[SystemSafety] Small but useful Detail on Road Stopping Distances
Steve Tockey
Steve.Tockey at construx.com
Thu Jul 30 16:38:12 CEST 2015
We were taught (in the US), "One car-length per 10 MPH" as in if you're
going 50 MPH then leave 5 car lengths distance between your car and the
one in front.
Cheers,
-- steve
-----Original Message-----
From: <systemsafety-bounces at lists.techfak.uni-bielefeld.de> on behalf of
David Haworth <david.haworth at elektrobit.com>
Organization: Elektrobit Automotive GmbH
Date: Wednesday, July 29, 2015 11:18 PM
To: Peter Bernard Ladkin <ladkin at rvs.uni-bielefeld.de>
Cc: 'The System Safety List' <systemsafety at techfak.uni-bielefeld.de>
Subject: Re: [SystemSafety] Small but useful Detail on Road
Stopping Distances
Peter,
On 2015-07-29 15:58:35 +0200, Peter Bernard Ladkin wrote:
> The traffic law in Germany stipulates a reaction time of 1 second.
The "halber Tacho"* rule for driving on the Autobahn approximates
to a 2 second reaction time (since your safe distance behind
another car doing the same speed is just your reaction time,
all other things being equal). Or one second plus "engineering
tolerance" ;-)
* For people not familiar with the German guidelines, you take your
speed in km/h, divide by two, and that gives you your "safe" distance
in metres.
Incidentally, the UK has a 2 second guideline for the same
purpose. And they used to have a snappy slogan: "Only a fool
breaks the 2-second rule". One advantage of this over the "halber
Tacho" rule is that it is easier to apply in practice.
Cheers,
Dave
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