weepej wrote:
dcbwhaley wrote:
The graph in that link does not conclusively demonstrate demonstrate that travelling well below the 85th %ile is more dangerous. It could well be, probably is, that less competent drivers drive at a lower speed. If they increased their speed to that 85th there is no reason to expect their accident rate would fall. More likely the opposite.
The text below it also seems to assert that crashes that involve a slow driver are automatically the fault of the driver who's going slow. That's quite a common thread on this site.
Doddery old fool at 30 mph on a UK "A" road suitable for 60 mph. Of course he has an elevated crash risk. He does not know what he is doing. That's why he's doing 30 mph with a queue of increasingly frustrated traffic behind.
A single vehicle in lane 3 of a busy motorway. It's obvious that as the speed is reduced below 55 mph the crash risk will increase. Cherry picking will not help any discussion as points being made are then not only taken out of context (deliberately) but the point of the meanings purpose is lost.
Safe driving and concentrating on improving those that are not 'up to par' may often be a subtle point that is missed.
One has to understand where the safest drivers are to start to comprehend what is best practice.
NO ONE has ever said that if someone is comfortable at proceeding at a slow speed that they are comfortable with that this in itself is always wrong. In some circumstances it can be of course. Police do book people for both excessive and slow speed when they are considered to be dangerous.
Understanding the purpose of safe areas of driving (road users), is fundamental to understanding safe driving (road user) practices. Once you understand where the safest areas exist you can make various conclusions. Once you have a collection of conclusions patterns and trend emerge. Those best practices help indicate who are the safest.
So when the discussion becomes one of a few individuals bad practices or one or two incidents the overall benefit of understanding road safety is lost nto a narrow discussion.
Nothing wrong in discussing a few individual driving behaviours but it is a different disucussion, pin pointing a driver behaviour/s and whether or why (etc.) that is right or wrong. Then depending upon the topic running in the thread, will then depend on if you chaps are trying to introduce a specific example is then either on or off topic.
In this case this topic is about the overall trend and system so to introduce individual examples discussed is likely off topic.