Dids
Well-known member
- First Name
- Les
- Joined
- Dec 21, 2019
- Threads
- 7
- Messages
- 1,347
- Reaction score
- 401
- Location
- Massachusetts
- Vehicles
- 04 Tacoma, 23 Cybertruck
- Occupation
- Self
I don't know but I suspect that common sense is the problem.If the measure of system working is 100% safety, it does not but if it is +1% Safer it MAY be working ( I don’t know how to measure that). The idea with emergency lights is to replace a highly unexpected situation with a somewhat unexpected situation. Chances are regardless of what level of incapacitated a driver is at, they would recognize a flashing light as something unexpected faster than seeing the bottom of a semi in middle of the road one time and a car pile up the next. It is entirely possible in a specific situation emergency responders make the situation less safe but if a study shows that is in fact the case for all incidents and you were running the show, would you shut down their operation and stop taking calls? Or keep running it and wait until someone figures out how to improve the system?
Now that our cars are quipped with incapacitometers and watching us all the time, can we trust them not to blame us for their own screwup?
I imagine no one other than the sellers of flashing lights has ever done a study to determine if flashing lights actually help prevent people from driving into something.
I imagine that deference is given to the longtime police chief or fire chief on what they think is effective and that common sense says adding more lights makes it better. The typical person attracted to public service and advanced to leadership is probably not a scientist making them not likely the best choice for design of a safety system.
It is likely that less lights / less bright lights / less confusing lights would be more effective.
Some portion of humans have seizures induced by flashing / strobing lights. Instead of thinking of those people as aberrant it is likely that all humans are affected by strobing, maybe not to the point of seizure but they are affected.
Many animals / insects and birds are confused by light. It is likely humans are also but can brain process out of that confusion. If that brain processing is slowed in any way or they have long distance visibility of the target they can get surprised by the distance.
Anything over 200ft away is far away and it is not until it is within that range that distance judgement can begin.
Your best bet for avoiding something is it entering visibility at 200ft anything further out tells you it is far away. By the time you realize it's closing you have to slam on brakes.
FSD is going to be very helpful here!