Originally posted by d000hg
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Explain to me then: Why can a normal considered driver, drive on a regional road at 50mph and be perfectly safe, yet another driver, driving at the same speed skid off the road and crash.
Both are going the same speed, so it has nothing to do with that.
The issues you mentioned but glossed over. I highlighted them in bold for you though. The problem is people dont know how to take a corner safely at speed, how to drive in adverse conditions, they dont keep enough distance, etc etc. In your example, it isnt that someone is going too fast to react to a changing situation, but that they don anticipate that situation. I can tell on the motorway for instance half a mile off when traffic is bunching up well before anyone touches their brake pedal.
Let me try to illustrate this to you in another way. When there was bad snow and ice, I saw plenty of accidents happening on a chaotic morning. People smashed in to other cars, in to the back of them at only a couple of miles an hour. Yet others managed to drive at 20mph on ungritted roads and not smash in to each other, at the exact same junction.
Speed wasnt a relevant factor that morning either although reports tried to claim it was. The issue was people for the most part, werent used to snow and didnt know how to drive in it. They didnt know about feathering controls, driving in a higher gear to lower rpm's more than usual and gentle control inputs. Most just drove like they normally do.
That is why some skidded out of control at a slower speed than walking pace, while others going near the speed limit (30mph) managed to stop in plenty of time and didnt get stuck at all.
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