Cleopatra wrote:
However, my original question was asking if detectors represent as much of a distraction as speed cameras allegedly do. I have heard that detectors can go off every time your car passes a shop security door, for example, - i.e. more distraction, especially in areas of heavy pedestrian traffic.
As others have said, newer detectors are more able to avoid false alarms like that. However, in such a scenario as you describe there, with someone driving along a shop-filled pedestrian-filled street, any driver possessing the slightest amount of common sense would be driving below the posted limit regardless of whether they believed there to be a speed camera in the vicinity.
Generally though, whilst the audible/visible warning given off by the detector may be a distraction that wouldn't exist if the detector weren't fitted, it's surely better to have advance warning of a camera site so that you know you've got time to check and adjust if necessary your speed in a safe and gradual manner, as opposed to the problem we see too often of someone suddenly noticing the camera and panic braking to bring themselves under what they think the limit is, even if the actual limit is somewhat higher.
Put it another way, if you were driving along an unfamiliar road, but your frontseat passenger knew every inch of it and kept offering advice as to approaching hazards before they came into sight (sharp bends, hidden junctions, camera sites etc.), would you consider that distracting to the extent that your drive along that road would be less safe than if the passenger remained silent (or you were alone) and you were left with no idea of the road ahead?
I suppose some drivers could be sufficiently distracted by an extra bit of audio/visual feedback from an in-car system such that, for them, a detector would do more harm than good. But, realistically, how many drivers have such an inability to deal with distractions?
Quote:
I am a detector-sceptic. Instead of a driver being speed-aware, does a detector not take aware the driver's own ability to judge speed? After all, you are placing your dependency on a gadget, rather than learning to use your own judgement? Lazy driving?
Not at all, it merely acts as an extra tool in the drivers collection. Besides, the speedometer is a gadget designed to show the vehicle speed - should we do away with those on the grounds that some drivers may rely on them to determine their speed rather than being able to judge it by use of sensory cues? In addition, given the shabby state of too many speed limit signs in this country (hidden by foliage or other badly-placed signs/street furniture, penny-pinching local authorities installing the smallest repeaters as far apart as is legally allowable, old signs not covered/removed when a limit is changed), even the most aware of drivers may sometimes find themselves genuinely unable to state with complete certainty what the speed limit is on a stretch of road. In such a position, which driver would turn down a gadget which told them exactly what the limit was at all times, for every stretch of road across the entire country?