Rigpig wrote:
My concern is that driving without a safe gap between ones own vehicle and the one ahead is slowly becoming a driving norm. It is certainly endemic on the M54.
Couldn't agree more. It's par for the course on the motorways I use most (M3, M4, M40 and M25), and from what I've seen of the M1, M11, M20, M6, M5, M42, M56, M62, A3(M) and M27 things are no better there. Trunk roads and dual carriageways are usually just the same. In fact I reckon up to a point the higher the road speed, the smaller the time gap. Drives me round the twist.

Rigpig wrote:
When something becomes the norm, no matter how wrong it is, changing it back again is bound to prove difficult, particularly if in this instance, the DfT suddenly proposes coming down hard on 'tailgaters'. People who don't necessarily give much thought to their driving will wonder why they are being punished today for something they've done with impunity for the past umpteen years.
Those 2-second rule ads should be brought back.
Yep. IMO they need to begin the re-education process before they start hammering drivers who've been allowed to forget it. OK, the drivers themselves have also allowed themselves to forget about it, but we have continually had the seatbelt and drinking messages over the years while ads for the two second rule have quietly vanished from our screens.
This is what they had to say when I mailed them about it a while ago:
Quote:
Only a fool breaks the two second rule was probably a television filler, or public information film, which television stations would put on air when they had free airtime.
All television channels currently have a Think! two second rule filler, which they can use when they have unsold airtime.
In the advice section on the Think! website you'll find driving on motorways, which mentions the two second rule.
Our Guide to Safer Motorway Driving leaflet with the same advice can be obtained by phoning 0870 1226 236 and quoting product code T/INF/260.
Our advertising budget is spent on areas where deaths and serious injuries are highest, i.e. speeding, drink drive, motorcycling, driver fatigue, seat belts, child road safety, mobile phones and drug driving.
So they have a filler that may occasionally get shown when the TV companies have free airtime, say the early hours of the morning, and a leaflet that hardly anyone will ask for obtained by dialling a number hardly anyone knows about, and advice on a website that hardly anyone looks at. [sarcasm]Well, that's alright then. We're obviosuly worrying about nothing.[/sarcasm]
