russ_watters said:
I'm not sure what you mean by that, but I drive in traffic every day and see situations where the driver in front of me slams on their brakes every day.
So that's the norm for you. Would you avoid a crash, though, if that driver slammed onto his brakes too late and runs into a "brick wall"? What about what that driver slams his brakes shortly after someone pulled in between you and him?
I'd like to see some citations of that 1 second. It seems unreasonably high to me and as far as I'm concerned,
It would be nice to see them on half-a-second too.
If all you're timing is the response time to seeing a car's brake lights turn on, then yah, I agree that one second is ridiculously high. But the number that matters has to account for the time it takes to realize you have to slam the brakes rather than gently press them, along with the maximum amount of distraction you might suffer (checking mirrors, reading street signs, and non-driving-related ones too).
When they see brake lights in front of them, they don't slam the brakes on reaction. I can't tell how hard they
do press at first, but it's definitely not a slam.
Based on the 3 second rule? As others noted, the 3 second rule is rarely followed ... a reality about how people determine stopping distance, not some silly rule the DOT gave us that no one ueses.
You should know better than to make an argumentum ad populum. Just because most people tailgate doesn't mean tailgating is safe.
russ_watters said:
You cannot calculate the following distance behind an object that doesn't exist, so there is nothing you can do about that one.
Sure I can, it's not hard. If I'm going 55 MPH down the highway following at half-a-second behind the guy in front of me, I can estimate that someone pulling between us will be roughly in the middle, and my following distance would be less than a sixth of a second.
The premise of your objection is flawed, though -- people
really do pull in front of you. Therefore, safe driving must account for the fact it happens.
This one I don't understand - how does following distance matter if you get sideswiped?
This one was more about the safety of others. However, as an aside...
You're not suggesting you apply a following distance rule to people next to you, are you?
One of the usual guidelines of safe driving is not to drive side-by-side with other cars. (or just in front of or just behind)