ElandGone wrote:
RobinXe wrote:
ElandGone wrote:
...ignoring instrumentation is like having the car drive the driver!
Nope, ignoring instrumentation is known as a selective scan, and it does not in any way mean you are not in full control of the vehicle. You only scan those instruments that are important to the mode of opertaion your machine is currently in, and if you are driving to the conditions (road, weather, traffic, hazard density etc.) then the speedo can well be ignored. In such circumstances the only task requiring the inclusion of the speedo in the scan is the avoidance of speed enforcement, which is a largely non-productive additional load on the driver that we can ill-afford, given the current state of our road safety!
Aw come on...."a largely non-productive additional load on the driver that we can ill-afford"...non productive? Hows that? How can something that gives out information to help you avoid a speeding ticket be non-productive p...lease!

:D
"additional load" give me a break"

... a millisecond of your time (and don't lets get bogged down in taking Pauls test to see how long it takes us all to scan our speedo again) to check the indicated speed is hardly "additional load" in my eyes...it is a necessity if you are to avoid £60 and 3 points in today's driving climate.

AND IMPO required if you are to remain in control of your vehicle.

It can be non-productive because the primary aim of driving is not to observe arbitrary speed limits and avoid tickets, its to get from A to B without inflicting death or damage on yourself or others. It is not necessarily the 'millisecond' (hyperbole) of your time that is take looking at your speedo on one occasion that is significant (though on occasions it may well be!) but the constant additional load taken up with looking out for speed cameras, when they are never going to step/pull out into the road, or brake suddenly ahead, or be the primary cause of lost traction with the road surface. What of the driver in a talivan infested area, scanning from speedo to roadside in an attempt to comply and avoid enforcement, who subsequently missed the ball bouncing into his path from the right, closely followed by infant ball-owner?
On a slight digression, and whilst I do not oppose speed limits, in principle, as a tool for curbing excesses, nor do I think drivers should necessarily be given
carte blanche to drive around in whatever manner they see fit, there is a further psychological justification for
reducing the level of prescription in both driving law and it's enforcement: If you micro-manage people to the
nth degree, then you will only get from them exactly what you have specified, and nothing further. You also set up an authoritarian image of
them and
us. If, however, you borrow from the concept of 'mission command', you empower your 'subordinates' largely to achieve the results, without meddling. You give them your intent, and allow them to join in ownership of the goals, in order that the 'team' is united towards a common end, pulling together for a result known and desired by all, not a few of the elite who chuck down prescriptive orders willy-nilly. I'm sure I don't need to spell out the parallels there with road safety.