| Conclusion
We've shown without room for doubt that the average speed of a fatal accident on a UK road and affecting a car driver is less than 12 mph.
Since 12 mph bears no relation to any free travelling speed used on UK roads "something" must intervene between free travelling and the actual crash. This "something" is of course driver response. No one wants to crash. Most drivers, most of the time have effective strategies for avoiding crashes. In practise the failures of these crash avoiding strategies are not normally massive blunders resulting in impacts at free travelling speeds. Instead they are subtle misjudgements followed avoiding actions leading to mostly minor crashes. The ratio of minor crashes to fatal accidents is probably greater than 1,500:1.
Perhaps you might wonder if speeding is a separating factor between the 1,500 survivors and the 1 fatal? With 70% of drivers exceeding the speed limit at sample sites it would be an entirely unreasonable conclusion.
It isn't speed that kills. We can reduce the speed limits endlessly or enforce them perfectly without ever hoping to get close to the thresholds where free travelling speed will play a larger part in the outcome than driver based factors like skill, attention, attitude and training level. In fact, small variations in these factors will have far more effect on accident rates and outcomes than big variations in limited or enforced speed. See elsewhere on this web site. |