johnsher wrote:
Rewolf wrote:
In many ways it is advanced driving for Motorways and DCs.
great theory until the car in front of you has some sort of mechanical failure or something else totally unexpected happens - like someone crossing the central reservation.
Just to play Devil's Advocate for a moment, that doesn't really defeat the theory. If some "foreign object" enters the carriageway then the idea is that you react to it at the same time as the car in front, or perhaps slightly earlier, so that you both brake at the same rate and maintain (or increase) separation.
If the "unexpected event" is something totally catastrophic, such as a notional twenty ton weight dropping from the sky immediately in front of the car you are tailgating and causing sudden and massive deceleration then you would still hit it if you were two seconds behind - in fact you'd hit it
harder as a bigger speed differential would have had time to develop.
Going back to the original post, I've been thinking a bit about this and I have to say I agree with Paul. I can think of a few occasions over the years where I've come close to embedding myself in the back of the car in front, and in each case it has been due either to a lapse in concentration or to being distracted from looking ahead.
And to pick up on the other point about C.O.A.S.T. I think it does work very well as a prioritised list. Look at it in terms of which deficits are most likely to lead to crashes? Loss of Concentration is clearly top of the list, as all of the others are dependent on it. Loss of Observation would be next most likely to cause a crash (eg didn't see child run out), which in turn is more likely to cause an accident than a lapse of anticipation (failed to
expect child to run out). And so on...