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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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#241
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On Sat, 22 Aug 2015 21:28:48 -0400, "(PeteCresswell)"
wrote: Per Ashton Crusher: Interesting points. My driving experience is that things are no different on the road now then they ever were in the past as far as the general competency and driving behavior of other drivers. I probably ride a bike more than 99% of the general population - and have been for sixty+ years. I see obvious changes in driving behavior over the years. The most obvious: people drive faster, signal less, run more red lights, and more people are obviously doing other things besides driving - mostly things that were not technologically available years past. The red light thing has developed in the past few years since our area went over to ludicrously-long red lights plus red-in-all-directions for a seemingly very long time plus un-timed lights. Most people running red lights used to be trying to slip through a stale yellow light. Now I seem them coming in at speed and not even slowing down. I can't say you are wrong, we may be seeing the same thing differently. But I will say that every generation complains about "kids today... yada yada yada" and believes the youth are going to hell in a hand basket. And they have been saying that since Socrates day. “The children now love luxury. They have bad manners, contempt for authority; they show disrespect for elders and love chatter in place of exercise.” - Socrates I view how most people talk about "other drivers" the same way. No matter who you talk to it's always the same, drivers are getting worse, politicians are getting worse, everything is getting worse. It seems that such a "it's getting worse" view is hard wired into most people as they age. |
#242
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On 08/22/2015 07:32 AM, Mayayana wrote:
While we're at it, I'm curious how many accidents are caused by ridiculous flashing light overkill on emergency vehicles. Police and firefighters just can't seem to resist the childish thrill of adding yet another light. Police cars used to have a blue "bubble gum machine" on top. It worked fine. Now they have dozens of flashing lights in every color. The problem: It's impossible to tell where an emergency vehicle is going. Even if they use turn signals, there's no time to figure out which lights on this high-speed, psychedelic Christmas tree are signalling. Glad I'm not the only one. The stupid things aren't on long enough for our eyes to focus on them, and the next one is in a different place. And what about that stupid chartreuse color that some cities are painting their fire engines? So it's NOT a natural color, that doesn't make it stand out any better. FIRE ENGINES ARE RED. PERIOD. And have any Los Angeles residents noticed how few lights there are on the overhead freeway signs no? I suspect that it just costs too much to replace them. I can read the signs at a reasonable distance if I have my lights on high, but that seems really rude -- in spite of the fact that perhaps 1/4 of the drivers don't understand that their high beams are to be used only OCCASIONALLY. And what about those banks of bright lights they use when working on the freeways at night? They ALWAYS point them directly into oncoming traffic. It's like they WANT to cause crashes. And another thing... -- Cheers, Bev ------------------------------------------------------------------- Hmph. I used to have snow tires. Never again. They melted in the spring. I won't even start going on about my wood stove. -- websurf1 |
#243
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On 8/22/2015 7:19 PM, Ashton Crusher wrote:
It's been less than a week and we're almost up to 500 messages. Should I start a "left foot braking thread"??? I'd expect this one to hit Bad Golferman's list. Sure! I learned on a clutch car, so I'm totally comfortable with left foot braking. Lets hope the spammer gets spammed at his Gmail adress. He tried to separate the email in his posts. -------- Forwarded Message -------- Subject: INSTRUCTOR'S SOLUTIONS MANUAL PDF: Linear Algebra Done Right, 2nd Ed by Sheldon Axler Date: Sat, 22 Aug 2015 22:11:32 -0700 (PDT) From: Newsgroups: alt.home.repair -------- Forwarded Message -------- Subject: INSTRUCTOR'S SOLUTIONS MANUAL PDF: Linear Algebra Done Right, 2nd Ed by Sheldon Axler Date: Sat, 22 Aug 2015 22:11:32 -0700 (PDT) From: Newsgroups: alt.home.repair -------- Forwarded Message -------- Subject: INSTRUCTOR'S SOLUTIONS MANUAL PDF: Linear Algebra Done Right, 2nd Ed by Sheldon Axler Date: Sat, 22 Aug 2015 22:11:32 -0700 (PDT) From: Newsgroups: alt.home.repair -- .. Christopher A. Young learn more about Jesus .. www.lds.org .. .. |
#244
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.home.repair
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On 8/22/2015 7:19 PM, Ashton Crusher wrote:
It's been less than a week and we're almost up to 500 messages. Should I start a "left foot braking thread"??? On Sun, 16 Aug 2015 06:10:23 +0000 (UTC), ceg wrote: The cellphone paradox - where are all the accidents? The Fermi Paradox is essentially a situation where we "assume" something that "seems obvious"; but, if that assumption is true, then something else "should" be happening. But it's not. Hence, the paradox. Such is the cellphone paradox. Does braking with the left foot increase the risk of accidents? -- .. Christopher A. Young learn more about Jesus .. www.lds.org .. .. |
#245
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.home.repair
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On 8/22/2015 7:19 PM, Ashton Crusher wrote:
It's been less than a week and we're almost up to 500 messages. Should I start a "left foot braking thread"??? On Sun, 16 Aug 2015 06:10:23 +0000 (UTC), ceg wrote: The cellphone paradox - where are all the accidents? The Fermi Paradox is essentially a situation where we "assume" something that "seems obvious"; but, if that assumption is true, then something else "should" be happening. But it's not. Such is the cellphone paradox. Does changing the radio station increase your risk of collisions? -------- Forwarded Message -------- Subject: INSTRUCTOR'S SOLUTIONS MANUAL PDF: Linear Algebra Done Right, 2nd Ed by Sheldon Axler Date: Sat, 22 Aug 2015 22:11:32 -0700 (PDT) From: Newsgroups: alt.home.repair -------- Forwarded Message -------- Subject: INSTRUCTOR'S SOLUTIONS MANUAL PDF: Linear Algebra Done Right, 2nd Ed by Sheldon Axler Date: Sat, 22 Aug 2015 22:11:32 -0700 (PDT) From: Newsgroups: alt.home.repair -------- Forwarded Message -------- Subject: INSTRUCTOR'S SOLUTIONS MANUAL PDF: Linear Algebra Done Right, 2nd Ed by Sheldon Axler Date: Sat, 22 Aug 2015 22:11:32 -0700 (PDT) From: Newsgroups: alt.home.repair -- .. Christopher A. Young learn more about Jesus .. www.lds.org .. .. |
#246
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.home.repair
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On 8/22/2015 9:36 PM, Ashton Crusher wrote:
I view how most people talk about "other drivers" the same way. No matter who you talk to it's always the same, drivers are getting worse, politicians are getting worse, everything is getting worse. It seems that such a "it's getting worse" view is hard wired into most people as they age. Well, some how we survived other Presidents like Stagflation Carter. At least he didn't give nukes to Iran, like Oh Bomb Us. -------- Forwarded Message -------- Subject: INSTRUCTOR'S SOLUTIONS MANUAL PDF: Linear Algebra Done Right, 2nd Ed by Sheldon Axler Date: Sat, 22 Aug 2015 22:11:32 -0700 (PDT) From: Newsgroups: alt.home.repair -------- Forwarded Message -------- Subject: INSTRUCTOR'S SOLUTIONS MANUAL PDF: Linear Algebra Done Right, 2nd Ed by Sheldon Axler Date: Sat, 22 Aug 2015 22:11:32 -0700 (PDT) From: Newsgroups: alt.home.repair -------- Forwarded Message -------- Subject: INSTRUCTOR'S SOLUTIONS MANUAL PDF: Linear Algebra Done Right, 2nd Ed by Sheldon Axler Date: Sat, 22 Aug 2015 22:11:32 -0700 (PDT) From: Newsgroups: alt.home.repair -- .. Christopher A. Young learn more about Jesus .. www.lds.org .. .. |
#247
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.home.repair
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| Interesting points. My driving experience is that things are no
| different on the road now then they ever were in the past as far as | the general competency and driving behavior of other drivers. I wonder if my mostly urban/suburban driving might be a factor. I see *a lot* of people on the phone, and it's not kids. Occasionally I might see a teenager texting at 60 mph, but mostly I see adults, of all kinds, yapping away. The man who sideswiped me veering into my lane was probably 35-40 y.o. He was talking to his friend, who in turn was dropping off her car at a repair shop. He was engrossed in trying to follow her instructions on which street to turn at when he hit me. A few years earlier he would have figured out the directions before he'd left the house. But this was about 2004 and he was a "yuppie" on the go, with a phone glued to his ear. When he pulled over after the accident he wouldn't even talk to me. He called the police, then his insurance company. I never saw him off the phone until the police arrived. He was so much out to lunch that he'd called the police, convinced that I'd hit him! In my experience that's typical. As a taxpaying consumer he doesn't feel he has to relate to the world around him, thus that world has no business "relating" to him. ![]() A very big change is that people don't signal anymore. Maybe 30-50% of the time. It's crazy. They're just not paying attention. In MA it's illegal not to signal, and it's irritating to be behind someone and get no notice of why they suddenly stepped on the brakes. That used to be unheard of. Now it's almost the norm. Again, it has nothing to do with young drivers. But it does have a lot to do with phoners only having one freee hand. A couple of weeks ago I was pulling out of a supermarket and was going straight across the street, up a sidestreet. Traffic was stopping in both directions in front of me. The near side traffic had left a gap. A man driving on the far side, heading toward my left, slowed down and seemed to be leaving a gap. I started to pull out. He then turned into the supermarket and almost hit me. I beeped. We both put down our windows. He looked at me with a condescending smile and said, "I'm turning in here", as though I must be an idiot. I said, "how about a signal?!" His face dropped. It had never occurred to him to signal. To his credit, though, he apologized. I see the phones and the anti-social behavior as related. For instance, where I live it's always been customary, on a narrow road with a parked car, to wait for an oncoming car if the parked car is on your side. The oncoming driver then waves a thankyou. Now it's usually a game of chicken. That's a very clear difference in driver behavior. It's not related to phones, but phones seem to be related to the general social disconnection. People are no longer experiencing themselves as being where they are. The same is true of people walking across streets, on cellphones or not. People used to *always* look before crossing. Now it's common to see people cross without breaking step, trusting that the universe is looking out for them. Maybe many of them are the children of "helicopter moms". At first I thought it was a kind of passive-aggressive entitlement, but the more it's happened, the more I'm thinking that these people are actually entitled to the core. They're not trying to show me who's boss. They don't even know I'm there. It hasn't occurred to them that they could actually suffer the indignity of being run over by a car! Maybe that's because they've spent their lives getting trophies for showing up? I'm not sure. It's actually a very intriguing pattern to me. (A friend who tutors gradeschool children recently told me that helicopter moms have been replaced by "snowplow moms". The kids are pushed through endless achievements, with no breaks to just sit, reflect, get bored, discover a bug, or even think about what they might *want* to do.) Do you really not see any changes? When I was growing up, kids behaved and anyone nearby was a parent. Today, when I see kids running and shrieking in a store I don't dare say anything. The parents are likely to be outraged. And often as not, they're standing there proudly as their kids act out. In a nutshell, being considerate has become a sucker's pastime, while "self-empowerment" is considered an important goal. I think my own generation, the baby boomers, actually started with being entitled. Not all of us, but many. In the 50s life was about kids. Baby boomers then grew up feeling they needed to be special. They had kids. Their kids were very special accomplishments, so many of those kids are now hyper-spoiled and entitled. That's a unique situation. (It's not so long ago that child labor was considered OK and that people had kids to save money. The kids could work the farm. They weren't cherished possessions. They were low paid workers.) It's certainly true that young people are more selfish and old people are less tolerant. That's timeless. But I'm surprised that anyone, say, over 50 doesn't see some dramatic changes in American culture during the past decades, which have nothing to do with young vs old. But those changes may be less pronounced in small towns and rural areas. |
#248
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Per Stormin Mormon:
Does braking with the left foot increase the risk of accidents? From what little I have read, there is disagreement on the answer. The traditional answer is that left-foot braking is, somehow, less safe. I can't remember the term-of-art for it, but there is a recognized cause of accidents that consists of the driver stepping on the accelerator when they were trying to step on the brake. A few months ago there was an article in the New Yorker about vehicle defect investigation and vehicle recalls from an engineering perspective in which it was mentioned that some people think that left-foot braking may actually be safer because it reduces the chances of a "wrong pedal" error to nearly zero. -- Pete Cresswell |
#249
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Per Mayayana:
People used to *always* look before crossing. Now it's common to see people cross without breaking step, Does anybody remember being taught "The curb step" as a child? -- Pete Cresswell |
#250
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(PeteCresswell) wrote:
The traditional answer is that left-foot braking is, somehow, less safe. I cannot say, but I can make some strong arguments against braking with your nose. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#251
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On Sunday, August 16, 2015 at 8:37:27 PM UTC-4, Ashton Crusher wrote:
Speaking of the UK, they did a study of the influence of speed cameras (they have a LOT of them) on accidents and it showed that where there were cameras that statistically the accidents INCREASED. They attempted to bury the report. It was eventually released but uniformly ignored by those in power. Further proof, as if more was needed, that speed cameras are for revenue, not safety. Same here in the U.S. Same result. But this will be a temporary blip until drivers are retrained to obey traffic lights, not abuse them. When traffic lights first came into use, there was no delay between red and green for the opposite road, that's what the yellow was for. Back then, drivers knew that when the yellow appeared, the red would follow and they would either stop or complete the drive through the intersection based on their speed and where they were when the yellow appeared. Over the years, a delay was added for "safety" reasons. Of course, drivers took advantage of that and started slipping under the red knowing the other side wouldn't get the green for another second or two. In response, even more delay time was added and if you could believe it, drivers took advantage of the extra time delay! The fact is, there is NO delay required. The yellow is sufficient, but drivers have now become used to running red lights knowing the delay exists. I'm all for the traffic cams. There will be some problems initially, but drivers will again learn to use the yellow to judge when to stop, not the built in delay after the red. |
#252
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| People used to *always* look
| before crossing. Now it's common to see people cross | without breaking step, | | Does anybody remember being taught "The curb step" as a child? I remember "look both ways before crossing". It sounds like you're talking about something similar. In my city the police got a $10K federal grant to run a scam trap to catch drivers who don't stop. A plainclothes woman cop steps into the crosswalk as a car approaches. If they don't stop they get a $200 fine. The city made far more than the grant money in a single weekend. I was thinking.... what happened to "look both ways"? |
#253
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On 08/23/2015 07:13 AM, (PeteCresswell) wrote:
A few months ago there was an article in the New Yorker about vehicle defect investigation and vehicle recalls from an engineering perspective in which it was mentioned that some people think that left-foot braking may actually be safer because it reduces the chances of a "wrong pedal" error to nearly zero. My early attempts at left foot braking were a disaster as they usually occurred when I was trying to throw the clutch out in a car with an automatic. |
#254
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On Sun, 23 Aug 2015 07:37:38 -0500, Stormin Mormon
wrote: On 8/22/2015 7:19 PM, Ashton Crusher wrote: It's been less than a week and we're almost up to 500 messages. Should I start a "left foot braking thread"??? On Sun, 16 Aug 2015 06:10:23 +0000 (UTC), ceg wrote: The cellphone paradox - where are all the accidents? The Fermi Paradox is essentially a situation where we "assume" something that "seems obvious"; but, if that assumption is true, then something else "should" be happening. But it's not. Hence, the paradox. Such is the cellphone paradox. Does braking with the left foot increase the risk of accidents? Three on the tree? Four on the floor? One down, four up? -- Using Opera's mail client: http://www.opera.com/mail/ |
#255
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On 08/23/2015 12:40 PM, Dean Hoffman wrote:
On Sun, 23 Aug 2015 07:37:38 -0500, Stormin Mormon wrote: On 8/22/2015 7:19 PM, Ashton Crusher wrote: It's been less than a week and we're almost up to 500 messages. Should I start a "left foot braking thread"??? On Sun, 16 Aug 2015 06:10:23 +0000 (UTC), ceg wrote: The cellphone paradox - where are all the accidents? The Fermi Paradox is essentially a situation where we "assume" something that "seems obvious"; but, if that assumption is true, then something else "should" be happening. But it's not. Hence, the paradox. Such is the cellphone paradox. Does braking with the left foot increase the risk of accidents? Three on the tree? Four on the floor? One down, four up? European or Japanese? -- Cheers, Bev "At the core of liberalism is the spoiled child, miserable, as all spoiled children are, unsatisfied, demanding, ill-disciplined, despotic and useless. Liberalism is a philosophy of sniveling brats." PJ O'Rourke |
#256
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On Sun, 23 Aug 2015 14:53:16 -0500, The Real Bev
wrote: On 08/23/2015 12:40 PM, Dean Hoffman wrote: On Sun, 23 Aug 2015 07:37:38 -0500, Stormin Mormon wrote: On 8/22/2015 7:19 PM, Ashton Crusher wrote: It's been less than a week and we're almost up to 500 messages. Should I start a "left foot braking thread"??? On Sun, 16 Aug 2015 06:10:23 +0000 (UTC), ceg wrote: The cellphone paradox - where are all the accidents? The Fermi Paradox is essentially a situation where we "assume" something that "seems obvious"; but, if that assumption is true, then something else "should" be happening. But it's not. Hence, the paradox. Such is the cellphone paradox. Does braking with the left foot increase the risk of accidents? Three on the tree? Four on the floor? One down, four up? European or Japanese? I got to ride a Norton once, long ago. I think there was some odd critter with an actual hand gear shift. -- Using Opera's mail client: http://www.opera.com/mail/ |
#257
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On Sun, 23 Aug 2015 08:54:02 -0400, "Mayayana"
wrote: | Interesting points. My driving experience is that things are no | different on the road now then they ever were in the past as far as | the general competency and driving behavior of other drivers. I wonder if my mostly urban/suburban driving might be a factor. I see *a lot* of people on the phone, and it's not kids. Occasionally I might see a teenager texting at 60 mph, but mostly I see adults, of all kinds, yapping away. The man who sideswiped me veering into my lane was probably 35-40 y.o. He was talking to his friend, who in turn was dropping off her car at a repair shop. He was engrossed in trying to follow her instructions on which street to turn at when he hit me. A few years earlier he would have figured out the directions before he'd left the house. But this was about 2004 and he was a "yuppie" on the go, with a phone glued to his ear. When he pulled over after the accident he wouldn't even talk to me. He called the police, then his insurance company. I never saw him off the phone until the police arrived. He was so much out to lunch that he'd called the police, convinced that I'd hit him! In my experience that's typical. As a taxpaying consumer he doesn't feel he has to relate to the world around him, thus that world has no business "relating" to him. ![]() A very big change is that people don't signal anymore. Maybe 30-50% of the time. It's crazy. They're just not paying attention. In MA it's illegal not to signal, and it's irritating to be behind someone and get no notice of why they suddenly stepped on the brakes. That used to be unheard of. Now it's almost the norm. Again, it has nothing to do with young drivers. But it does have a lot to do with phoners only having one freee hand. A couple of weeks ago I was pulling out of a supermarket and was going straight across the street, up a sidestreet. Traffic was stopping in both directions in front of me. The near side traffic had left a gap. A man driving on the far side, heading toward my left, slowed down and seemed to be leaving a gap. I started to pull out. He then turned into the supermarket and almost hit me. I beeped. We both put down our windows. He looked at me with a condescending smile and said, "I'm turning in here", as though I must be an idiot. I said, "how about a signal?!" His face dropped. It had never occurred to him to signal. To his credit, though, he apologized. I see the phones and the anti-social behavior as related. For instance, where I live it's always been customary, on a narrow road with a parked car, to wait for an oncoming car if the parked car is on your side. The oncoming driver then waves a thankyou. Now it's usually a game of chicken. That's a very clear difference in driver behavior. It's not related to phones, but phones seem to be related to the general social disconnection. People are no longer experiencing themselves as being where they are. The same is true of people walking across streets, on cellphones or not. People used to *always* look before crossing. Now it's common to see people cross without breaking step, trusting that the universe is looking out for them. Maybe many of them are the children of "helicopter moms". At first I thought it was a kind of passive-aggressive entitlement, but the more it's happened, the more I'm thinking that these people are actually entitled to the core. They're not trying to show me who's boss. They don't even know I'm there. It hasn't occurred to them that they could actually suffer the indignity of being run over by a car! Maybe that's because they've spent their lives getting trophies for showing up? I'm not sure. It's actually a very intriguing pattern to me. (A friend who tutors gradeschool children recently told me that helicopter moms have been replaced by "snowplow moms". The kids are pushed through endless achievements, with no breaks to just sit, reflect, get bored, discover a bug, or even think about what they might *want* to do.) Do you really not see any changes? When I was growing up, kids behaved and anyone nearby was a parent. Today, when I see kids running and shrieking in a store I don't dare say anything. The parents are likely to be outraged. And often as not, they're standing there proudly as their kids act out. In a nutshell, being considerate has become a sucker's pastime, while "self-empowerment" is considered an important goal. I think my own generation, the baby boomers, actually started with being entitled. Not all of us, but many. In the 50s life was about kids. Baby boomers then grew up feeling they needed to be special. They had kids. Their kids were very special accomplishments, so many of those kids are now hyper-spoiled and entitled. That's a unique situation. (It's not so long ago that child labor was considered OK and that people had kids to save money. The kids could work the farm. They weren't cherished possessions. They were low paid workers.) It's certainly true that young people are more selfish and old people are less tolerant. That's timeless. But I'm surprised that anyone, say, over 50 doesn't see some dramatic changes in American culture during the past decades, which have nothing to do with young vs old. But those changes may be less pronounced in small towns and rural areas. Which is what every older generation says. If this continual degradation of the 'young' were true we'd be back in the stone age. Don't take my next comment personally, it could apply to me too, but have you considered that all that bad stuff you see that causes you problems is because when you were younger it simply didn't bother you and/or your defensive driving skills and ability to "see ahead" and avoid those situations was better. So what you think of as everyone else getting worse is at least partly due to you getting worse at avoiding those positions? Like you, I see bad drivers all around but I"m not convinced that on average it's any worse particularly when the accident rates keep going down. |
#258
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On 8/23/15 8:37 AM, Stormin Mormon wrote:
On 8/22/2015 7:19 PM, Ashton Crusher wrote: It's been less than a week and we're almost up to 500 messages. Should I start a "left foot braking thread"??? On Sun, 16 Aug 2015 06:10:23 +0000 (UTC), ceg wrote: The cellphone paradox - where are all the accidents? The Fermi Paradox is essentially a situation where we "assume" something that "seems obvious"; but, if that assumption is true, then something else "should" be happening. But it's not. Hence, the paradox. Such is the cellphone paradox. Does braking with the left foot increase the risk of accidents? It greatly reduces the risk of brake failure. I can't use that method with my car because they're no hole in the floor. |
#259
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On Sun, 23 Aug 2015 09:27:22 -0400, "(PeteCresswell)"
wrote: Per Mayayana: People used to *always* look before crossing. Now it's common to see people cross without breaking step, Does anybody remember being taught "The curb step" as a child? I have one single memory from when I was perhaps 18 months old and it's having to climb up a tall curb step in Albany NY in the winter. It seemed VERY tall and someone holding my hand helped me levitate up to the top. |
#260
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![]() J Burns wrote: It greatly reduces the risk of brake failure. I can't use that method with my car because they're no hole in the floor. None that you know of, anyway. ;-) |
#261
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On Sat, 22 Aug 2015 20:49:11 -0700, The Real Bev
wrote: On 08/22/2015 07:32 AM, Mayayana wrote: While we're at it, I'm curious how many accidents are caused by ridiculous flashing light overkill on emergency vehicles. Police and firefighters just can't seem to resist the childish thrill of adding yet another light. Police cars used to have a blue "bubble gum machine" on top. It worked fine. Now they have dozens of flashing lights in every color. The problem: It's impossible to tell where an emergency vehicle is going. Even if they use turn signals, there's no time to figure out which lights on this high-speed, psychedelic Christmas tree are signalling. Glad I'm not the only one. The stupid things aren't on long enough for our eyes to focus on them, and the next one is in a different place. And what about that stupid chartreuse color that some cities are painting their fire engines? So it's NOT a natural color, that doesn't make it stand out any better. FIRE ENGINES ARE RED. PERIOD. The fire engine color is based on the same faulty logic of DRL's. Studies have shown that you can see a Chartreuse colored fire engine from farther away then a red painted one. Therefore, as the logic goes, Chartreuse must be a better color to paint a fire engine. That fallacy of that, as well as of DRL's, is that there is no need to see a fire engine that is so far away that if it were red you would not notice it. When it's that far away it's just not of any significance to you. The same is true of DRL's. It's true that a DRL car can be seen farther away. But no one needs to see a car that's a mile away, they only need to see the ones within perhaps a quarter mile of them and the worst drive is more then able to see a car without any DRL's at that distance. That's why the studies of DRL's show that there is no net safety benefit. Some types of accidents go down and other types of accidents go up because while people look at the DRL's they fail to see other cars coming crossways toward them, cars that they would have normally noticed if those bright lights up ahead of them hadn't distracted them from the actual danger that was just off to their right or left. And have any Los Angeles residents noticed how few lights there are on the overhead freeway signs no? I suspect that it just costs too much to replace them. I can read the signs at a reasonable distance if I have my lights on high, but that seems really rude -- in spite of the fact that perhaps 1/4 of the drivers don't understand that their high beams are to be used only OCCASIONALLY. The gvt doesn't want to pay for the electric to turn them on nor to maintain them, it's strictly to save costs. There are better sign materials that would make it so you don't need to use your high beams as much but that stuff costs more so the gvt will either simply not use it cuz they don't want to pay for it, or they will use it but not before the old stuff is completely worn out. Since the sign sheeting is expected to last around 10 to 20 years don't expect to see it replaced any time soon. And what about those banks of bright lights they use when working on the freeways at night? They ALWAYS point them directly into oncoming traffic. It's like they WANT to cause crashes. Most of those workers have no idea about safety to the public, they just stick em wherever it's convenient for themselves and a light that shines ALL AROUND works a lot better, and you need less of them, then a light that is directional and shines mostly downward so it won't blind people. As you should know by now, gvt isn't there to serve you, you are there to serve it. Pay your taxes and shut up. |
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On Sun, 23 Aug 2015 08:37:38 -0400, Stormin Mormon
wrote: On 8/22/2015 7:19 PM, Ashton Crusher wrote: It's been less than a week and we're almost up to 500 messages. Should I start a "left foot braking thread"??? On Sun, 16 Aug 2015 06:10:23 +0000 (UTC), ceg wrote: The cellphone paradox - where are all the accidents? The Fermi Paradox is essentially a situation where we "assume" something that "seems obvious"; but, if that assumption is true, then something else "should" be happening. But it's not. Hence, the paradox. Such is the cellphone paradox. Does braking with the left foot increase the risk of accidents? Depends. Is the person left foot braking skilled at it? However, knowing that would only let us speculate since there is zero data. Speculatively, a skilled left foot braker will have less accidents because they have, on average, shorter perception-reaction-braking times then a right foot braker. |
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On Sun, 23 Aug 2015 09:13:20 -0400, "(PeteCresswell)"
wrote: Per Stormin Mormon: Does braking with the left foot increase the risk of accidents? From what little I have read, there is disagreement on the answer. The traditional answer is that left-foot braking is, somehow, less safe. I can't remember the term-of-art for it, but there is a recognized cause of accidents that consists of the driver stepping on the accelerator when they were trying to step on the brake. A driver that ALWAYS uses the right foot to Brake and Accelerate is the one most likely to use that right foot on the wrong pedal. Someone who is skilled at left foot braking is far less likely to try to push the accelerator with the right foot with the intention of braking. I'm sure there are always exceptions. A few months ago there was an article in the New Yorker about vehicle defect investigation and vehicle recalls from an engineering perspective in which it was mentioned that some people think that left-foot braking may actually be safer because it reduces the chances of a "wrong pedal" error to nearly zero. |
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On Sun, 23 Aug 2015 07:37:38 -0500, Stormin Mormon
wrote: Does braking with the left foot increase the risk of accidents? Didn't Toyota make some claims about that? There was a recall for driver side carpets if I remember correctly. -- Using Opera's mail client: http://www.opera.com/mail/ |
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On 08/23/2015 02:58 PM, Dean Hoffman wrote:
On Sun, 23 Aug 2015 14:53:16 -0500, The Real Bev wrote: On 08/23/2015 12:40 PM, Dean Hoffman wrote: On Sun, 23 Aug 2015 07:37:38 -0500, Stormin Mormon wrote: On 8/22/2015 7:19 PM, Ashton Crusher wrote: It's been less than a week and we're almost up to 500 messages. Should I start a "left foot braking thread"??? On Sun, 16 Aug 2015 06:10:23 +0000 (UTC), ceg wrote: The cellphone paradox - where are all the accidents? The Fermi Paradox is essentially a situation where we "assume" something that "seems obvious"; but, if that assumption is true, then something else "should" be happening. But it's not. Hence, the paradox. Such is the cellphone paradox. Does braking with the left foot increase the risk of accidents? Three on the tree? Four on the floor? One down, four up? European or Japanese? I got to ride a Norton once, long ago. I think there was some odd critter with an actual hand gear shift. And then there was the Harley suicide clutch... For a while I rode a 1960 Ducati street bike and a 196x Honda dirtbike. Even if I think about it now I can't decide which is the 'correct' Japanese side to shift on, I have to find a picture. At the time, dirt triggered one shift method and street triggered theother one. I still can't remember which is 1 up four down or 1 down 4 up. http://cybermotorcycle.com/gallery/d..._Monza_250.jpg .. It's not. The tank is just like mine, although I can't verify that all my parts were stock. I painted it orange. And then there were the two different Japanese metric threads... -- Cheers, Bev "At the core of liberalism is the spoiled child, miserable, as all spoiled children are, unsatisfied, demanding, ill-disciplined, despotic and useless. Liberalism is a philosophy of sniveling brats." PJ O'Rourke |
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On 8/23/2015 8:48 PM, Neill Massello wrote:
Stormin Mormon wrote: Does braking with the left foot increase the risk of accidents? In a panic situation, do left-foot brakers tend to mash down both pedals (brake and throttle) at the same time? Not me. I learned on a clutch car. -- .. Christopher A. Young learn more about Jesus .. www.lds.org .. .. |
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On 08/23/2015 6:10 PM, Ashton Crusher wrote:
On Sun, 23 Aug 2015 09:13:20 -0400, "(PeteCresswell)" wrote: Per Stormin Mormon: Does braking with the left foot increase the risk of accidents? From what little I have read, there is disagreement on the answer. The traditional answer is that left-foot braking is, somehow, less safe. I can't remember the term-of-art for it, but there is a recognized cause of accidents that consists of the driver stepping on the accelerator when they were trying to step on the brake. A driver that ALWAYS uses the right foot to Brake and Accelerate is the one most likely to use that right foot on the wrong pedal. Someone who is skilled at left foot braking is far less likely to try to push the accelerator with the right foot with the intention of braking. I'm sure there are always exceptions. And the left foot break idiot(s) who rests his/her foot on the brake pedal and thus drives around all day with their brake lights on? Not to mention wearing out the brake pads or (even worse) overheating the brakes so they fail at an inopportune time... I see that a lot, so I vote no to left foot braking. Unless you can't use your right foot, but we are talking about folks without any sort of handicap (cast, missing foot, etc.). John :-#)# A few months ago there was an article in the New Yorker about vehicle defect investigation and vehicle recalls from an engineering perspective in which it was mentioned that some people think that left-foot braking may actually be safer because it reduces the chances of a "wrong pedal" error to nearly zero. -- (Please post followups or tech inquiries to the USENET newsgroup) John's Jukes Ltd. 2343 Main St., Vancouver, BC, Canada V5T 3C9 (604)872-5757 or Fax 872-2010 (Pinballs, Jukes, Video Games) www.flippers.com "Old pinballers never die, they just flip out." |
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On 08/23/2015 5:31 PM, J Burns wrote:
On 8/23/15 8:37 AM, Stormin Mormon wrote: On 8/22/2015 7:19 PM, Ashton Crusher wrote: It's been less than a week and we're almost up to 500 messages. Should I start a "left foot braking thread"??? On Sun, 16 Aug 2015 06:10:23 +0000 (UTC), ceg wrote: The cellphone paradox - where are all the accidents? The Fermi Paradox is essentially a situation where we "assume" something that "seems obvious"; but, if that assumption is true, then something else "should" be happening. But it's not. Hence, the paradox. Such is the cellphone paradox. Does braking with the left foot increase the risk of accidents? It greatly reduces the risk of brake failure. I can't use that method with my car because they're no hole in the floor. Hi Fred! (Flintstone)... John ;-#)# -- (Please post followups or tech inquiries to the USENET newsgroup) John's Jukes Ltd. 2343 Main St., Vancouver, BC, Canada V5T 3C9 (604)872-5757 or Fax 872-2010 (Pinballs, Jukes, Video Games) www.flippers.com "Old pinballers never die, they just flip out." |
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On Mon, 24 Aug 2015 10:50:22 -0700, John Robertson
wrote: Does braking with the left foot increase the risk of accidents? It greatly reduces the risk of brake failure. I can't use that method with my car because they're no hole in the floor. Hi Fred! (Flintstone)... Didn't Fred back pedal to slow down? |
#272
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On Mon, 24 Aug 2015 10:48:51 -0700, John Robertson
wrote: On 08/23/2015 6:10 PM, Ashton Crusher wrote: On Sun, 23 Aug 2015 09:13:20 -0400, "(PeteCresswell)" wrote: Per Stormin Mormon: Does braking with the left foot increase the risk of accidents? From what little I have read, there is disagreement on the answer. The traditional answer is that left-foot braking is, somehow, less safe. I can't remember the term-of-art for it, but there is a recognized cause of accidents that consists of the driver stepping on the accelerator when they were trying to step on the brake. A driver that ALWAYS uses the right foot to Brake and Accelerate is the one most likely to use that right foot on the wrong pedal. Someone who is skilled at left foot braking is far less likely to try to push the accelerator with the right foot with the intention of braking. I'm sure there are always exceptions. And the left foot break idiot(s) who rests his/her foot on the brake pedal and thus drives around all day with their brake lights on? Not to mention wearing out the brake pads or (even worse) overheating the brakes so they fail at an inopportune time... I've seen it maybe twice in 40 years. It's an imaginary problem. And for all you know they were using their right foot and had it on both the gas and brake at the same time... unless you have X-ray vision of course and could actually see their feet. Or perhaps their brake light switch was broken making the brake lights come on and off without any one pushing on the pedal. Someone who rode their brakes like that "all day" would be emitting smoke. I see that a lot, so I vote no to left foot braking. Unless you can't use your right foot, but we are talking about folks without any sort of handicap (cast, missing foot, etc.). No one has suggested that people should left foot brake if they don't have the skills necessary. Some people just aren't trainable or don't have the ability, or are too easily confused for anything above bare minimum. John :-#)# A few months ago there was an article in the New Yorker about vehicle defect investigation and vehicle recalls from an engineering perspective in which it was mentioned that some people think that left-foot braking may actually be safer because it reduces the chances of a "wrong pedal" error to nearly zero. |
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On Sun, 23 Aug 2015 20:16:39 -0500, "Dean Hoffman"
wrote: On Sun, 23 Aug 2015 07:37:38 -0500, Stormin Mormon wrote: Does braking with the left foot increase the risk of accidents? Didn't Toyota make some claims about that? There was a recall for driver side carpets if I remember correctly. That was for unintended acceleration, not foot confusion. |
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On 08/24/2015 04:08 PM, Ashton Crusher wrote:
Seems unlikely. Do pilots mash the bottom part of the Rudder pedal which also controls the front steerable wheel instead of the top part of the pedals that controls the brakes when they want to stop on the ground? I flew an old Lark and got in the habit of pumping the brakes up on final. Just another thing to add to the checklist... |
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Ashton Crusher wrote:
I've seen it maybe twice in 40 years. It's an imaginary problem. And for all you know they were using their right foot and had it on both the gas and brake at the same time... unless you have X-ray vision of course and could actually see their feet. Or perhaps their brake light switch was broken making the brake lights come on and off without any one pushing on the pedal. Someone who rode their brakes like that "all day" would be emitting smoke. What if you are mutant with three feet? Then you could operate the brake, clutch, and accelerator independently. It would make waltzing easier too. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
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On 08/25/2015 07:30 AM, Scott Dorsey wrote:
What if you are mutant with three feet? Then you could operate the brake, clutch, and accelerator independently. It would make waltzing easier too. To say nothing of driving a Model T. |
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On 23/08/2015 10:37 PM, Stormin Mormon wrote:
On 8/22/2015 7:19 PM, Ashton Crusher wrote: It's been less than a week and we're almost up to 500 messages. Should I start a "left foot braking thread"??? On Sun, 16 Aug 2015 06:10:23 +0000 (UTC), ceg wrote: The cellphone paradox - where are all the accidents? The Fermi Paradox is essentially a situation where we "assume" something that "seems obvious"; but, if that assumption is true, then something else "should" be happening. But it's not. Hence, the paradox. Such is the cellphone paradox. Does braking with the left foot increase the risk of accidents? **The left foot is for the clutch. Sheesh! -- Trevor Wilson www.rageaudio.com.au --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus |
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