JT wrote:
Actually, it is your approach which introduces that very paradox! If you only ever use your brakes for emergencies, then by very definition you will only ever discover a braking failure in an emergency.
JT wrote:
However, if you use your brakes routinely and decisively, as a routine part of most driving manoeuvres, then if they should fail the odds are greatly increased that they will fail when you are making a minor speed adjustment, rather than in a full-on emergency.
Nice try, and I can see that I should have made things clearer. I’m not literally talking about mechanical brake failure, but the total technology round-trip, i.e. the ability of the technology to save you from crashing. It may work almost all the time, but if you rely on it in dire situations, the 0.0001% of the time when it can’t extricate you from the mess you have made may kill you.
JT wrote:
And your point about wipers or lights failing asynchronously to hazards is nonsense. The hazard wipers deal with is water, the hazard lights deal with is darkness. That's when you use them, and also the time when you will typically discover any failure in the system.
Yes, indeed. But it doesn't go dark without warning (total eclipse of the sun, perhaps?), and it doesn't rain torrentially without warning (when is the monsoon season in Cambridgeshire?). Other than that, darkness and rain come on progressively. Failure may happen during use, but there is nothing anyone could do about that, anyway.