Peyote wrote:
We live in a universe of infinite possibilities. Somewhere there is a version of planet Earth which is inhabited solely by drivers with Schumacher-like reactions.
I think you took that out of context (I did see the smiley, BTW)
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Nope you've lost me with this one. I've re-read half a dozen times. If a vehicle takes longer to cover a particular distance at a lower speed, the driver has more time to depress the brake pedal, surely?
You don't know when a pedestrian is going to step out, and you don't know how far you're going to be away from them at the time. These things are completely random.
If you're doing 20mph and you're two car lengths away at the time, you've got one second to react and stop.
If you're doing 10mph and you're one car length away at the time, you've got one second to react and stop.
And, in either case, the less time it takes for the pedestrian to step into the road, the less of that one second you
have to react and stop.
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I'm not sure why the other vehicles present would have any impact either? I was under the impression the scenario was a single vehicle turning into a side street and a pedestrian crossing the road. Unless in this case the pedestrian is being treated as vehicle?

If you
do have a string of vehicles (which you often do), then the slower they're travelling the less the physical gap between them (for the same 2-second gap) so the more the immediate piece of roadspace is occupied by vehicles, so the greater the probability that there's going to be one within a car's length at the time you step off the pavement.
Cheers
Peter