine visually whether I'm in the red. Having said that, I drive an auto which will not enter the red zone in "drive". Also, the rev of the car can be determined by the performance in a given gear and the engine sound to a more-than-adequate degree for normal road driving. Were I in a competition I'd fit two bulbs in peripheral vision on the top of the dash - one each (rev) side of the optimum gearchange point.
mosis wrote:
What you have admitted here is that YOU have an inability to see what's on your own dashboard properly, without it taking you so long that you lose sight of what's on the road ahead of you.
Yes. And what you've assumed is that I've no other means to check that my numerical speed is within that prescribed by law, that I might overrev the engine, that I'd not notice a fan belt break, that I'd not realise the need to refuel....
mosis wrote:
So you think it's acceptable for you to continue driving, even though you no longer know what speed you are going at!
Here you go again - obsession with speed. I drive to conditions. The time it takes me to recheck numerical speed is such that I don't do it as often as you - I pick my moments. I am pleased to advise that, within tolerance, my prior opinion of numerical speed from many other factors, matches that indicated by the speedo.
mosis wrote:
So you then 'redefine' the speed limit and now call it 'safe speed' not 'posted' or 'legal speed'.
No. I regulate my speed to match hazard density and prevailing conditions, one of which is the numerically posted speed limit. Depending on enforcement severity, this last (arbitrary from a safety aspect) point may be elevated on a transient basis to take a higher than desireable (from a safety perspective) place in the hierarchy.
mosis wrote:
Why not just fix the problem with the glasses you need?
Because the side effects of possibly misjudging speed of objects in peripheral vision thanks to the variability of the power of the lenses is to my mind too great a trade off. It would place the wrong emphasis on my priorities and make me less safe.
mosis wrote:
And therefore you think it's okay to SPEED
Roger wrote:
Did I say it was ok to speed? It is NOT ok to exceed the speed at which one becomes unsafe.
And, of course, YOU get to decide, as and when it suits YOU, on all roads, in all sorts of conditions. Not those wretched planners, who of course know nothing about every road in the country, the accident rates, etc. compared to YOU.
Yes. You're getting there. The posted limits do not vary with time of day, weather conditions, parked car concentration... Fortunately my (continually reassing) choice of speed does.
mosis wrote:
But again I ask - WHO gets to decide? WHO is going to decide that your speeding is 'dangerous', as well as the tens of millions of other drivers, all over the country, ALL the time? Do we just have a free for all?
We all do this all the time. Some place a heavier reliance on the speed limit than others, but we all choose our rate of progress. Fortunately we all do it fairly well. If we didn't we'd all end up in heaps like skittles having been "striked".
mosis wrote:
Why do you feel the need to go faster than the posted speed? I would love to know. Therein lies the real problem - your problem. I have never once in my twenty years of driving felt like I needed to go faster than the speed limit.
With the exception of motorways and roads which have artificially low limits to appease the crowds and scamerati, I am pleased to confirm that my desired rate of progress is nearly always at or lower than the posted limit. There are specific occasions where it is safer to exceed a posted limit - where visibility ahead is restricted on a transient basis but prior observation has confirmed a clear stretch is one such example.
mosis wrote:
{snip}
You are speaking, again, about your own bad eyesight here. It would not take me any more time (at least, not measurable in less than hundredths of a second) to refocus.
Please can you endulge me here and do the experiment that Paul devised for speedo time-to-check? It's defined around 2/3 through
this page I would welcome your opinion on the validity of this test and love to know your result.
mosis wrote:
{snip}
You meant to say "unlike speedo checks FOR ME WHO HAS BAD EYESIGHT". ...{snip}
Roger wrote:
No I didn't. That is both wrong and offensive; I invite you to withdraw the allegation.
Why would that be 'offensive'?
Because you are making assumptions in a derrogatory way about what you thought I meant to say, wrongly, and then quoting it as fact - and with CAPITALISED EMPHASIS. That is why it is offensive, but no matter.
mosis wrote:
Because you're incapable of focussing properly while driving a car, you claim it's 'offensive'? It's not me who's driving around with poor vision.
No - bacause you wrongly claim to know what I intended to say and quote it as fact.
mosis wrote:
{snip}
Well I've never had to 'maintain calm' because I've never felt anger while driving. Could it be because I have absolute confidence in my own driving abilities, and, especially, my own sight?
I find it incongruous that you've never felt anger when behind the wheel given that you've been driving 20 years. Unless I'm mistaken, you've been posting elsewhere on this board about wanting to film other drivers committing offences. What has fuelled that desire if not anger?
mosis wrote:
{snip}
Please explain to me:
1) Why you think it is acceptable for you to be driving on our roads when your re-focussing time is so slow that you cannot safely see what speed you are going at. (And yes, I know you claim to be able to tell what a 'dangerous' speed is, but you can tell how fast you are going by how quickly objects are moving past you - which requires you to follow them as they come closer to you - thereby requiring you to refocus...
Maintaining a safety cocoon of time is paramount. This one can do without looking at anything within the car. As to absolute numerical speed, I can determine this from external influences to a sufficiently accurate degree.
mosis wrote:
2) Why you think you or anybody else should be allowed to speed. Since you can't physically check your speedo, you are highly liable to be breaking the law every time you drive. Who gets to decide who the special people are who are competent enough to speed?
Class 1 Hendon-trained traffic police used to make very effective judgement of this in yesteryear. Exceeding the speed limit is an absolute offence. Policed with appropriate sensitivity it gives police power of education as well as a means to prosecute where required.
mosis wrote:
3) If you support yearly driving tests. Perhaps if the speeders here supported yearly driving tests, and passed them ten years in a row, they would have some justification for claiming that they, and only they, can drive above the speed limit, as long as it's 'safe'. (I don't think that breaking the speed limit automatically means you are driving dangerously, but it's all a matter of degree, and since most people are bloody incompetent drivers when they stay UNDER the speed limit, we can expect a lot more misery in the form of 'accidents' if such people are allowed to go even faster.
I would have no problem being reassessed for driving competence on a regular basis. Whether annually is the right frequency I am unsure, but in principle I have no problem whatever with this.
mosis wrote:
4) Why you want to go faster than the posted speed limit. This one I have never been able to comprehend.
Unless dictated by circumstances of emergency, I want to travel at the speed that minimises overall risk in all situations. Sometimes this is in excess of the posted limit.
I really have tried to answer your questions here. The only parts I've nhot bothered to include above from your long post are the banal point-scoring parts where no new points are raised. However, if you feel I've left anything out, please advise.