Whats Paraffin Grandad?They used to sell parafin sump heaters for many cars once to just keep the chill out.
Only joking, I remember those heaters from when I was a kid.
Whats Paraffin Grandad?They used to sell parafin sump heaters for many cars once to just keep the chill out.
Yes when the weather was really bad I can recall one being put under the old Humber Snipe.Only joking, I remember those heaters from when I was a kid
Automated vehicles may lock doors unless stationary or involved in an accident. They will likely have the capacity to unlock only those next to the pavement, and (as with a human driver) find somewhere safe to pull over i an emergency.I saw an interesting thought/question posed in a science magazine in relation to self driving cars.
If the majority of cars become automated and don't have drivers behind the wheels, how long will it be before pedestrians learn that the autonomous vehicles will stop if they just step out into the road. I don't think they meant on a dual carriageway way but in town etc.
I was waiting to cross the road in my town which is a 20mph zone and can take quite a while even to get across at certain times. In the future will people just see autonomous cars coming and just wave their bag etc out into the road to cause it to stop and then merrily cross the road. We've already seen people stopping the waymo cars with traffic cones, so it doesn't seem to far out there that this could become a thing.
Perhaps it'll make being a pedestrian a lot easier.
Sadly, pedestrians now don't have to take responsibility, due to recent changes, they have precedence in right of way over the car.Automated vehicles may lock doors unless stationary or involved in an accident. They will likely have the capacity to unlock only those next to the pavement, and (as with a human driver) find somewhere safe to pull over i an emergency.
Some will no doubt try to disrupt automated vehicles and find themselves face down in the road nursing broken bones and losing blood.
I would guess that automated vehicles will have "black boxes" recording all system inputs preceding a crash - perhaps on a 30 minute loop. Those pedestrians who misjudge speed and distance will have to take responsibility for their own stupidity.
When we got our new 'old' car, I managed to lock myself inside the car as it timed out on me, the key also having fallen down under the seat and inaccessible. Fortunately I was at home and SWMBO finally rescued me with her key. Now permanently disabled.We actually turned off the 'auto unlock after an accident' feature as the local crooks had taken to giving a parked car a hardish knock with a stolen ute or car fitted with a bullbar (which is the vast majority on Aussie roads) which will then unlock the car- grab any valuables inside and drive off...
It worked on an older Honda (you have to do a set 'dance' with the ign key, gear lever and brakes while holding a button down on the door for the locks), but apparently some newer cars there is no possible way to disable it
:-(
Apparently, if you give a parked car a hard enough 'tap' with the bullbar, it thinks its been in an accident and conveniently (for the crooks) handily unlocks either the drivers door or all doors (depending on make/model) giving them access to the interior and boot...
sighs...
Annoyingly the car flashed its indicators/hazards as usual to signal the doors had auto unlocked, but apparently doesn't sound the cars alarm/horn- as my partners work carpark had several cars broken into by doing this... and not one car alarm went off
I agree with you but I can understand why the features are defaulted to on. The safety testing NCAP is done with such features enabled and therefore contribute to the safety rating of the cars which insurers use to calculate their premium.And here's the thing. There should be legislation that every single damn (un)helpful 'feature' such as auto stop/start and lane assist should be able to be disabled and permanently. None of this having to re-disable it everytime you turn the damn thing on.
In that case there is no consistency. Our car (thankfully) let's me permanently switch off Lane Assist. But I cannot permanently switch off Stop/Start and have to re-disable each switch on. Since when was the latter a safety feature ?I agree with you but I can understand why the features are defaulted to on. The safety testing NCAP is done with such features enabled and therefore contribute to the safety rating of the cars which insurers use to calculate their premium.
If you look at history you'll find (at least in america) that pedestrians had the right of way over cars. Once cars started running people over the automobile companies did a marketing campaign to put the blame on the pedestrian and labelled them a 'jay walker'.Sadly, pedestrians now don't have to take responsibility, due to recent changes, they have precedence in right of way over the car.
Still likely to end up over the car bonnet anyway though.
Is the stop/start actually counted as a safety feature in the ncap test though?I agree with you but I can understand why the features are defaulted to on. The safety testing NCAP is done with such features enabled and therefore contribute to the safety rating of the cars which insurers use to calculate their premium.
Well obviously start/stop isn’t but Kane assist, stability control etc is.In that case there is no consistency. Our car (thankfully) lets me permanently switch off Lane Assist. But I cannot permanently switch off Stop/Start and have to re-disable each switch on. Since when was the latter a safety feature ?
Isn't the whole point of reducing emissions to make the air safer, not to mention the planet as a whole?Is the stop/start actually counted as a safety feature in the ncap test though?
It is there to reduce emissions, not for safety, as far as I am aware.
My 2014 BMW 5 series has a phone app that can start the car remotely to warm it up on the driveway, also switch's the whole thing off after a time set by you on the app.A lot of German makers used to offer a fuel burning heater as an extra. You could set it to come on maybe 20 mins before you wanted to use he car and it heated up the coolant and circulated it, so when you got in it was warmed up and defrosted. Last one I had was on an S class I think. Really good.
Isn't the whole point of reducing emissions to make the air safer, not to mention the planet as a whole?
Other people's safety, rather than just yours.
Standard on all of the EV's I've had / got. Really nice on a cold winters morning when neighbours are scraping their windows, ours are all defrosted, interior toasty.My 2014 BMW 5 series has a phone app that can start the car remotely to warm it up on the driveway, also switch's the whole thing off after a time set by you on the app.
Picky, picky You know what I was referring to.Is the stop/start actually counted as a safety feature in the ncap test though?
It is there to reduce emissions, not for safety, as far as I am aware.
I can well believe it.Are dealer prices really around £180 ph? I've not been to one in a while, i know about overheads but how can they justify that sort of money?
This was slightly different in that it used a small heater, fuelled from the tank. So no engine running.My 2014 BMW 5 series has a phone app that can start the car remotely to warm it up on the driveway, also switch's the whole thing off after a time set by you on the app.
I had an old bmw years ago that had a recall on the airbags despite the car being over 10yrs old. I took it to the BMW in bristol which is huge glass fronted fancy building. I was greeted by a person in a suit who's job it is to greet people (not a receptionist, they were separate). Offered a coffee from their fancy coffee machines and a seat on the leather sofa's.Are dealer prices really around £180 ph? I've not been to one in a while, i know about overheads but how can they justify that sort of money?
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