basingwerk wrote:
Good luck to you Hobbes – at least you realise that the odds of crashing are much higher than SS would have us believe.
No! No! NO!
That's NOT what I'm saying, you're reading things I'm not writing again!
I said
Quote:
YES it IS true that the chance of a driver having SOME FORM of accident is statistically 1 in 3 by
calculations (not the 1 in 2 coinflip as you say) during a 50 year driving career.
AND YES this was simplified to cover incidents PER DRIVER (whether or not the driver himself was injured), not stripped down to 'per occupant' or pedestrian injuries, (if these stats were given throughout
it would actually make driver odds much BETTER than 3:1, as of the accident related injuries, only a proportion of these will be driver injuries.)
Driver Odds BETTER than 3:1 ie, 4:1, 5:1, 10:1!!! as the stats are offset against the injured non-drivers & pedestrians.
Injuries caused BY or inflicted ON drivers remains at 3 to 1 odds per 50yrs driving.
Suppose we assume that 1 in 3 drivers will be involved in
some kind of accident injury in his normal driving lifespan. Not great really I agree.(see my older posts) But these are spread over the driver, their passengers and related pedestrians of which, one, some or all are involved at any given time.
The thing with stats like this is "ONE driver is involved in accident resulting in his, two passengers & a pedestrian injury." (Four injuries per driver) This skews the average curve - now, it is concievable that this will result in 4 other drivers having their odds bettered to 1 in 12 (estimate) in order to maintain the 1 in 3 norm, OR, this will push the odds lower - making the figures look bad for other drivers.
ps. I'm glad we're getting
somewhere, I'll be a little more amicable in future.
