Great mantra, but the article's title is misleading. It should read: 'Bigger isn't always better.'Ottomania wrote:
Bigger cars just "pretend" to be safer :unnamednewbie13 wrote:
Guns don't kill people, people do.Ottomania wrote:
people dont die because of small and efficient cars, they die because of reckless driving.
I agree with your logic. However, I do like to try and protect myself against reckless driving by making sure whatever vehicle I purchase has decent survivability.
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m … _98469838/
"The argument that lowering the weight of cars to achieve high fuel economy has resulted in excess deaths is unfounded," says Tom Wenzel of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, coauthor of the report with physicist Marc Ross of the University of Michigan. "Safety is a challenging concept. It includes the design of the car itself, driver demographics and behavior, the kinds of roads, the time of day--a whole host of factors." While highway safety is complex, one thing is clear: A safety-conscious driver need not purchase a vehicle by the pound.--R.M.
First of all, I am aware that there are smaller cars with better safety ratings than some SUV's, but it doesn't mean larger vehicle classes are death traps in comparison.
Second, check this out (from your link):
I've been driving for several years. I've been pulled over for a fritzed tail light and got a bill in the mail for driving three or four (I think) miles over the last posted speed limit I saw, thanks to a strategically-placed traffic cam in on a short road with about a half a dozen speed limit change-ups (on that note, I just keep to 25mph within city limits, since I'd rather not stock city coffers with outrageous payments for snidely-worded fees). I can count on my fingertips the amount of times somebody's honked at me for a perceived or actual error. So I've been doing pretty good for myself. What do I drive? A Ramcharger, a pickup truck, a cube van and a diesel flatbed. The first one holds my personal tools and gear, the second one can tote what the first can't and the last two are for work.The study also found that most passenger cars are safer than the average sport-utility vehicle or pickup truck when the risk posed to other drivers is taken into account, a figure the researchers call "combined risk."
That being said, poor driving is often based on biased perception. Small car drivers often see larger vehicles as huge (by perspective, they are) cumbersome devices with little reaction time and whose drivers are oblivious to everyone else's safety. Drivers in larger vehicles see smaller car drivers as flighty airheads with no idea how hard it is for a truck to avoid hitting you if you cut in front of it and slam on your brakes. Drivers of really big trucks see everyone as annoying turds who love nothing better than to hang out in their blind spots and get all pissed off when said big truck starts to switch lanes after about a minute of blinkering.
I suppose what I'm trying to say is that shared safety is the responsibility of everyone on the road, but since a lot of drivers (in my region, at least), aren't inclined to purge their horrible habits, I feel much better being in something with greater mass than what would likely hit me. I'd rather not be the hapless victim of combined risk, thank you very much. Does that mean I don't care about the other drivers on the road? Absolutely not.
Besides which, there's a practical reason for a bigger vehicle: space.
Last edited by unnamednewbie13 (2009-05-21 16:41:37)