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#1
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MIKE Hunter's smaller car thesis??
"In the latest crash figures available from 2003, provided by the Insurance
Institute for Highway Safety, there were 142 fatalities per million registered vehicles for the smallest cars. That figure drops to 108 fatalities for the next larger class of cars. For large sedans, that number drops to 61 per million. For small SUVs, the figure was 75 deaths per million as compared with 62 for large SUVs. For pickups, totals increased to 124 per million for small trucks and 102 per million for large." Technically Mike is right, but the numbers are still so low that even a half a percent change is not very much. Secondly, there are more small cars on the road than larger cars. Furthermore, how many of those accidents are more deadly because a gas hogging driver, in a large SUV, hits a small car? So basically what Mike is asking small car owners to do is to accomidate him because he is a pussy. So instead of buiying a 15 thousand dollar gas saver, you should buy a 30 thousand dollar SUV (this difference is what Mike calls "Saving a few bucks vs safety") This way, Mike does not feel so guilty when he crushes a smaller car with his Mormon sized family in his Chevy Tahoe! |
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#2
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MIKE Hunter's smaller car thesis??
GO Mavs wrote: > "In the latest crash figures available from 2003, provided by the Insurance > Institute for Highway Safety, there were 142 fatalities per million > registered vehicles for the smallest cars. That figure drops to 108 > fatalities for the next larger class of cars. For large sedans, that number > drops to 61 per million. For small SUVs, the figure was 75 deaths per > million as compared with 62 for large SUVs. For pickups, totals increased to > 124 per million for small trucks and 102 per million for large." > > > Technically Mike is right, but the numbers are still so low that even a half > a percent change is not very much. > > Secondly, there are more small cars on the road than larger cars. But the statistics are for fatalities/vehicles. OTOH I want to know how the numbers compare, once the number of miles and ages and incomes of the drivers are considered. |
#3
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MIKE Hunter's smaller car thesis??
larry moe 'n curly wrote:
> GO Mavs wrote: > >> "In the latest crash figures available from 2003, provided by the Insurance >> Institute for Highway Safety, there were 142 fatalities per million >> registered vehicles for the smallest cars. That figure drops to 108 >> fatalities for the next larger class of cars. For large sedans, that number >> drops to 61 per million. For small SUVs, the figure was 75 deaths per >> million as compared with 62 for large SUVs. For pickups, totals increased to >> 124 per million for small trucks and 102 per million for large." >> >> >> Technically Mike is right, but the numbers are still so low that even a half >> a percent change is not very much. >> >> Secondly, there are more small cars on the road than larger cars. > > But the statistics are for fatalities/vehicles. OTOH I want to know > how the numbers compare, once the number of miles and ages and incomes > of the drivers are considered. I don't think anyone has done the study that accounts for demographic factors. Jeff |
#4
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MIKE Hunter's smaller car thesis??
"GO Mavs" > wrote in message
newsZkhi.672$Pv2.197@trnddc03... > "In the latest crash figures available from 2003, provided by the > Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, there were 142 fatalities per > million registered vehicles for the smallest cars. That figure drops to > 108 fatalities for the next larger class of cars. For large sedans, that > number drops to 61 per million. For small SUVs, the figure was 75 deaths > per million as compared with 62 for large SUVs. For pickups, totals > increased to 124 per million for small trucks and 102 per million for > large." > > > Technically Mike is right, but the numbers are still so low that even a > half a percent change is not very much. > > Secondly, there are more small cars on the road than larger cars. > > Furthermore, how many of those accidents are more deadly because a gas > hogging driver, in a large SUV, hits a small car? > > So basically what Mike is asking small car owners to do is to accomidate > him because he is a pussy. So instead of buiying a 15 thousand dollar gas > saver, you should buy a 30 thousand dollar SUV (this difference is what > Mike calls "Saving a few bucks vs safety") > > This way, Mike does not feel so guilty when he crushes a smaller car with > his Mormon sized family in his Chevy Tahoe! I'd also like to know more about what types of accidents were involved, especially for pickups. My guess would be rollovers. |
#5
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MIKE Hunter's smaller car thesis??
> I'd also like to know more about what types of accidents were involved,
> especially for pickups. My guess would be rollovers. ==================================== There was a campaign in the US to get get the good ol boys in pickup trucks to use their seatbelts. Maybe they thought their personal liberty was being encroached on by the intrusive governmant regulations, but they were dying in disproportionate numbers by flying out during crashes. |
#6
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MIKE Hunter's smaller car thesis??
On Sat, 30 Jun 2007 04:28:04 GMT, "GO Mavs" > wrote:
>"In the latest crash figures available from 2003, provided by the Insurance >Institute for Highway Safety, there were 142 fatalities per million >registered vehicles for the smallest cars. That figure drops to 108 >fatalities for the next larger class of cars. For large sedans, that number >drops to 61 per million. For small SUVs, the figure was 75 deaths per >million as compared with 62 for large SUVs. For pickups, totals increased to >124 per million for small trucks and 102 per million for large." IIHS really tries to bury the details of Driver Fatalities Statistics. If you don't believe me, go to: http://www.iihs.org/ and try to find them. This is as close as I could get: http://www.iihs.org/research/fatalit...ants.html#sec3 It is a an aggregate list by vehicle type rather than individual makes and models. I have seen these results in the past and the interesting thing is how much variability there is. Some small cars have lower driver fatality rates than some very large SUVs. Go here to see lists of vehicles with the highest and lowest driver fatality rates: http://tinyurl.com/2od58m There are surprises, some of which demonstrate the weakness of real world surveys. Are Chevy Astros really that safe, or is flower delivery just an inherently low risk occupation? Harder to explain away is why the Chevy Blazer death rate is 21 times higher than an Infiniti G35. >Technically Mike is right, but the numbers are still so low that even a half >a percent change is not very much. > >Secondly, there are more small cars on the road than larger cars. As others have pointed out, this is not really a factor, at least not in the manner you imply. But read on. >Furthermore, how many of those accidents are more deadly because a gas >hogging driver, in a large SUV, hits a small car? Very true, and you also have to consider the opposite. Is the monster SUV's fatality rate low because it most often collides with something smaller? What if everyone were driving monster SUVs? The way the data is presented is a distorted view of public safety. It looks at the vehicle in the vacuum of "does it protect the occupants" rather than "does it pose unnecessary risk to everyone else." Why are there no statistics on the likelihood of Model X causing the driver of the other vehicle to die? And how about pedestrians? Why do we have a side-impact test which determines the ability of a car to resist a tall SUV bumper instead of a law requiring all passenger vehicles (i.e. SUVs) to have a uniform bumper height? According to the IIHS reasoning, a vehicle that killed someone else every time you drive it but only killed the driver six times in every million vehicle years would be the safest vehicle on the road. This attitude reflects a popular political/economic argument which conveniently justifies greedy, self-centered lifestyles. Some call this "the law of the jungle," but the truth is that behavior like this will get you kicked out of the ape tribe PDQ. >So basically what Mike is asking small car owners to do is to accomidate him >because he is a pussy. So instead of buiying a 15 thousand dollar gas saver, >you should buy a 30 thousand dollar SUV (this difference is what Mike calls >"Saving a few bucks vs safety") > >This way, Mike does not feel so guilty when he crushes a smaller car with >his Mormon sized family in his Chevy Tahoe! If Mike was really concerned with safety, he would be better off with a Honda Odyssey or Toyota Sienna which have lower driver fatality rates than any "full size" SUV |
#7
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MIKE Hunter's smaller car thesis??
On Sat, 30 Jun 2007 10:45:45 -0700, BobG > wrote:
>> I'd also like to know more about what types of accidents were involved, >> especially for pickups. My guess would be rollovers. >==================================== >There was a campaign in the US to get get the good ol boys in pickup >trucks to use their seatbelts. Maybe they thought their personal >liberty was being encroached on by the intrusive governmant >regulations, but they were dying in disproportionate numbers by flying >out during crashes. > Sounds like a win-win situation to me. |
#8
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MIKE Hunter's smaller car thesis??
Gordon McGrew wrote:
> On Sat, 30 Jun 2007 04:28:04 GMT, "GO Mavs" > wrote: > >> "In the latest crash figures available from 2003, provided by the Insurance >> Institute for Highway Safety, there were 142 fatalities per million >> registered vehicles for the smallest cars. That figure drops to 108 >> fatalities for the next larger class of cars. For large sedans, that number >> drops to 61 per million. For small SUVs, the figure was 75 deaths per >> million as compared with 62 for large SUVs. For pickups, totals increased to >> 124 per million for small trucks and 102 per million for large." > > IIHS really tries to bury the details of Driver Fatalities Statistics. > If you don't believe me, go to: > > http://www.iihs.org/ > > and try to find them. This is as close as I could get: > > http://www.iihs.org/research/fatalit...ants.html#sec3 > > It is a an aggregate list by vehicle type rather than individual makes > and models. I have seen these results in the past and the interesting > thing is how much variability there is. Some small cars have lower > driver fatality rates than some very large SUVs. > > Go here to see lists of vehicles with the highest and lowest driver > fatality rates: > > http://tinyurl.com/2od58m > > There are surprises, some of which demonstrate the weakness of real > world surveys. Are Chevy Astros really that safe, or is flower > delivery just an inherently low risk occupation? Harder to explain > away is why the Chevy Blazer death rate is 21 times higher than an > Infiniti G35. > >> Technically Mike is right, but the numbers are still so low that even a half >> a percent change is not very much. >> >> Secondly, there are more small cars on the road than larger cars. > > As others have pointed out, this is not really a factor, at least not > in the manner you imply. But read on. > >> Furthermore, how many of those accidents are more deadly because a gas >> hogging driver, in a large SUV, hits a small car? > > Very true, and you also have to consider the opposite. Is the monster > SUV's fatality rate low because it most often collides with something > smaller? What if everyone were driving monster SUVs? > > The way the data is presented is a distorted view of public safety. It > looks at the vehicle in the vacuum of "does it protect the occupants" > rather than "does it pose unnecessary risk to everyone else." Why are > there no statistics on the likelihood of Model X causing the driver of > the other vehicle to die? And how about pedestrians? Why do we have > a side-impact test which determines the ability of a car to resist a > tall SUV bumper instead of a law requiring all passenger vehicles > (i.e. SUVs) to have a uniform bumper height? According to the IIHS > reasoning, a vehicle that killed someone else every time you drive it > but only killed the driver six times in every million vehicle years > would be the safest vehicle on the road. > > This attitude reflects a popular political/economic argument which > conveniently justifies greedy, self-centered lifestyles. Some call > this "the law of the jungle," but the truth is that behavior like this > will get you kicked out of the ape tribe PDQ. > >> So basically what Mike is asking small car owners to do is to accomidate him >> because he is a pussy. So instead of buiying a 15 thousand dollar gas saver, >> you should buy a 30 thousand dollar SUV (this difference is what Mike calls >> "Saving a few bucks vs safety") >> >> This way, Mike does not feel so guilty when he crushes a smaller car with >> his Mormon sized family in his Chevy Tahoe! > > If Mike was really concerned with safety, he would be better off with > a Honda Odyssey or Toyota Sienna which have lower driver fatality > rates than any "full size" SUV Yet, this does not take into account the way the vehicles are used, e.g., people go faster with big SUVs or who is driving them, like teens vs. mature adults. These other factors (how, where and by whom the vehicles are used) may affect the death rates more than the vehicle themselves. For example, Ford minivans have a different death rates than similar Mercury vans, presumably because the average driver of each van has different characteristics. Likewise, the death rate for Indy cars and NASCAR cars is higher than the death rate for production cars, even though the Indy and NASCAR cars are far safer. Jeff |
#9
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MIKE Hunter's smaller car thesis??
The subject should be "Mike Hunter's smaller car conjecture." For it to
be a thesis, he should have a clue. |
#10
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MIKE Hunter's smaller car thesis??
Gordon McGrew wrote:
> On Sat, 30 Jun 2007 04:28:04 GMT, "GO Mavs" > wrote: > >> "In the latest crash figures available from 2003, provided by the Insurance >> Institute for Highway Safety, there were 142 fatalities per million >> registered vehicles for the smallest cars. That figure drops to 108 >> fatalities for the next larger class of cars. For large sedans, that number >> drops to 61 per million. For small SUVs, the figure was 75 deaths per >> million as compared with 62 for large SUVs. For pickups, totals increased to >> 124 per million for small trucks and 102 per million for large." > > IIHS really tries to bury the details of Driver Fatalities Statistics. > If you don't believe me, go to: > > http://www.iihs.org/ > > and try to find them. This is as close as I could get: > > http://www.iihs.org/research/fatalit...ants.html#sec3 > > It is a an aggregate list by vehicle type rather than individual makes > and models. I have seen these results in the past and the interesting > thing is how much variability there is. Some small cars have lower > driver fatality rates than some very large SUVs. > > Go here to see lists of vehicles with the highest and lowest driver > fatality rates: > > http://tinyurl.com/2od58m > > There are surprises, some of which demonstrate the weakness of real > world surveys. Are Chevy Astros really that safe, or is flower > delivery just an inherently low risk occupation? Harder to explain > away is why the Chevy Blazer death rate is 21 times higher than an > Infiniti G35. > >> Technically Mike is right, but the numbers are still so low that even a half >> a percent change is not very much. >> >> Secondly, there are more small cars on the road than larger cars. > > As others have pointed out, this is not really a factor, at least not > in the manner you imply. But read on. > >> Furthermore, how many of those accidents are more deadly because a gas >> hogging driver, in a large SUV, hits a small car? > > Very true, and you also have to consider the opposite. Is the monster > SUV's fatality rate low because it most often collides with something > smaller? What if everyone were driving monster SUVs? > > The way the data is presented is a distorted view of public safety. It > looks at the vehicle in the vacuum of "does it protect the occupants" > rather than "does it pose unnecessary risk to everyone else." Why are > there no statistics on the likelihood of Model X causing the driver of > the other vehicle to die? And how about pedestrians? Why do we have > a side-impact test which determines the ability of a car to resist a > tall SUV bumper instead of a law requiring all passenger vehicles > (i.e. SUVs) to have a uniform bumper height? According to the IIHS > reasoning, a vehicle that killed someone else every time you drive it > but only killed the driver six times in every million vehicle years > would be the safest vehicle on the road. > > This attitude reflects a popular political/economic argument which > conveniently justifies greedy, self-centered lifestyles. Some call > this "the law of the jungle," but the truth is that behavior like this > will get you kicked out of the ape tribe PDQ. it's nothing of the sort. it's all about subtle [political] promotion of big heavy vehicles by the oilcos. big heavy vehicles consume more gas. most modern "safety" in small cars has resulted in significant weight increases. like 50% in the last 20 years. think about it. cars today are touted as spectacularly "economic" of they get 40mpg. yet my 18 year old civic can do 40 no problem. more if i do only 55mph. has engine technology stood still in that time? no. does it take more gas to lump a 3400lb vehicle up a grade than a 2200lb one? yes, significantly. and that's all there is to it! real world gas mileage* has stayed flat as engine efficiency increases have been negated by vehicle mass increases. suv's with their total _disregard_ of safety are pure gas consumption gravy. clearly, "safety" is not the true agenda - it's oil consumption. and frankly, when we're buying it from a bunch of hostiles, that makes no sense. time to get real and put national security ahead of oilco security. smaller lighter more fuel efficient vehicles are the way to go. it won't even cause any pain for detroit since they make vehicles like this already for the european market. * epa mileage is measured on a rolling road. from what i gather, vehicle mass is not taken into account in that testing - the rollers used have fixed resistance. a heavy vehicle is going to read the same as a light vehicle if they had the same motor. and that's not real world. > >> So basically what Mike is asking small car owners to do is to accomidate him >> because he is a pussy. So instead of buiying a 15 thousand dollar gas saver, >> you should buy a 30 thousand dollar SUV (this difference is what Mike calls >> "Saving a few bucks vs safety") >> >> This way, Mike does not feel so guilty when he crushes a smaller car with >> his Mormon sized family in his Chevy Tahoe! > > If Mike was really concerned with safety, he would be better off with > a Honda Odyssey or Toyota Sienna which have lower driver fatality > rates than any "full size" SUV |
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