
WelshGas
Retired after 42 yrs and enjoying Life.
Super Poster
Lifetime VIP Member

The Fight for the Right to Drive
The Human Driving Association hopes to pass a constitutional amendment for the age of autonomous vehicles.
I got stuck on the image of a guy weeing behind his car and wondering what it had to do with the article...
You stop, everyone stops. Could be interesting.I got stuck on the image of a guy weeing behind his car and wondering what it had to do with the article...
You mean like a train or tramPersonally I cannot see autonomous vehicles being anything but " Follow my Leader " transport pods, and introducing them into a predominantly manual system a recipe for disaster
Yes. ACC cruise control. At least you still have a driver to change lanes.You mean like a train or tram![]()
The driving standards that are commonplace on our roads now are awful. Cutting in, late breaking, inappropriate speed, mobile phones and the impatience to get there now are the causes of many unnecessary accidents. As a HGV driver I have 35 hours of classroom training every five years to be able to continue my entitlement to drive trucks. Maybe it is time to introduce the same system for car and van drivers to include the following:
How to enter and exit a roundabout.
Why there is a gap between a truck and the vehicle in front.
How to use the vehicle indicators.
Join the end of a queue instead of cutting in.
Turn your mobile phone off if you don’t have hands free.
Understand the importance of patience.
Check your vehicle lights working.
Stop at a zebra crossing if someone wants to cross it.
Don’t try to drive in snow if you don’t have the correct tyres or talent.
Yes. ACC cruise control. At least you still have a driver to change lanes.
That’s my thoughts too but some of us here recently took part in some paid market research that suggests very much the opposite. It’s the next ‘new’ thing and I suspect the only developments taking place on conventional vehicles are those that lead them towards winning the future autonomous race.Cars being autonomous in this country is a long way off simply because the roads aren't suitable.
Interesting discussion this.ACC for if you like driving with your brain disengaged...
That’s autonomy creeping in slowly, along with lane assist etc etc.
But did that stupid person Learn anything from that episode? No, she is just as stupid preferring to look at her phone rather than check the road. If she had been knocked to the floor then maybe next time she would have taken more notice. Harsh I know, but as it said in that article, training and learning may bring all the gains needed.Interesting discussion this.
A few years back I got a new car (Golf GTE) and it came with autonomous emergency braking.
One morning I was pulling in to the road near the office up from a mainline railway station. A commuter was looking down at her phone, with head phones in and stepped out in to the road as I turned the corner.
The car stopped dead.
I don't know how fast I was going (10-15mph maybe), but there is no way had I been driving my previous car that I would have reacted and stopped the car in time.
I remember the look on her face like it was yesterday. Still makes me shudder. (She was a right cow, waved her arms in the air and a whole host of expletives came out of her mouth - like it was my fault!)
I was very grateful for this "driver aid" that day and I can't imagine I'd go back to a car without it if I had the choice today.
I was also glad when VW made it standard on the later T6s. Our 2016 Beach didn't have it.
I think of these advances like the introduction of anti-lock braking. They are good and make driving safer.
I really enjoy driving and don't relish the thought of computers taking the enjoyment out of it though. If they make it safer, then I'm all for it.
ACC for if you like driving with your brain disengaged...
That’s autonomy creeping in slowly, along with lane assist etc etc.
What wrong with concentrating 100% with the task at hand, driving.
Perhaps it would be better if we as motorists remember that on all highways, with the exception of motorways and a few other roads, pedestrians and cyclists have an unrestricted right of passage; motorists can only use the highway under licence.Maybe we should follow the States and make " Jaywalking" a criminal offence.
Everyone should take personal responsibility for their own actions.Perhaps it would be better if we as motorists remember that on all highways, with the exception of motorways and a few other roads, pedestrians and cyclists have an unrestricted right of passage; motorists can only use the highway under licence.
There is an abundance of stories relating acts of stupidity by road users of all sorts, many with catastrophic consequences. There is, however, a greater duty of care required from someone driving, often at considerable speed, inside a steel box than someone with little more than flip-flops and clothing defending their body.Anyway she landed under the bonnet of my van.
Stupid action on her behalf. Its a case of natural selection.
Where the smart survive and thrive.
I don’t fully agree with this Amarillo. If you have minimal protection as a pedestrian, surely you instinct for survival would make you even more aware of your surroundings and take the necessary steps to look after yourself.There is an abundance of stories relating acts of stupidity by road users of all sorts, many with catastrophic consequences. There is, however, a greater duty of care required from someone driving, often at considerable speed, inside a steel box than someone with little more than flip-flops and clothing defending their body.
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