Alex321
Guru
- Location
- South Wales
Interesting you mention speed and showing off.
An incident recently not far from here where some young show off was going a bit quick in a Porsche and crashed into an Indian restaurant.
The papers were full of wailing and gnashing of teeth at the high powered sports car, while completely overlooking the fact that that it was a 60mpg crash and my gears old Metro 1.0 automatic could do 60. That it was a high powered sports car was utterly irrelevant to the physics of the incident.
I've been riding motorbikes for 37 years and not had an off. Were I to get into a sticky situation on the road on a bike I'd far rather do so on a big bike with massive brakes and handling and stability to spare, than be in the same situation on a CG125 which is on the ragged edge of its brakes and handling at the national speed limit.
Most incidents caused or brought by excessive speed are at velocities that very mundane cars or bikes can easily achieve.
While this is all very true, there is a major difference in how those speeds are achieved.
The Porsche will probably be doing 60 while your metro would only have been up to 40 - so there will be stretches of road where he can hit 60 but you can't, because there isn't enough distance before having to slow again.
Then add to that the fact he probably has better brakes and tyres, and any mistake he makes can easily be exacerbated. If it takes 10 seconds to slow from 60 to a stop, and you are late by a second, you are probably down to 10mph or less by the point where you should have stopped. If it take 5 seconds and you are late by a second, you are probably still doing 30+ at that point (slowing is not linear).
It also takes much less of an over-pressure on the throttle to lose control of the car as you are accelerating. So inexperienced drivers in control of powerful cars is a recipe for trouble, even if they are only going at the speed a small low powered can can achieve.