Tailgating – Following Too Closely A Collision Countermeasures Presentation.

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Presentation transcript:

Tailgating – Following Too Closely A Collision Countermeasures Presentation

Copyright SafetyFirst 2007 Statistics “…during 2004, there were 2200 deaths and 769,000 injuries from more than 3 million rear-end collisions.” - National Safety Council

Copyright SafetyFirst 2007 Introduction Tailgating is following the vehicle in front of yours too closely to safely avoid a collision.

Copyright SafetyFirst 2007 Introduction The odds of a crash go up when tailgating is combined with: –not paying attention, or –traveling faster than conditions permit.

Copyright SafetyFirst 2007 Introduction The amount of time and space you will need to react, slow and/or stop is greater when: –your vehicle is fully loaded, –its brakes are out of adjustment or need maintenance, –you are tired or distracted.

Copyright SafetyFirst 2007 Introduction The faster you drive, the more room you’ll need to stop.

Copyright SafetyFirst 2007 Details If you allow more space between your vehicle and the car ahead, you’ll have more time to spot a hazard or accident down the road. You will have more time to stop, or to avoid the hazard.

Copyright SafetyFirst 2007 How Much Space Do You Need? The amount of following distance depends on the size of your vehicle (i.e. extra heavy trucks take longer to stop than sedans & pick up trucks)

Copyright SafetyFirst 2007 How Much Space Do You Need? Following distance also depends on other factors such as: –Vehicle condition (tires and brakes, etc.) –Weather conditions (harder to stop on wet or icy roads) –Your fitness (you need time to react – if you are tired, ill or “multi-tasking” while you drive, you need more following distance)

Copyright SafetyFirst 2007 How Much Space Do You Need? For most sedans, pick ups and small vans, you could apply a “three-second rule.” We’ll explain on the next slide…

Copyright SafetyFirst 2007 How Much Space Do You Need? When the vehicle ahead of you passes a certain point, such as a sign, count “one-thousand-one, one-thousand-two, one-thousand-three.” This takes about three seconds. If you pass the same point before you finish counting, you are following too closely.

Copyright SafetyFirst 2007 How Much Space Do You Need? First Vehicle Passes A Fixed Object You Start Counting If your vehicle passes that fixed point before you count to “3” or “6” (depending on your vehicle type, etc.) then you are following too closely

Copyright SafetyFirst 2007 How Much Space Do You Need? The “three-second rule” doesn’t tell you that you have enough distance/space – it only reminds you when you are definitely too close! You may need much more space depending on conditions!

Copyright SafetyFirst 2007 How Much Space Do You Need? Sometimes you will need more than a “three-second” cushion. For larger trucks, you may want to start with a “six-second” following distance – your safety director will help you determine what is adequate based on your vehicle type (loaded and unloaded, etc.)

Copyright SafetyFirst 2007 Leave More Space When: Leave more space when you are crowded by a tailgater… by leaving extra space you can: –slow down gradually if you encounter stopped traffic, and hopefully… –avoid being hit from behind by the tailgater!

Copyright SafetyFirst 2007 Leave More Space When: Driving on slippery roads…you will need more distance to stop your car. Following motorcycles-If the motorcycle falls, you’ll have to avoid hitting the rider.

Copyright SafetyFirst 2007 Leave More Space When: Pulling a trailer or carrying heavy loads…Extra weight makes it harder to stop.

Copyright SafetyFirst 2007 Leave More Space When: Following large vehicles that block your view ahead. You need the extra room to see around the vehicle and to the sides.

Copyright SafetyFirst 2007 Summary When another driver makes a mistake, you need time to react. Give yourself that needed time by allowing enough following distance.

Copyright SafetyFirst 2007 THANK YOU! Thank you for participating in our program…. The decisions that every driver makes while behind the wheel lead to a specific result…let’s all try to make it a safe one!