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35 votes
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Meet the guerrilla bike activists in Chicago installing bootleg infrastructure for safer streets
32 votes -
US pedestrian deaths reach forty-year high
63 votes -
You may soon have to pay more to drive that SUV in New York
37 votes -
The history of how US school buses became yellow
13 votes -
Interesting project to create a more humanizing helmet using objects associated with fragility
10 votes -
Electric cars prove we need to rethink brake lights
9 votes -
Is Oslo the next great cycling city?
4 votes -
Car safety and fuel efficiency improvements aren't driving up the cost of cars
4 votes -
Tesla recalls 362,758 vehicles in the US, says Full Self-Driving Beta software may cause crashes
14 votes -
The most complex system in modern cars
3 votes -
eBikes face safety hurdles
7 votes -
As e-bike fires rise, calls grow for education and regulation
10 votes -
How do seatbelts work?
2 votes -
Team of Swedish engineers has finally developed the first crash test dummy designed on the body of the average woman
15 votes -
How Finland put traffic crashes on ice – only 219 people died on Finnish roads in 2021, or four per 100,000 residents
7 votes -
US NHTSA data likely shows Teslas on Autopilot crash more than rivals
6 votes -
Elon Musk’s regulatory woes mount as US moves closer to recalling Tesla’s self-driving software
10 votes -
Just another pedestrian killed
10 votes -
1.7 million Hondas are being investigated for phantom braking
4 votes -
Tesla recalls 53,822 vehicles running "full self-driving" because they won't stop at stop signs
22 votes -
How road barriers stopped killing drivers
6 votes -
How do cars fare in crash tests they're not specifically optimized for?
8 votes -
GM recalls all Chevrolet Bolt electric vehicles, due to fire risk from high-voltage LG batteries
22 votes -
Tesla recalls 135,000 cars after pushing back against regulators
23 votes -
GM will recall about seven million US pickup trucks and SUVs from the 2007-2014 model years to replace potentially dangerous Takata air bag inflators
12 votes -
Driving the 2021 Cadillac Escalade was one of the most stressful experiences of my life
17 votes -
A friendly reminder: If you own a bicycle, you must own a helmet
I shivered at the thought of being severely brain-damaged after being hit by a car while cycling about a month ago. I am now extremely humbled by the fragility of the human body. The vehicle that...
I shivered at the thought of being severely brain-damaged after being hit by a car while cycling about a month ago. I am now extremely humbled by the fragility of the human body. The vehicle that hit me was going really slow--a hard requirement of the lane. An apt cyclist can easily achieve 30 MPH (48km/h). That's enough to do a lot of damage itself. Now imagine a shock with a vehicle coming in the opposite direction at a mere 20 MPH (32km/h) (that’s not what happened to me BTW. I have no recollection of the accident, and no wish to get in touch with the driver. I don’t resent him at all, in fact he was extremely caring and wanted to ride with me in the ambulance but my mom was already occupying the only spot).
I'm terrible at physics but you guys and girls are probably not, so you make the calculations. To sum up, without a helmet a ridiculously "benign" accident at low speeds can literally impair you for life.
After the crash, my helmet went into pieces. I wish someone had got it so I can visualize the extent of my luck. It was an old helmet that should have been replaced at least 2 years ago. It cost me about 30 bucks and probably saved my life or cognition.
So, cyclists: own a helmet and use it whenever you're on the bike even if there are no cars around. A skilled cyclist can still crash all by himself/herself. And a car could appear from nowhere.
Some people get brain damage by falling in the bathroom. Why would you be safer waltzing around on top of a metal frame?
41 votes -
Safety lessons from the morgue
6 votes -
Tesla included in JD Power survey for the first time, and it’s bad
14 votes -
Ford recalls 2.15 million US vehicles for potentially faulty door latches
4 votes -
How Helsinki and Oslo cut pedestrian deaths to zero – after years of committed action, neither city recorded a single pedestrian fatality in 2019
6 votes -
Elon Musk told workers they're more likely to die in a car crash than from coronavirus
14 votes -
How would you reduce speeding by car drivers?
I was reading this twitter post and it made me wonder if you have any ideas to stop speeding by car drivers? Have any of these ideas been tried anywhere? I'm also interested in unintended...
I was reading this twitter post and it made me wonder if you have any ideas to stop speeding by car drivers? Have any of these ideas been tried anywhere? I'm also interested in unintended consequences.
https://twitter.com/agnessjonsson/status/1229103764843438086?s=20
Agnes @agnessjonsson
fact of the day: Sweden once experimented with a “speed camera lottery”. Those who drove within the speed limit were automatically entered into a drawing where the prize fund came from fines that speeders paid.
They tested it in a few different cities and I haven’t read the results of each one, but in Stockholm the average speed on the selected road decreased by 22 percent.
17 votes -
Oslo saw zero pedestrian and cyclist deaths in 2019 – reducing the number of cars reduced the number of traffic fatalities
5 votes -
Only two road traffic deaths per 100,000 inhabitants were reported in Norway in 2019, making it the best-performing country for road safety
10 votes -
Self-driving Uber vehicle that killed woman in March 2018 could not detect jaywalking pedestrians
15 votes -
The complicated ethics of Tesla's Autopilot - It could save the lives of millions, but it will kill some people first
8 votes -
Teddy bear fence along Copper Coast Highway poses safety risk to children, South Australia mayors warn
5 votes -
The future is four wheels, cyclists be damned
12 votes -
Tesla’s autopilot found partly to blame for 2018 Los Angeles Freeway crash
7 votes -
Gothenburg port in Sweden has installed the country's first automated sobriety check to prevent drivers over the alcohol limit from venturing on to its road network
4 votes -
Why speed kills cities: US cities are dropping urban speed limits in an effort to boost safety and lower crash rates. But the benefits of less-rapid urban mobility don’t end there
7 votes -
Feds told Tesla to stop making “misleading statements” on Model 3 safety
10 votes -
Dozens of arrests in Copenhagen for drunk scooter driving
5 votes -
The LED traffic light and the danger of "but sometimes!"
7 votes -
Do better bike lanes keep drivers safer?
3 votes -
If only experienced cyclists feel safe in a bike lane, then is it a bike lane at all? In Vancouver, a shift to “AAA” (all ages and abilities) bike lanes
15 votes -
In car-choked Brussels, the pedestrians are winning
6 votes -
The curious tale of the St. Louis street barriers
5 votes