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This is exactly correct! There are no dangerous roads, only dangerous driving. A fact that seems to elude most scameraships
Hmnn!
I'm torn on this one.
Whilst I accept the principle that, for a "perfect" driver there would be no such thing as a dangerous road. I have to accept that no driver is perfect.
As drivers we are always (or at least we should be) matching our driving style to the road conditions in order to make a reasonable balance between safety and making good progress.
As Weep points out. the only *safe* car is a stationary one! Unfortunatly, in this state it would be making no progress at all. OTOH somebody blatting down a single track road at the limits of adhesion may be making good progress but he is also, basically, a dead man driving (along with whoever he inevitably ends up hitting)
Somewhere between these two extreems there lies a optimal point where safety and progress are balanced at a reasonable level. (Unfortunatly, diferent people have diferent views about where the *reasonable* point is, but that is for a diferent discussion)
part of the process of deriving this point is the driver "reading" the road ahead for potential hazards (both moving and stationary)
To my mind a "Dangerous" road is one where a *competant* driver is
mislead by his observations into believing that he can travel faster (or perform potentially hazardous manouvers such as overtaking) than this optimal point. A "Safe" road is where he is mislead into driving slower (or avoiding hazardous manouvers) than this optimal point.
(This is where the "sight line barriers" mentioned elsewhere at roundabouts come in, they are there to make the road look more dangerous than it actually is)