Road Safety at ezee.ca
Road Safety at ezee.ca
This blog is the beginning of some of my thoughts and maybe some rants about driving and road safety in general.
I’ve been lucky, I have never been in a reportable accident. In fact the most damage that I have done to a vehicle myself was with an ice scraper when I broke an expensive piece of trim while trying to free the wiper blades after an ice storm.
It’s not because I don’t drive much or only drive where there is no traffic, I’ve accumulated well over a million miles, mostly driving a straight truck in metropolitan areas like Toronto, Buffalo, Hamilton or Detroit as well as the desolate areas in between.
I believe the main reason I’ve been so lucky is that I LIKE TO BE SAFE. I don’t knowingly take chances if there is any possibility of getting hurt or damaging property.
I didn’t always think that way though. I lived in The Bahamas when I started driving. In Freeport, Grand Bahama Island, there aren’t freeway or highway systems like the “Interstates” or “Kings Highways” There was Sunrise Highway which was more like a driveway for the amount of traffic that was there, and that was about it.
When I was young in the Bahamas, I took risks, I did do things that were unsafe and dangerous until witnessing a really horrific accident where a pedestrian was hit by a speeding car and his mangled lifeless body came sliding to “our” feet. Forty years after that accident, I can still see it in slow motion like it was last week. That same year my grandmother was killed in a car accident and within a few years a couple of my friends were killed in separate auto accidents.
I have known several people that have survived serious accidents only to go out and survive more serious accidents, unfortunately alcohol sometimes plays a roll. Why are some people so unlucky?
I think it boils down to a combination of ones perception of safety and/or tolerance of risk. In other words, they may think they are safer than they really are or are more willing to take a risk than others.
Personally, I play it safe for the most part, in fact one might say too safe. I like to have a three second break between my car and the car in front of me driving 75 miles an hour on a busy highway. This way, when a tailgater is one quarter of a second from my rear bumper, I have enough time to warn the asshole on my bumper and still slow down without “spilling my coffee”.
All in all, everyone is responsible for their own safety on the road to a large extent, though freak things do happen and even the safest drivers can be at risk of mechanical failure, mistakes of other drivers or even road or weather conditions.
More on road safety at http://www.ezee.ca
Truck “side underride”
Truck safety has improved a lot over the years but there is still a long way to go.
One huge improvement to truck safety has been made in some European countries with the addition of “Side Underride” protection. Too many deaths still occur every year in North America when cars end up careening under truck trailers.
The “Mansfield Bar” at the rear of a trailer has saved countless lives by preventing a car from going under a trailer from behind, now it’s time to protect the side of a trailer, Isn’t it?
More on truck safety at http://www.ezee.ca
Tailgating don’t take away my safety space
I don’t know about you, but this is an issue that really pisses me off.
Most other unsafe road actions are not as intentional as tailgating. An unsafe pass, unsafe lane change, forgotten signal or even running a red light or stop sign may be a momentary lapse of judgment, but getting close and personal with a vehicle in front of you at 70 miles per hour shows either ones aggression or shear ignorance of physics. It’s no wonder how road rage begins sometimes.
Some may recommend a two second break between vehicles on a highway but I prefer a three second gap between my vehicle and the vehicle in front of me. That way I have just a little more time to “PLAN” my actions in case of an emergency and emergencies do happen in a split second. I’ll never cease to be amazed when I see a string of cars less than
a second apart driving at 75 mph.
I fully believe in the basic rule “slower traffic keep right” or “keep right except to pass” while driving on highways and believe that if everyone followed that rule, it would be like unclogging a heart patient’s arteries and traffic would flow.
If slower traffic did keep right a lot of the tailgating would probably go away although there may still be some that just don’t know any better or just don’t care.
More on road safety at http://www.ezee.ca
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