Bad Driving thread

Watch This Ferrari 360 Challenge A Pickup On The Stradale And Lose Big Time - Hotcars​

An Australian Ferrari collector has crashed his 360 Challenge Stradale, taking out a Nissan Navara and Subaru Impreza along the way.

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Crashing your priceless Ferrari into another vehicle is something we would all want to avoid. Who wants to turn their prized possession from a stunning supercar into a hugely expensive repair bill?

Sadly, that is something that has befallen one owner of a Ferrari 360 in Australia. The incident was all captured on security cameras in the area, showing the supercar veer out of its lane and into quite the expensive pileup in the middle of traffic.

The Ferrari seemed to take a particular disliking to a pickup truck as it ploughed into it. According to 7NEWS Australia, $600,000 AUD supercar was badly damaged.

The images of the crashed Ferrari show that indeed is the case with multiple twisted body panels. Not how this owner hoped to end the day with his prized possession.


Link to embedded YT video:
 
Yesterday I saw two drivers blatantly ignoring a red traffic light on the Waterkloof Air base road... Luckily I saw them coming.
Yesterday a guy went through a non working (load shedding) traffic light at about 60kms per hour without even slowing down.

I read an interesting article the other day saying that drivers have become so used to non working traffic lights (due to load shedding) that many of them have started treating them as four way stops even when they are working.
 
Yesterday a guy went through a non working (load shedding) traffic light at about 60kms per hour without even slowing down.

I read an interesting article the other day saying that drivers have become so used to non working traffic lights (due to load shedding) that many of them have started treating them as four way stops even when they are working.
Another road hazard to be aware of. :(
 
Yesterday a guy went through a non working (load shedding) traffic light at about 60kms per hour without even slowing down.

I read an interesting article the other day saying that drivers have become so used to non working traffic lights (due to load shedding) that many of them have started treating them as four way stops even when they are working.
When I was in Rustenburg for test work recently, I saw stop signs on many of the major traffic lights in town. Looked like people were still observing the traffic signals when lights were working though. Are the lights there out so often that they are now predominantly 4 way stops?
 
When I was in Rustenburg for test work recently, I saw stop signs on many of the major traffic lights in town. Looked like people were still observing the traffic signals when lights were working though. Are the lights there out so often that they are now predominantly 4 way stops?
traffic light decolonization hard at work.
 
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