10 Road Safety Tips Every Drivers should know
1. Don't use your mobile phone while
driving
2. Always Belt up
3. Don't Drink and Drive.
4. Slow down for pedestrian.
5. Take extra care when driving in
school zones and playground
6. When driving long hours, have a break
and rest for at least 15 minute every
3 hours
7. For long trip, share the driving
responsibility with someone else if
possible.
8. Always use your side and rear mirrors
regularly
9. Child and baby seats should be fitted
properly and checked every trip
10. Always keep a two second or imaginary
two cars as gap between you and any
vehicle in front.
driving
2. Always Belt up
3. Don't Drink and Drive.
4. Slow down for pedestrian.
5. Take extra care when driving in
school zones and playground
6. When driving long hours, have a break
and rest for at least 15 minute every
3 hours
7. For long trip, share the driving
responsibility with someone else if
possible.
8. Always use your side and rear mirrors
regularly
9. Child and baby seats should be fitted
properly and checked every trip
10. Always keep a two second or imaginary

vehicle in front.
Nice tips, but rather increase following distance to 3 seconds on dry tar, by measuring when the back of the vehicle in front of you passes a marker like a tree, then counting 1001, 1002, 1003 by the time the front of your vehicle reaches the same marker.
ReplyDelete3 hours is too long. The average adult can concentrate for 2 hours maximum. Rather stop at each petroport every two hours on a long trip. Baby seats should be behind the driver, facing backwards to prevent their necks breaking in a crash and the buckle from tearing organs. Thank you for your excellent contribution.
Regarding following distance...a quote from my good friend Eddie Wren:
ReplyDeleteThe rule is three seconds for a dry, clean road surface; double it to six seconds for a wet road surface (irrespective of whether or not it is still raining -- remember it is the available GRIP that counts); and the triple or even quadruple it (i.e. 9-12 seconds) for extremely wet or otherwise slippery road surfaces -- everything from standing water and the risk of aquaplaning, through soft snow, to ice (and at the latter point look for the first opportunity to terminate your journey before somebody else's bad driving on sheet-ice does it for you).
The original rule was 2-4-10 seconds but this was extended to 3-6-12 as a result of research which showed that real-life reaction times are significantly slower than people expect them to be (largely because of complacency and a failure to concentrate).
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ReplyDelete