WD40
Full Access Member
Maybe we should let DW do the driving!
Some of us on this forum fit two out of three of these: Men over 45, 4x4 Pickups, Icy and snowy roads.
Quote
Older Men Driving 4x4 Pickups More Likely to Crash In Winter
By Jim Hilkevitch, Chicago Tribune
(as printed in the Salt Lake Tribune)
Dec. 4, 2011
While it may be open to debate whether men or women are generally safer drivers, men over age 45 are much more likely to crash their vehicles on icy and snowy roads, according to a new study.
Those risks, notable as winter approaches, are even greater if the older men are driving four-wheel-drive pickup trucks, Purdue University researcher Fred Mannering found. It could reflect a false sense of safety, he said.
"There may be a sense of invulnerability with four-wheel drive trucks leading the drivers to not slow down as much as they should," Mannering said in an interview. "The reality is that four-wheel drive gets you up to speed faster in snow and ice, but it doesn?t help you stop any quicker."
In addition, men under age 45 are more likely to get into serious accidents on dry roads, perhaps because of overconfidence, the study of single-vehicle accidents involving Indiana drivers indicates.
Female drivers of all ages, meanwhile, lose control and crash on rain-slicked roads most often because of their failure to sense reduced friction on wet pavement, Mannering?s analysis of more than 23,000 police accident reports determined. But the crash rates involving women decline on snow and ice, Mannering said.
Some of us on this forum fit two out of three of these: Men over 45, 4x4 Pickups, Icy and snowy roads.
Quote
Older Men Driving 4x4 Pickups More Likely to Crash In Winter
By Jim Hilkevitch, Chicago Tribune
(as printed in the Salt Lake Tribune)
Dec. 4, 2011
While it may be open to debate whether men or women are generally safer drivers, men over age 45 are much more likely to crash their vehicles on icy and snowy roads, according to a new study.
Those risks, notable as winter approaches, are even greater if the older men are driving four-wheel-drive pickup trucks, Purdue University researcher Fred Mannering found. It could reflect a false sense of safety, he said.
"There may be a sense of invulnerability with four-wheel drive trucks leading the drivers to not slow down as much as they should," Mannering said in an interview. "The reality is that four-wheel drive gets you up to speed faster in snow and ice, but it doesn?t help you stop any quicker."
In addition, men under age 45 are more likely to get into serious accidents on dry roads, perhaps because of overconfidence, the study of single-vehicle accidents involving Indiana drivers indicates.
Female drivers of all ages, meanwhile, lose control and crash on rain-slicked roads most often because of their failure to sense reduced friction on wet pavement, Mannering?s analysis of more than 23,000 police accident reports determined. But the crash rates involving women decline on snow and ice, Mannering said.