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More stupid laws that affect the rest of us as a direct consequence of stupid kids killing themselves. I have a better suggestion: don't allow driving until age of 19 if you're unwilling to have mandatory driver lessons. |
I'm actually surprised that speed was only a factor in a third of incidents. The way the media loves to make it sound, it should have been a lot higher. As for restricting higher displacement and hp vehicles, there's a counter argument for this. Sure, a Corolla can hit speeds that far exceed the posted limit. However, a car designed for higher speeds and horsepower typically also has the braking and suspension designed to help offset it. A modern AMG or //M will stop far quicker and safely than a modern Mazda 3 or Civic. I wouldn't say speed is necessarily the resulting factor rather than inattentiveness and the fact that your reaction time drops dramatically as your speed increases. Neither of those have anything to do with what car you're in. Hell, my 127hp Acura will hit speeds that exceed even the Coquihalla's limit almost as easily as many dedicated sports cars I've driven. The difference is that the latter can stop more easily than the Aucra. |
^ they can only stop quicker if you're in control and paying attention. How many of these accidents do you think happened only because they couldn't stop in time and the vehicles braking system was the limiting factor? |
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Take an Audi R8 - it's 62mph-0 stopping distance is amazing at 112ft. Let's say a regular economy car has a stopping distance of 140ft. Assuming the R8 has zero brake fade - it's stopping distance from 75mph-0 will be 163ft. Even though it can stop quite a bit quicker than a regular car, going just 13mph faster will equal a stopping distance of 50ft longer, 23ft longer than the economy car going 62. It isn't just about reaction time. |
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Has it ever occurred to you guys that a driver who speeds will speed regardless of what kind of car they are in? Similar to how a driver who always drinks and drive will do the same regardless of the law?The only way to fix this problem is to increase driver education and increase the penalty. Get rid of the frequent oblivious speeders faster regardless if they are a novice or a mature driver. All those ideas regarding limiting displacement and horsepower and stuff like that won't work. Also, the speed limit needs to be increased. When 90% of the cars on the roads are traveling +10 over the speed limit, going the speed limit is just plain dangerous. The government knows this is an issue as it has been suggested by engineers to increase the speed limits on many of the highways in BC. |
mandatory self driving cars. done. lower HP whatever wont change anything. i took my town and country up to 185km/h back in HS cuz i could. an echo can still speed and the driver can still get drunk and slam into a pole or people. it makes no difference. i can take a civic up to 100km/h pretty fast. i bet if they released the cars involved in all teen fatal accidents... none of them are exotics like lambos and ferraris. you might get an M series here and there. but i bet the majority of them are just mom and pop cars. you wanna lower % of accidents? you don't target the 1%. you target the majority average people. they cause most of the accidents. the 1% of the 1% cause some accidents, but they're so few it almost doesn't even matter stats wise. anyway. self driving cars. remove the right to drive on public roads. done. |
In addition, although I know translink is quite terrible, having a good public transportation system will also help tremendously. Provide a service to the majority that will cause them to leave the car home, not need to apply for a drivers license and take public transportation. With the increase in gas prices, insurance and traffic congestion, it will simply be not worth driving for people who are on a tight budget such as students. |
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IMO the problem is ICBC being a profit-minded machine rather than actually caring about driver safety and education. Look at the whole Chinese DL fiasco that happened recently. Because ICBC gets a ton of money from all the Chinese drivers who insure high-value cars and then damage them, they effectively convinced the RCMP to stop doing their jobs, when really they should be doing the opposite and examining why certain groups of people with certain licenses get into more collisions. It simply shouldn't be so easy to get a BCDL and effectively let people who have no understanding of driving in Canada drive around with no checks or balances. I also agree that there should be class restrictions regarding what GLP drivers can drive, as well as a tougher "L" and "N" road test instead of how it is now where you are essentially driving around a couple blocks and then 20-30 seconds on the highway. In a perfect world, we'd be like Europe where young people would be forced to learn on a manual car and do their test in a manual unless they had some kind of disability. IMO that would weed out a lot of shitty drivers. And then be straight up priced out of insuring high-powered or high-value cars until they had a full license. But that's wishful thinking, somehow in North America we see driving as a right instead of a privilege. EDIT: I also think ICBC should do mandatory yearly re-certification for seniors. All this talk about how young people don't have the reflexes, hand-eye coordination, etc. to drive a car, yet nobody really addresses the opposite end of the spectrum. It's proven that people lose their reflexes, vision, coordination, etc. as they age, and I think it's crazy that seniors can just drive up until they go blind with nobody to stop them unless they get into an accident and/or pulled over. |
^ as a side note, I know that many seniors who crossed over to legal driving age during WWII in some countries never actually took a driving test. In the UK they just asked if you had been driving a tractor or truck for XX amount of time during the war and if you said yes you got a license. |
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But I am willing to bet that many seniors on the roads now would not pass the Class 5 road test if made to do so. |
I'm assuming it was the same for military service members but I only know for sure about civilians who worked on farms and such helping with the war effort. It's a bit of a toss up as to whether they would pass, I'm sure sheer experience and having driven all manual cars made in the 20's would help somewhat. |
GLP probably helps but I still remember wanting to sneak out with my parent's car when I had my L Once people got their N in grade 12 there were plenty of burn outs and speeding of 70+ kph in school zones right after school, with plenty of kids around. sadly I got into one those car a few times...thought I was gonna dieded. ICBC should do educational seminars on reckless driving to grade 10 classes like sex ed ...that would've scared most of them I'd presume. Teenagers think their invincible if you just tell them don't do this or that but don't show any consequences. |
When I was in highschool BC Paramedics came out and did a presentation to grade 12's about driving (speeding, under the influence, etc.) All the kids driving were ignoring what was being said, until they brought out a model of this, and demonstrated what will happen if you get into a severe crash. Spoiler! Every single guy immediately shuddered, closed their legs, and paid attention. |
^^^ It hurts coming out more than it does going in! |
If the issue is with young drivers, then address the young drivers. Don't implement something that has so many holes and goes after every driver on the road. Automated Speed Monitoring is nothing more than photo radar and does nothing for new drivers, it just becomes a revenue generator again and nothing to do with safety. |
or... maybe young people are just destined to do high risk things because that's the nature of young people. therefore, young people will die. the end. period. leave it at that. the few young people that take high risks and succeed at it, might get really good at it and become extreme sports or competitive drivers. yes, and the onus and payment is the blood of young drivers and people that get hit by them... society will always absorb the damage. but hey, blood is the only real currency in this world for advancement right? RIGHT?! RIGHT?!?!?! right. it's like... declawing a tiger. or removing the sting from a scorpion. what are we really trying to do here. tiger gotta claw, scorpions gotta sting, kids gotta risk. |
oh fuck BC should just learn from Germany, they have far better driver training and one of the safest highway in the world, Autobahn. Germans take driving very seriously, whereas BC doesn't. All we need to do is to ask one your buddy's brother who is 25 yrs or older, or ask your parents to teach you and off you go. In Japan, you must be trained by official instructor certified by the government. I believe same as in Germany too. |
and HP/displacement limitation on your license? Well that's too bad for kids, they would have to ditch their mom's V6 Powered Camry, Maxima or Accord and drive one of these instead. http://usedcarnews.jp/wp-content/upl...20130805_1.jpg http://www.blogcdn.com/www.autoblog....-t-rex-16s.jpg http://thesupercarkids.com/wp-conten...erlight-02.jpg |
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