johnsher wrote:
there's also plenty of people out there who'll tell you their driving isn't affected by an evening on the booze.
Well we all know that cannot be true due to the way alcohol works on the brain, however medical testing before now has also shown that drivers under the influence of cocaine have a more heightened attention span than a driver that is drug free.
Based on that evidence, should we get the GP's to start handing out prescriptions in order to heighten people's attention spans before they get behind the wheel now?
Just because you don't seem to think it is possible to talk & drive at the same time (based on your own personal experience perhaps?), it doesn't mean that it cannot be done.
Watch the reality TV cop shows, and you will see time & time again a lone police officer using his radio while on pursuit and his driving is not degraded in any way at all.
And before you offer the explanation of it being done because the officer has been "trained", you can forget that because it is a mindset thing.
You can either do it, or you can't.....and if you can't then no amount of training will teach you otherwise.
Capri2.8i wrote:
When I was a van driver on the minimum wage £300 was an awful lot of money.
As I said above, I didn't buy the phone or the head unit because I was thinking from a safety point of view. I bought the head unit because I wanted a decent sound system, and I bought the phone so I could run TomTom on it.
The fact that both are BlueTooth capable just happened to bring about the nice little side effect of having true hands free in the car.
The comment about whether you have the money or not for true hands free is a bit of a no brainer, because if you did have the money for the hands free then you would be spending it on a better equipped car to start with.