Cruse Control and interesting information that can save your life
|
01-03-2006, 15:44
Post: #1
|
|||
|
|||
Cruse Control and interesting information that can save your life
NEVER KNEW THIS BEFORE.
I wonder how many people know about this? A 36 year old female had an accident several weeks ago and totaled her car. A resident of Kilgore, Texas, she was traveling between Gladewater & Kilgore. It was raining, though not excessively, when her car suddenly began to hydroplane and literally flew through the air. She was not seriously injured but very stunned at the sudden occurrence! When she explained to the highway patrolman what had happened he told her something that every driver should know - NEVER DRIVE IN THE RAIN WITH YOUR CRUISE CONTROL ON. She had thought she was being cautious by setting the cruise control and maintaining a safe consistent speed in the rain. But the highway patrolman told her that if the cruise control is on and your car begins to hydroplane -- when your tires lose contact with the pavement, your car will accelerate to a higher rate of speed and you take off like an airplane. She told the patrolman that was exactly what had occurred. The highway patrol estimated her car was actually traveling through the air at 10 to 15 miles per hour faster than the speed set on the cruise control. The patrolman said this warning should be listed, on the driver's seat sun-visor - NEVER USE THE CRUISE CONTROL WHEN THE PAVEMENT IS WET OR ICY, along with the airbag warning. We tell our teenagers to set the cruise control and drive a safe speed - but we don't tell them to use the cruise control only when the pavement is dry. The only person the accident victim found, who knew this (besides the patrolman), was a man who had had a similar accident, totaled his car and sustained severe injuries. If you send this to 15 people and only one of them doesn't know about this, then it was all worth it. You might have saved a life." |
|||
01-03-2006, 16:31
Post: #2
|
|||
|
|||
Cruse Control and interesting information that can save your life
--- In WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com, "Jon"
> > NEVER KNEW THIS BEFORE. > I wonder how many people know about this? > > A 36 year old female had an accident several weeks > ago and totaled her car. > > A resident of Kilgore, Texas, she was traveling > between Gladewater & Kilgore. It was raining, though > not excessively, when her car suddenly began to > hydroplane and literally flew through the air. She > was not seriously injured but very stunned at the > sudden occurrence! > > When she explained to the highway patrolman what > had happened he told her something that every driver > should know - NEVER DRIVE IN THE RAIN WITH > YOUR CRUISE CONTROL ON. She had thought she > was being cautious by setting the cruise control and > maintaining a safe consistent speed in the rain. > > But the highway patrolman told her that if the > cruise control is on and your car begins to hydroplane -- > when your tires lose contact with the pavement, your > car will accelerate to a higher rate of speed and you > take off like an airplane. She told the patrolman that > was exactly what had occurred. > > The highway patrol estimated her car was actually > traveling through the air at 10 to 15 miles per hour > faster than the speed set on the cruise control. > > The patrolman said this warning should be listed, > on the driver's seat sun-visor - NEVER USE THE > CRUISE CONTROL WHEN THE PAVEMENT > IS WET OR ICY, along with the airbag warning. We tell > our teenagers to set the cruise control and drive a safe > speed - but we don't tell them to use the cruise control > only when the pavement is dry. > > The only person the accident victim found, who > > knew this (besides the patrolman), was a man who had > > had a similar accident, totaled his car and sustained > > severe injuries. > > If you send this to 15 people and only one of them > > doesn't know about this, then it was all worth it. You > > might have saved a life." I ran this on another internet site and this is one of the answers I got back-Very interesting for non believers:I found out the hard way when I was working on the road in the late 80's. I was following a flatbed, and when it went around the curve, my steering wheel no longer worked.... I ended up in the ditch with a sore head and $3K worth of damage to the company car..... I aquaplaned.... and had the cruise on at the time.... Allan > |
|||
01-03-2006, 16:42
Post: #3
|
|||
|
|||
Cruse Control and interesting information that can save your life
At 3:44 AM +0000 1/4/06, Jon wrote:
>NEVER KNEW THIS BEFORE. > I wonder how many people know about this? > > A 36 year old female had an accident several weeks > ago and totaled her car. I hope we can avoid spreading urban legends through the list. It's usually best to check these out before passing them on. You can get the full story about this story at this link: http://www.snopes.com/autos/techno/wetroad.asp Snopes.com indicates that the danger is, essentially, true --- but the circumstances described are probably incorrect. When a vehicle hydroplanes, it does not "fly" and it doesn't "gain speed" ... (these are impossible under laws of physics). It does, however, lose effective directional control and the action of typical cruise control devices can interfere with the necessary immediate reactions required to bring the vehicle back under control. Here's an excerpt from the linked article: Origins: We began seeing this cautionary tale turn up in inboxes in November 2002. Although these accounts are probably "real" in the sense that they indeed reflect someone's attempt to describe an automotive mishap that actually happened to him, the explanation about a hydroplaning car's suddenly accelerating and "taking off like a rocket" due to the use of cruise control is a garbled one probably reflecting the author's misunderstanding of what had occurred. Nonetheless, the warning inherent to the tale - don't engage your vehicle's cruise control on slippery or wet roads is - well worth heeding. Snow, ice, slush, or even rain can cause wheel-spin and loss of control, situations to which drivers must react quickly. Although cruise control can generally be cut off by the driver's simply tapping the brake pedal, the extra reaction time required for a motorist relying upon cruise control to recognize the danger of the situation when his wheels begins to spin or slide on a slippery surface, bring his foot up off the floor to the brake pedal, and disengage the cruise control can be crucial (especially for drivers lured into a hazardous level of inattentiveness on long, flat stretches of road). -- Pete Masterson -- pete@... Book Design and Production: A Guide for Authors and Publishers Voice & FAX: (510) 222-6743 -- 9AM to 5PM M-F Pacific Time Visit my web site at http://www.aeonix.com for publishing hints P.O. Box 20985, El Sobrante, CA 94820-0985 |
|||
« Next Oldest | Next Newest »
|
User(s) browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)