Racing Saves Lives

spiderz

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http://www.news24.com/MyNews24/Racing-Saves-Lives-20111213

"Racing Saves Lives
13 December 2011, 20:29

This morning I discovered one of the benefits of racing. Racing drivers develop quick reflexes. Reacting quickly saves lives.

I race karts socially. They’re not particularly fast, just 160cc single cylinder no-gear karts at my local indoor kart track. There is a karting league at the track, and I’ve been part of a team there for just over a year.

On the kart track, when a driver spins just in front of me, I react without even thinking. Avoiding the accident has become instinctive. Sometimes it’s impossible, but most of the time, the reflexes I’ve developed will keep me out of trouble.

Reflexes are also useful for kart control. If the kart slides, I have to react quickly enough to control the slide, otherwise I will spin. This has also become natural, and I’ve reached the point where I can use the slide to my benefit. Until this morning, however, I did not really appreciate how significant karting has been in improving my reflexes while driving on the road.

While on my way to work this morning, driving in traffic, a man ran in front of my car. He was just going for his morning jog, and decided not to wait for a few cars about to cross an intersection. Avoiding him should have been easy, except that there was an SUV on my right and slightly in front of me that blocked my view of the runner.

As a result, I only saw the man when he was probably about 10 metres in front of my car. I was doing about 30 km/h, no great speed, but enough to potentially do him some quite serious harm.

As it turned out, I saw him, braked, just missed him, and carried on driving. He carried on running quite serenely as though nothing had happened. But I was left to wonder what could have happened if I had been just a little distracted, just a little slower to react, just a little less sure of what to do.

The conclusion I have come to is that my amateur, social racing experience probably saved that man’s life, or at least prevented serious injury.

I was fully focused on my driving, and was able to calmly and confidently take the correct action for the situation with no hesitation. Without the experience I have on the race track, I’m not sure that I would have been able to do so."
 
I think any activity that forces you to develop instinctive reactions to changing situations is going to make you safer in that activity.
I think there's even more to it than this though. I am a bit of a self-confessed speed freak, but I have found that taking my car to an organised track day and thrashing it for a few laps works that demon out of my system and for months afterwards I am much calmer and more relaxed on the road...
 
Very true. I do IDPA shooting, and the higher level of awareness and the quicker reflexes really makes a difference in my every-day life.
 
I agree with this.
Whilst I was still rallying competitively, I was on my way to Pretoria from Joburg - it was about 8pm and drizzling, and I crested a hill and came across a guy towing a huge trailer with no tail lights, and doing about 60 km/h less than me. The first time I saw him, I probably had less than 100 m to do anything, so quite instinctively I spun the car and actually passed him whilst spinning. If I hadn't done that I certainly wouldn't be around to tell the story.
 
i used to be very alert on the road but these days seems distracted. should i see my shrink?
 
Same thing for me...

Grew up watching racing with my dad. Be it on TV or at one of the various tracks...

We used to go go-karting very often when i was younger and i ended up being really good. I do admit that yes, i do drive quicker than your average person on the road, but from being around speed and experiencing it all my life, my reaction times to things are what i would consider to be quicker than your average person... Be it boxing, driving, catching something that fell off a counter etc...

When i did my Advanced Drivers course the instructor actually asked me if I raced or had previous racing experience as my reaction times were good for an amateur.
 
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For the record, it's not really about reflexes, but more about instinctively reacting correctly.
I remember watching a test on TV where they compared Michael Schumacher's reflex speed to someone elses (can't remember who offhand) and there was very little difference.

Pressing the accelerator pedal within 0.1 seconds of seeing someone step into the road is a super quick reflex but a wholly inappropriate reaction!
 
For the record, it's not really about reflexes, but more about instinctively reacting correctly.
I remember watching a test on TV where they compared Michael Schumacher's reflex speed to someone elses (can't remember who offhand) and there was very little difference.

Pressing the accelerator pedal within 0.1 seconds of seeing someone step into the road is a super quick reflex but a wholly inappropriate reaction!

I would agree with this, and add to it the one thing that everyone is saying, but not (seemingly) realising, it is all about awareness, in the end. A lack of awareness only really leaves you with chance, maybe you get lucky, maybe you don't. Well that's just my opinion anyway.
 
I would agree with this, and add to it the one thing that everyone is saying, but not (seemingly) realising, it is all about awareness, in the end. A lack of awareness only really leaves you with chance, maybe you get lucky, maybe you don't. Well that's just my opinion anyway.

Awareness is a good word to use! No reaction time will work if the awareness was not there first... Riding motorbikes on the road taught me that very quickly :P
 
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