stevei wrote:
I'll accept the point that inattentiveness may be worse, no problem there. But if average impact speed is proportional to free travelling speed, that could have a very disproportionate effect on the number of serious accidents. So what result do you get, say, for how the number of accidents where the impact speed is 30mph or greater, say, varies with free travelling speed? From what you've said, I would expect a more than linear increase in this measure with speed.
Perhaps I could have worded that better.
In any particular incident, from the commencement of emergency braking (under good conditions) you lose roughly 20mph per second, which means that you'll come to a complete stop from 30mph in about 1.5 seconds.
The time between commencing braking and impact, and therefore the impact speed, depends on where the hazard is in relation to you at the point at which you commence braking. As this relationship is essentially random, so will the impact speed be - and could be anything between zero and your full travelling speed.
If you have a statistically large number of incidents, you will find that there is an even spread of impact speeds when plotted against braking time. However, as braking time is effectively 'slowed down' (it takes twice the time to cover your braking distance while braking as it does at your original speed) and the risk is proportional to 'pre-incident' time, you will find the numbers increasing toward the higher speed when plotted against pre-incident time.
BTW it took me (and Paul as well) quite a while to get my head around the effects of this 'slowing down' of time.
What attention (hazard awareness) does is to place an upper limit on the impact speed.
Consider this: except for incidents where you don't see the hazard untill less than your reaction time before impact, some braking will take place, and so the impact speed will always be less than your pre-braking travelling speed. A higher level of attention (hazard awareness) will increase the time between seeing the hazard and the impact (if any) and so increase the amount of speed you lose before impact. So your level of attention places an upper limit on the impact speed for any given pre-braking travelling speed.
Cheers
Peter