BEHIND THE WHEEL - TIPS FROM THE PROS
January
Be careful on wet roads Since
we don’t get a lot of rain in Southern California, even
during the Winter, drivers aren’t used to the reduced traction on slick
roads. In snow country, drivers have more
experience
when it’s slippery and develop a healthy respect for physics. Yesterday morning, a 19-year old San Diego
teenager
lost his life when his car spun out on a wet curve, right into the path
of a
fuel tanker truck. His car ran wide and
crossed 3 lanes of traffic. When the
road is wet, traction is reduced, and too much speed can lead to these
tragic
results.
California’s Basic Speed Law
says you can’t drive faster “than it is safe for the conditions” no
matter what
the posted speed limit is. Slow
down. Inspect your tires to make sure
they have a safe amount of tread to channel water underneath. And
consider
taking an advanced driver safety course (like www.streetsurvival.org) to really learn
how to handle your car.
October
Look WAY ahead on the road!Too many drivers only look
as far ahead of them as the bumper of the car they're following.
That is not near enough information to drive safely and anticipate
changes. In addition to keeping a 3-second gap to the car ahead,
look at least 10-15 seconds ahead on the road. Basically, look as
far ahead as you can see. There
are lots of advantages to looking
WAY ahead: 1) You have much more information to make decisions about
what to do and where to go, 2) You have more time to make essential
decisions, 3) You have more choices in your decisions (notice the slow
truck earlier, you can change lanes sooner and not get stuck), 4) You
can lift off the gas to gently slow the car instead of jamming on the
brakes when you're surprised by slowing traffic that you didn't notice
soon enough.
This not only is
safer and smooths out traffic flow, it can become a matter of life and
death. Last Saturday, an SUV driver didn't notice suddenly
slowing traffic on I-5 and didn't leave enough time to slow down.
Instead, he swerved off the right shoulder, hit an embankment, and his
SUV rolled over several times. Three
passengers had moderate
injuries, and a 26-year old woman, who was not wearing her seat belt,
was ejected and later died from her injuries. The driver
survived, but he will never be able to forget that his driving mistake
took the life of a friend.
June
Texting is OMG, not LOLWe all know that texting while driving is very dangerous. It’s also very illegal, in California and almost all other states. Texting is a serious distraction from driving, making a driver 23 times more likely to crash compared to being fully alert to conditions. Texting causes all 3 types of distractions: visual (eyes off the road), manual (hands off the steering wheel), and cognitive (mind on the message). And now, for the first time, a teenager has been convicted of murder caused by texting while driving.
A jury in Massachusetts convicted an 18 year-old of vehicular homicide after he crossed the center line and crashed into another car, killing the other driver and seriously injuring their passenger. Telephone records showed he was texting at that moment. He was sentenced to 2 ½ years in prison, and will have his driver’s license suspended and unable to drive for 15 years. He will get out of prison some day, but he will never be able to bring back the life he took when he was texting instead of paying attention to his driving. Turn your phone off or put it in the glove compartment when you drive. Your friends will understand when you reply only after you’re safely at your destination.
April
Don’t
become a statistic
It’s
sad but true: car crashes are the #1
killer of teenagers. More than disease,
more than drugs, over 5,000 teenagers are killed nationwide every year
in car
crashes. A recent tragedy affecting East
County teenagers illustrates the dangers.
Coming home from a Spring Break bonfire at the beach, 5
teenagers in a
car began racing friends in another car on Highway 52.
At over 100 mph, their car flipped and rolled
several times. A student from Santana
High School and another from El Capitan were thrown out of the car and
killed
instantly. Another student was declared
brain-dead, and two more had severe injuries.
A candlelight vigil was held at Santana to remember the lives of
those
who lost their lives and reflect on how this senseless tragedy could
have been
avoided. According to the California
Highway Patrol, highway fatalities
can nearly always be traced to one of three
causes: Excessive speed, not wearing a
seatbelt, or Driving Under the Influence.
In this case, all three were a factor: the car was going over
100 mph,
two of the rear-seat passengers weren’t wearing their seatbelt, and the
driver
was high on marijuana. ALL THREE OF
THESE FATAL FACTORS ARE PREVENTABLE. How
to
avoid
becoming
a
fatal statistic is not a mystery.
You CAN drive the speed limit. You
CAN always wear your seatbelt. You CAN
make sure you (or the driver of the
car you’re in) are sober behind the wheel.
Make sure you do. Our company
slogan is also our commitment: we teach
Good Habits for Life.
February
Get a GripThe way you hold the steering wheel can make a real difference for your personal safety and when you need driving precision the most. A generation ago, everyone was taught to hold the steering wheel at the 10 and 2 hand position (viewing like the face of a clock). Now the best advice is to hold the steering wheel at the 9 and 3 position. There are three good reasons for this important change. First, a generation ago, steering wheels didn’t have airbags. To save thousands of lives every year, airbags are designed to deploy in a serious frontal collision. Sensors trigger an explosive charge and the nylon bag expands to instantly fill the space between the driver and steering wheel. How fast you ask? The speed of an airbag deployment is about 170 mph! If your hands are in the upper part of the steering wheel, your wrists will be shoved into your face, risking a broken nose or knocked-out teeth. You’ll survive the crash, but you might look a little different. At 9 and 3, your hands will harmlessly go to the side and the airbag can do its job. Another reason is that you have more accident avoidance control. Try this: at 10 and 2, you can quickly turn a steering wheel 90 degrees without taking your hands off. At 9 and 3, you can turn the wheel a full 180 degrees in an emergency, doubling your range of motion. Race car drivers use this technique for maximum precision when they’re driving at the limit. Finally, notice where the turn signal lever is. At the 9 position, you can flip on the blinker while your hand is still on the wheel; at 10 you have to take one hand off the wheel. It’s almost like the car designers planned it that way…
January
Look! Look! Look!Driving safely is a visual exercise. You must actively look around to know what’s going on in front of you, behind, and on both sides and keep a safe distance from other cars. Defensive driving means you’re always aware of other drivers and you keep an escape path in case another driver does something wrong. Because they will. You have to do some of their looking and thinking for them, because most drivers don’t look around enough themselves. And you don’t want to get caught up in “their” accident. We teach drivers to use a vision pattern that makes sure they’re always aware of their surroundings. Adapted from fighter pilots, with this technique you don’t miss anything. Here’s how it works: First, scan through the windshield from side to side, noticing any movement (other vehicles, pedestrians, bicyclists, animals, read all road signs). Keep your eyes moving; don’t fix on one spot (after all, it’s not polite to stare…). Occasionally, you have to check a mirror and the speedometer. But anything other than scanning through the windshield needs to be a quick glance, then immediately return to scanning ahead. This is the defensive visual pattern: SCAN, check a mirror, SCAN, check a different mirror, SCAN, check the third mirror, SCAN, check the speedometer, SCAN, repeat. Your eyes are moving every 2-4 seconds, and the pattern repeats every 15-20 seconds. After all, driving on busy streets may seem like a you’re in a dogfight.
December
Seatbelts Save Lives
You’ve heard this over and over, but it’s really true. Whenever you get
in a car, as a driver or
passenger, put on your seatbelt. Make a habit of putting it on
before you start the car. Sadly,
not everyone does. Recently, a popular student at an East County high
school lost his life when
riding with his mom on the way to school. A tire blew out on the
freeway, she lost control of
their pickup and they rolled down an embankment. He wasn’t wearing his
seatbelt and was
thrown from the truck, and in an instant, he was gone. A very sad
campus held a candlelight
vigil and dedicated a football game to him. But the best tribute to him
is the vow for all of his
classmates to always wear their seatbelt. His mom was wearing her
seatbelt, and after two
days in the hospital, she was home and has fully recovered from her
injuries. But she will never
recover from the loss of her son. Most Californians have gotten this
message, and we hope
you are already in the habit of always wearing your seatbelt. Here is a
revealing statistic: 97%
of Californians wear their seatbelt, but 50% of highway fatalities
happen to people who
do not wear their seatbelt. That means that only 3% of unbelted
people equate to 50% of
fatalities. Those are terrible odds; make sure you AND YOUR PASSENGERS
always wear
seatbelts.
November
Follow This Closely…
We almost never have the road to ourselves. While driving with other
people all around us, we
have to remember to share the road, to be predictable to other drivers,
and above all to keep it
safe. You may know that the law gives drivers extra responsibilities
when they follow someone
else. If there’s a rear-end collision, THE DRIVER BEHIND IS CONSIDERED
RESPONSIBLE
FOR THE CRASH. That’s right, if the person ahead of you brakes
suddenly, even if it seems
like it’s for no reason, YOU are responsible if you rear-end them. How
do you make sure you
don’t hit the car ahead? Well first, always keep your eyes scanning the
road far ahead to be
aware of what’s happening. How far behind should you follow? When your
parents learned
to drive, they were probably taught to keep 1 car-length for every 10
mph. That is no longer
used, because most of us aren’t good at measuring distance, and are we
talking about the
length of crew-cab pickups or Smart cars? The ideal following
distance is 3 seconds behind
the car ahead. When the driver ahead passes a fixed object (sign,
pole, tree, line across the
road, shadow across the road), count “one thousand one, one thousand
two, one thousand
three” before you pass the same spot. This works at ANY speed, from
residential areas to
the freeway. It might seem like more space than you need, and it would
be IF YOU ALWAYS
KNEW EXACTLY WHEN THE CAR AHEAD WAS STOPPING. But, since we can’t read
the
mind of the driver ahead and predict the future, we need time to SEE,
ANALYZE, and REACT to
a hazard ahead. According to studies, that takes 1.0-1.5 seconds. So
now your braking time is
cut in half by the time you notice what’s happening and when you hit
the brake pedal. You have
still left enough space to stop your car. The safe following distance
is as easy as 1-2-3.
October
The Heat is ON!
Most of us associate hot weather with Summertime, but in San Diego, we
have some of our
highest temperatures in October when Santa Ana winds blow desert air in
from the Northeast.
It’s a good time to think about the effects on you and your car. In
warm weather, try to drink
plenty of liquids (water hydrates better than soda). If you have
something cold in the cupholder,
don’t take your eyes off the road or your hands off the steering wheel
for too long when taking a
drink. How about sipping while waiting at a red light, or when the
freeway is straight and clear?
Also, it is technically illegal to drive while barefoot. Why? If you do
have a collision and your
door is jammed, you can break the side window glass by putting a shoe
over your hand, but that
only works if you HAVE a shoe. And if your door opens easily, walking
barefoot on pavement
that is hot or covered with broken glass doesn’t sound like a good
idea. When you drive, always
be prepared for the unexpected… Your car may also be affected by hot
weather. Now is a
good time to get used to keeping an eye on the temperature gauge.
Engine coolant can heat
up when the car is stopped (red lights or traffic) or when the engine
is working harder (up a
long hill). Overheating is bad for your engine, and it can lead to a
cooling system failure (white
steam and water vapor coming from under the hood). If the temperature
gauge climbs, first turn
off the air conditioning (less work for the engine). If that doesn’t
help enough, turn
on the heater (opens up more volume for the cooling system). It may be
uncomfortable for you,
but it can save your engine from a meltdown until you can fix your
cooling system. One more
tip: most modern cars actually use LESS gas on the freeway with the air
conditioning on and
the windows closed. There is less wind resistance without buffeting
from open windows, and
modern air conditioning is very efficient. Enjoy the warm weather!
September
Back to School!
Yes, Summer is over. We hope you had a fun one. But when school is back
in session, drivers
have an extra responsibility when they’re near a school. You’ve seen
the speed limit signs
for School Zones: SCHOOL SPEED LIMIT 25 mph. But does that mean
you always have
to slow down when you’re in a School Zone? Many drivers are confused by
this; some slow
down all the time, and some never slow down. If you continue reading to
the bottom of the
sign, it says: “When Children are Present.” Aha! But what does
that mean? What if there’s
a flashing yellow light above the Speed Limit sign? What if there’s a
digital readout of YOUR
speed flashed below the Speed Limit sign, telling everyone how fast you
are going? Exactly
WHEN does the School Zone Speed Limit apply? Here’s what it really
means: “When Children
are Present” means that there are literally school children on the
sidewalk at that moment. If
school is in session but kids are inside the buildings, the 25 mph
Speed Limit does NOT apply
(even if there is a digital speed readout showing you’re going over 25
mph). If school kids are
outside BUT in a playground separated by a fence from the sidewalk, the
25 mph Speed Limit
does NOT apply. In those cases, the Speed Limit is whatever the last
posted Speed Limit was
before you got to the School Zone. If children ARE present, slow down
to 25 mph until you get
to the “End of School Zone” sign. Now you know.

