stevei wrote:
Now, the point you have made before, and I guess that perhaps you are making again here, is that you believe there is no reason for someone to be interested in the link between speed and accidents in the first place, as there is no reason to suspect they are linked. I have to disagree, and I suspect that you do not practise what you preach and drive everywhere as fast as you possibly can. I'm guessing that you ease off the throttle, or even apply the brakes at times. Surely this is because you believe it would be dangerous to simply set off on your journey, plant the accelerator into the floor, and keep it there until you reach your destination? Surely we have to conclude, therefore, that you believe increased speed is dangerous? Or are you going to tell us that the only reason you don't drive everywhere at a steady 100+mph is fear of speed enforcement?
That's not what I'm saying at all, and I now feel at quite a loss as how to put things any clearer than I have done.
So here goes, maybe this will make things a bit clearer, maybe it won't.
Of all the research papers I've seen to date, only a few even attempt to describe a mechanism linking speed to collision risk, and that mechanism is always the same - braking distance is proportional to the square of speed, ergo collision risk is roughly proportional to the square of speed (deviating only because of reaction time makes 'reaction distance' directly proportional to speed)
As if it isn't bad enough that this hypothesis is demonstrably wrong, they then exaggerate this supposed effect by making unrealistic assumptions, such as braking deceleration is 0.6g and average reaction time is 1.5 seconds!
This hypothesis also spawns other falsehoods such as, going slower gives you more time to react, and that there's a direct link between free travelling speed and collision speed.
But this hypothesis is accepted without question, it pervades current mainstream thinking, and if real-world statistical data doesn't agree with it, they manipulate the data until it does, as well as making inferences from the data which simply don't exist.
The true relationship between speed and collision risk is that the risk is proportional to exposure, ie the amount of time it takes to cover your total stopping distance at your travelling speed - which gives a less than linear relationship between speed and collision risk (the deviation being due to reaction time, which is independent of speed)
But even this model is largely irrelevant in the real world, and merely serves to place an upper limit on risk - which is still much higher than real-world data would suggest.
It would only apply if, a) everone always drives at a fixed speed (whatever it happens to be) regardless of conditions, b) they only ever react to hazards when they are already directly in their path, and c) hazards always materialise instantly out of nowhere.
But drivers don't drive like automatons - they slow down, and adust their positioning and spacing, for hazards (real, perceived or potential) so they are able to deal with them. And, contrary to what some people would have us believe, they generally have plenty of time in which to make these adjustments. This driver attention-hazard-speed feedback loop effectively removes speed from the risk equation, and so we now have essentially two significant factors:
1) Drivers aren't perfect - they make mistakes. they sometimes aren't as attentive as they should be, and sometimes misjudge the appropriate speed for conditions. But, even then, it can be shown that the latter error is definitely the lesser of the two evils.
2) The frequency of hazards. The more hazards you encounter the more likely it is that a mistake is going to result in a collision. But it's also true that, because most hazards are transient - the ones that exist only at a particular time at any particular place, the more time you spend on the road the more hazards you will encounter, on average. And the lower your average speed is the more time you spend on the road.
Just to illustrate how far current thinking is divorced from reality:
We are told that we're perfectly safe driving at 30mph, but at 35mph we will mow down every pedestrian in sight.
From 30mph you need roughly 21 metres to react and stop, and about 27 metres from 35mph.
That much is true.
But:
1) We are expected to believe that, not only do pedestrians always charge into the road when there's a car about 24 metres away (never, say, 30 metres or 15 metres), but that a driver will only ever see said pedestrian when they are about 24 metres ahead of them, in which case they'd better be doing no more than 30mph, or the pedestrian is dead meat.
But, hang on a mo, isn't the minimum eyesight requirement for a driver to be able to read a numberplate from 22 metres? Given this, isn't it reasonable to say that if the driver doesn't see that there's a pedestrian just about to step into the road from a good deal further than 24 metres, then they are either legally blind or simply not looking? And that if conditions are such that the pedestrian can't be seen from more than 24 metres then the driver shoudn't (and, in all probability, won't) be doing anywhere near to 30mph?
The distance between two street lights is normally 50 metres, for the sake of comparison. So a visibility of 50 - 100 metres or more is commonplace - and such a distance gives you more than enough time to spot hazards and comfortably adjust your speed etc as appropriate.
2) Just half a seconds inattention on the driver's part can make a difference of more than 6 metres to their stopping distance - more than cancelling out the supposed advantage of going slower.
3) There is a strong inference that , if you're driving at 35mph, the pedestrian will be hit at 35mph. This is complete nonsense, of course - the collision speed being a function of how long you've had your foot on the brake before impact. Here, a half a second makes a difference of around 10mph.
4) The time you have available to react depends on how much time the hazard gives you, and your attention. It has nothing to do with your speed. Your speed only decides how much time you
require to react - a subtle but important point. It is for this reason that slower roads are slower - because they're more hazardous. And why people travel faster on roads with fewer hazards. It's also why slowing down fast traffic on fast, safe roads doesn't make them any safer. It's also why you seldom see speed enforcement on slow, hazardous roads - people are already driving slowly.
I hope this rather long posting has made things clearer.
Cheers
Peter