G'day Phred
There is nothing more diabolical as a Bobtail doing 360*'s in the wet @100kphor maybe a Bobtail blowing a steer tyre and jumping the table drain between the north and south sides of the Bruce Highway just north of Mobivics at Beerwah qld
cheers
Last edited by UncleHo; 21st December 2007 at 01:00 PM.
You won't find me on: faceplant; Scipe; Infragam; LumpedIn; ShapCnat or Twitting. I'm just not that interesting.
had a near miss about 2 hrs ago, duel lane, me in right doing 70km coming up to about 5 cars in a row in left lane doing about 60kmh. the last vehicle in left lane was a flat tray, he decides he is coming into the right lane as I was level with the tray, front of my rangie (left hand bull bar) ended up just under the tray forcing me to drive up the curb to get out of his way. As I sit here now and think about it, this guy had no bloody idea what he had just done and just never seen me. Felt like sticking the foot down and spinning him around. cheers
blaze
I'll agree that P platers are too inexperienced - but where do they get the experience, other than driving, in all conditions.
On Tuesday night my daughter had a minor bingle in a roundabout (unfortunately in my Defender)
On Wednesday afternoon she learnt that someone she had just met recently had been killed in a crash - I think that was a sobering thought for her. She was also able to identify that fatigue was also probably a big factor.
Not able to drive the Defender(supercool according to Top Gear)
Hands up those that haven't done that at some time during their younger years. I remember telling my kids that I could get the old Datto 1600 up to 100mph between Engadine and Loftus. Looking back not a very smart thing to do and their reaction was appropriate. I suppose a bit different to doing it every day, but is that the situation or is there a fair amount of 'bull****' (on his part) associated with that statement, don't forget you are really only just out side his peer group.
Research is starting to prove that you are NOW about the right age to be mature enough to get a license - but I don't think that will be practical, or more to the point palatable to the politicians that make the laws (or to the population).
Martyn
1998 Defender
2008 Madigan
2010 Cape York
2012 Beadell, Bombs and other Blasts
2014 Centreing the Simpson
VKS-737 mob 7669
Who of us haven't noticed the bad driving by "Driving Instructors"when they are in the signed car by themselves?
Sometimes I think it's the blind leading the blind, especially when they allow bad driving manners & habits to develop when they have pupils.
Who hasn't noticed bad driving instructors with students under instruction.![]()
Around my way they usually have Chinese pictograms or Arabic script on their signs - but geeeezzz do they make me angry. Think nothing of letting students drive with wheels on both sides of unbroken lines, double park in the street, even the Telstra ad seems mild to some of them around here.
Diana
You won't find me on: faceplant; Scipe; Infragam; LumpedIn; ShapCnat or Twitting. I'm just not that interesting.
Exactly my point, Diana.
Around here the "Learners" from the big smoke are taken up a fairly narrow, steep hill to Mount Lofty Summit.
Not only do they cautiously drive slower (that's fine) & create a tail back, but when they do reach the only place they can pull off & allow traffic to pass, it seems as though they are never advised by the instructor to do so.
Not only would it teach the student courtesy, but I suspect the learner wouldn't also mind a breather from the concentration.
Everyone wins.
I'm sure no-one doubted JDNSW's assertion that statistic show that the accident rate has been going down rather than up.
I wonder though how many people realise just how strong that trend had been.
My reading of the graph below is that in 1978 there was one death for every 27,400,000 vehicle kilometres traveled.
In 2004 there was one death for every 108,300,000 vehicle kilometres traveled.
So for every kilometre you traveled in 1978, you were four times as likely to be killed as you are now.
Or another way of looking at it there were four times as many deaths in 1978 as there are now when you consider the greater distances traveled today.
Even if you don't allow for the extra travel there were twice as many people actually killed on the roads each year in the 70's as there are now.
There are some more statistics here if anyone else is in the mood to dispel a few illusions or confirm a few prejudices about road safety.
Crash statistics
1973 Series III LWB 1983 - 2006
1998 300 Tdi Defender Trayback 2006 - often fitted with a Trayon slide-on camper.
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