|
Rule 4:
Don't speed!

Driving at a higher than reasonable speed
increases your risk in two ways: it cuts your reaction time
and results in more "stored" energy (that must be
dissipated in any collision). You should consider if the risks
are worth the gain.
This is the science of math and physicsyou
cannot bend these rules. Each incremental increase in speed
reduces your ability to react in time to hazards, because
you may be covering distance in less time than it takes to
react. Normal reaction time is between .75 second and 1.5
seconds, on average. Average reaction time distance at 50
mph would be approximately 83 feet. At 70 mph, it is over
115 feet (over 7 modern car lengths). These numbers do not
include braking distance, just reaction time. The average
difference in reaction-time distance from 50 mph to 70 mph
is about 32 feet. If you were relying solely on braking, any
hazard you encounter within the reaction distance is already
a problem; you can't react quickly enough to miss it. This
is particularly important at night, when darkness restricts
your visibility. Do you know at what distance your headlights
will illuminate a hazard? How is your night vision these days?
When headlights finally light up a road hazard, it is often
too late to avoid it. Many experts would tell you that even
50 mph is too fast for conditions at night, on any dark roadway.
If you could choose the speed at which to
hit a brick wall, assuming that it was a sure thing you were
going to hit one, would you choose to hit the wall at 10 mph
or at 100 mph? Not hard to decide, is it? Higher speeds
also bring additional accumulated, or stored, energy. More
stored energy means increased crash forces if you hit something.
Here's a real-world example; a loaded semi traveling at 60
mph develops about 6.5 MILLION foot-pounds of force. Or, your
body, unrestrained in the vehicle, could hit the windshield
with about 16,000 foot-pounds of force, should your vehicle
hit some immoveable object - like a tree.
A defensive driver chooses a speed matching
traffic as closely as possible without exceeding speed limits.
If traffic is moving at higher speed than you should go, keep
to the right and out of the way. This is often a legal requirement
as well, if you are traveling at a speed less than the flow
of traffic. Also, don't neglect to maintain the correct following
distance.
Consider that speeding often doesn't save
much time. How many times have you reached a red light,
only to find a "jackrabbit" waiting there that passed
you a half mile back like you were standing still? Ever wonder
why? Around most urban areas, signals limit overall speeds
to what the system can handle (in terms of numbers of vehicles).
In Phoenix, for example, that's approximately 40 to 45 mph.
Drive faster than that and you'll simply spend more time waiting
at red lights, wasting fuel, wearing down brake pads, and
accumulating just a little more stress in your life for no
good reason or gain. Even on the highway, you don't often
gain much. Frequently, once you pass someone, you find them
on your back bumper as you slow down to enter the next town.
So you gained what, exactly? On an Interstate, where you truly
can save some time by speeding (provided you don't get pulled
over), the difference between 65 mph and 80 mph over 50 miles
is only 8.7 minutes. Big deal.
<Rule
#3: Yield Anyway!
Rule #5: Don't Drive
Impaired.>
|