Four x Four’s To The Rescue
Can it only be as long ago as eighteen months ago that Green Campaigners were targetting owners of four x four gas guzzling apocalypse creating vehicles in places like London and Bristol?
I had some ill kempt crusties screeching at me ‘get a smaller car you selfish bastard, you are drowning the Maldives’ – Huh ??
Yet today as we have snow for the second time in this thing we normal people call, WINTER (not officially due to start for a few days) we are in great demand and are officially ‘heroes’. All complete tosh, all we are doing are driving vehicles in conditions that they were designed for, nothing heroic about that.
BBC West had a major story on how they got a bride to her wedding on Exmoor in their Discovery TD5, hospitals in Wales are relying on volunteer and emergency services 4×4′s to get staff and patients to and from hospital.
All of which goes to show that we are not all selfish bastards trying to drown the Maldives, I think you will agree.
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December 19, 2010 at 14:42 -
I have no problem with 4×4 owners crowing about having the right car for the conditions. I’ve even found myself considering purchasing a lovely 1979 LWB Landy for kicks.
My problem is that most of the 4x4s in the wild in Blighty never get further off road than parking on the pavement, and when they do venture off tarmac they’ve got the wrong bloody tyres on and are as useless as every other smug bugger in an Audi/BMW/Merc/name your favourite marque here.
I still fancy that LWB Landy, though. Bulletproof, no fancy electronics to go wrong. Honest, down-to-earth reliable motoring.
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December 19, 2010 at 14:48 -
Most owners don’t know how to use 4 wheel drive.
I wish I had one right now though. Couldn’t get up the hill yesterday.
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December 19, 2010 at 15:13 -
Timely piece. I’ve just got back from the motorist discount where I’ve picked up a towing strap, should anyone need a pull out of the snow. Mine’s a 10 year old Mistubishi with selectable 2/4 wheel drive system, so I guess on the basis that 4 wheel drives are destroying the planet I’m mostly in the clear
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December 19, 2010 at 16:46 -
Hahaha – I do like that last comment. I own, and drive daily, a large 4×4 that is permanent four wheel drive. My greatest joy, in this weather, is to encounter a stranded ecologist type (preferably trying to extract his Priius from a snowy lane) who gives me that hopeful “How about a tow mate?” look – so I can drive straight past with a cheery wave and a shouted “It’s a bugger this Global Warming, isn’t it?”
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December 19, 2010 at 18:09 -
Here is an interesting conundrum for all the Muesli-Munchers? The single biggest contributor is methane produced by cows. So, in order to reduce the amount of methane produced , surely we should all be eating more beef? But then aren’t the same people always telling us not to eat beef and other meat because ” meat is murder”? What should we do ? Answer = IGNORE THE MUESLI MUNCHERS and get on with our lives….
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December 19, 2010 at 19:37 -
And when an EcoLoon boasts how far his Electric Car goes on on ‘charge’, ask them how far it goes when they put the heater on.
If they don’t know, or are too embarrassed to tell you, remind then its range drops by a massive 45%.
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December 19, 2010 at 20:27 -
When celebrating how much good 4×4′s have done in this weather remember the flip side: see http://tinyurl.com/24xx4ys “4X4 driver ‘loses control’ in Glasgow, kills two pedestrians”.
Oh and also remember other forms of transport also work in the snow (and better than 4×4′s): http://quickrelease.tv/?p=1429
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December 19, 2010 at 21:36 -
Two girls, killed not a day ago, and the tragedy is the percentage of journeys undertaken by bike in Glasgow?
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December 19, 2010 at 22:16 -
Michael,
If you have read the post then you know it does not say that. Sadly we cannot make policy changes that will bring those women back.
However, I would agree that it is sad that so little is being done to encourage people to use transport that is faster, more convenient, healthier and cheaper as well as far less dangerous to other people.
Especially sad to know we are not funding changes to make our cities safer, healthier and happier places to be (see the global survey on liveable cities). Even more so as the kind of changes that would make cycling more popular in Glasgow would probably have had a side effect of traffic calming at the point where the Range Rover killed the two women.
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December 19, 2010 at 22:25 -
You cannot actually get too many pregnant women/disabled OAP’s to do a double up on a bike to and from hospital in the snow can you Dave ? and by the way I do own a bike as well
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December 19, 2010 at 22:45 -
Andrew,
Nope and I am not suggesting we do that (although it would probably surprise you to discover how many pregnant women and disabled OAP’s cycle in the Netherlands where it is safe to do so, even in the snow).
However, a significant switch away from 4×4′s and cars to cycling would
a) reduce the load on the health service eg 3 quick wins: reduced obesity (huge cost to the NHS and we are worst in Europe), reduced heart attacks (50% risk reduction from cycling 20 miles a week) and fewer road injuries (most years cyclists kill nobody, cars kill 1,000′s )
b) free up the roads for those who really need them such as the pregnant woman and disabled OAP’s getting a lift from a 4×4 ambulance funded through the savings in (a)
Note I am not suggesting a ban or attack on 4×4′s, just spend money where we can save lives and make life better for all (unless you prefer pollution, congestion & obesity).
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December 20, 2010 at 06:38 -
“…a significant switch away from 4×4′s and cars to cycling would
a) reduce the load on the health service … “
And there’d be a LOT fewer organ donors…
“…free up the roads for those who really need them such as the pregnant woman and disabled OAP’s…”
When those pregnant women and OAPs are the only ones paying road tax you may have a point. Until then, I’ll use what I’m paying for, thanks very much.
“…spend money where we can save lives and make life better for all (unless you prefer pollution, congestion & obesity).”
What I prefer is the freedom to make my own choices on travel (among other things) and also the freedom to happily ignore the hectoring little shits that think they have the answer to life the universe and everything if only people would just fall into line with them, and aren’t averse to some particularly callous shroud-waving to do so.
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December 20, 2010 at 08:45 -
JuliaM,
“When those pregnant women and OAPs are the only ones paying road tax you may have a point. Until then, I’ll use what I’m paying for, thanks very much.”
Afraid you are wrong:
“Road tax doesn’t exist. It’s VED, or ‘car tax’. Motorists do not pay for the roads, we all do, via general taxation. In 1926, Winston Churchill started the process to abolish road tax. He didn’t want motorists to think a token payment gave them ownership of the road. Road tax finally died in 1937, says DVLA. Paying Vehicle Excise Duty gives no ‘right to the road’ for motorists (or car-owning cyclists)” http://ipayroadtax.com/
You talk of your freedom to make your own travel choices.
Why does the freedom to make their own choices on travel made by the two women killed on the pavement in Glasgow not count?
Did anything I wrote deny you the freedom to drive a 4×4? No! I just asked for the freedom for people to make other choices and be safe from the result6s of your choice.
Did I say people should be forced to cycle? No!
Finally, when your freedom to choose kills someone then the automatic charge in court should be manslaughter and your driving license should be taken away for life. Anything else in unfair. I support you having your freedom, but kill someone and you should not have that freedom any more.
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December 20, 2010 at 09:15 -
“Afraid you are wrong”
According to that impeccable unbiased source, yet another cycling fanatic?
“Why does the freedom to make their own choices on travel made by the two women killed on the pavement in Glasgow not count?”
Why do I suspect that if the car had been a Prius, or indeed anything other than a vehicle loathed because all wheels drive, rather than the front or back two, you’d be keeping rather quiet?
You DO realise you are just as dead if a ‘green’ car hits you at speed, or even a cyclist, don’t you?
“Did anything I wrote deny you the freedom to drive a 4×4? No! I just asked for the freedom for people to make other choices and be safe from the result6s of your choice.”
And when those choices conflict, as it seems they must do (at least according to you)? Then you wrap yourself in the cosy blanket of self-righteousness and insist that YOUR choice is the ‘right’ one and must take precedence…
“Finally, when your freedom to choose kills someone then the automatic charge in court should be manslaughter …”
Sometimes things are just accidents. Black ice, mechanical failure, other driver’s actions.
That’s why we have impartial courts to decide this, not single-issue fanatics.
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December 20, 2010 at 13:43 -
Julia,
“According to that impeccable unbiased source, yet another cycling fanatic?”
Who is quoting both Winston Churchill and the DVLA, neither of which are exactly cycling fanatics.
“Why do I suspect that if the car had been a Prius, or indeed anything other than a vehicle loathed because all wheels drive, rather than the front or back two, you’d be keeping rather quiet?”
The only reason I would have kept quiet is that it would not have been relevant to this conversation. My experience is that too many 4×4 drivers assume that because they have traction to move they can also stop and so drive too fast in poor conditions, that is exactly why the Glasgow example is relevant in this conversation.
“And when those choices conflict, as it seems they must do (at least according to you)? Then you wrap yourself in the cosy blanket of self-righteousness and insist that YOUR choice is the ‘right’ one and must take precedence…”
You appear to be writing without any knowledge or experience. I would suggest you try riding a bike anywhere in the UK and then anywhere in the Netherlands (as well as driving your 4×4 in the Netherlands) to see for yourself how the infrastructure is about keeping vulnerable people safe and achieving higher traffic flows at lower cost.
It seems rather pathetic to respond to the two women being killed by that Range Rover by suggesting that wanting to avoid deaths like that in the future is self righteous.
“Sometimes things are just accidents. Black ice, mechanical failure, other driver’s actions.”
All those are made far worse by excess speed. Would you like to explain to the parents of the two women in Glasgow that it was just an accident and that the driver is blameless. It has been clearly established that speed is a major factor in “accidents” and that higher speeds make the consequences of an “accident” worse.
“That’s why we have impartial courts to decide this, not single-issue fanatics.”
So I am a single-issue fanatic. What does that make you? It appears that you care only for your freedom to do whatever you like. Why should you have that freedom while others live in fear because of your behaviour?
Also it is not the courts that decide the laws or decide who to charge with what offence, keeping to the facts does make discussion easier.
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December 20, 2010 at 14:24 -
“So I am a single-issue fanatic. What does that make you? It appears that you care only for your freedom to do whatever you like. Why should you have that freedom while others live in fear because of your behaviour?”
Because laws work so very, very well to prevent poor behaviour we need more of them, right?
You are just another blinkered nanny-statist, wishing for the firm hand of government to enforce your own desires on everyone else. For their own good, of course!
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December 20, 2010 at 14:29 -
And you’ll note that while I own a four-wheel drive vehicle, not only am I fully aware that it doesn’t give me a ‘get out of the laws of physics free’ card, but I am not pouncing on any blog post mentioning the weather or driving difficulties to demand that everyone should buy one.
Unlike cycle-fanatics, who just never know when to shut up about their personal hobby horse…
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December 20, 2010 at 14:46 -
Julia.
Again, it would be easier to have a conversation if you actually responded to what I wrote rather than want you wanted to read.
My plea was to enforce the laws we have and to appropriately sentence people, I did not suggest new laws.
Tell me. Do you think the driver of the Range Rover that killed two pedestrians should be allowed to drive again? If so why?
To make those ridiculous claims of being a nanny-statist wanting the government to enforce my desires you cannot have read what I wrote. For example “Note I am not suggesting a ban or attack on 4×4′s, …”
I have not suggested that everyone should have to cycle, I have suggested that those who wish to should be able to do so safely. Wow shock horror, what an outrageous thing to say.
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December 20, 2010 at 07:29 -
Aaarrgghh! They’ve shut our school down because of the weather. I say what’s the point of owning a 4×4?
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December 20, 2010 at 16:08 -
“Tell me. Do you think the driver of the Range Rover that killed two pedestrians should be allowed to drive again? If so why?”
You know, call me crazy and reckless, but I think I’ll go out on a limb here and wait for
A) an actual charge to be laid and
B) a convictionI know, I know, we should just skip all that ‘justice’ stuff but humour me, eh? It’s just possible that it wasn’t the car driver at fault here, odd as that concept must seem to you…
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December 20, 2010 at 17:09 -
JuliaM,
Firstly, rather than take this specific case consider any number of other convictions of drivers who have killed.
Sadly there are plenty of drivers who have been convicted of a motoring offence for a crash in which a pedestrian or cyclist died. When the driver has been convicted of such an offence do you think they should have their license taken away for life and if not why not?
If I were a teacher and a child under my care died because of my actions should I ever be allowed to be a teacher again? Why is this different to driving?
I recognise that most commonly drivers that kill are only charged with careless or dangerous driving rather than manslaughter. I think that is a injustice – why should killing someone by driving a car into them treated differently from every other way of killing them? I recognise that you disagree with this, although it is a separate issue from my question.
Secondly, as you are an experienced 4×4 driver who respects the laws of physics can you explain for me how this Glasgow crash might not be the drivers fault.
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December 20, 2010 at 17:27 -
Latest news reports mention that there’s a possibility that the driver had a blackout. True? Who knows.
That’s why we wait for a full investigation before thinking “Ugh! 4×4 bad! Pedestrian good!”
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December 20, 2010 at 21:05 -
Julia,
A blackout. H’mm, lucky they managed to miss the bus or they might have got hurt themselves travelling at that speed. Again as I said before. The consequences of a blackout will be less severe if you are travelling more slowly. Around shops, bus stops and pedestrians especially at a busy season like Christmas they should have been going very slowly.
What about the other cases, there are plenty of drivers who have been convicted after killing someone. Should they be allowed to drive again?
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December 20, 2010 at 22:26 -
My ! This Dave W is really poisonous — even by the standards of Socialism.
On one thing he is certainly wrong : the users of motor vehicles in the United Kingdom pay around six-times as much in taxes as is spent on the roads ; and three- or four-times as much as is spent on all transport. By any measure that makes Julia M’s allusion to ‘what she pays for’ entirely justified.
Speaking as a cyclist, motor-cyclist, motor-car driver and a former holder of both H.G.V.(1) and P.S.V.(any type) licences (and owner of a Toyota Prius), let me say that I find cyclists almost uniformly the least educated of road users (except in Oxford).
By the way, Joe Public is right about the effect of the cold weather on the K.E.R.S. : normally I get around 55-60 m.p.g. out of the Prius ; in these conditions I’m struggling to get 45. (Prius is hybrid rather than electric, so suffers less than Joe’s postulated 45% deterioration in performance for electric vehicles.)
ΠΞ
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December 20, 2010 at 23:58 -
Pericles,
Thanks for the generous and friendly tone of your response.
I would be interested to see your figures and sources for you breakdown of tax and expenditure for transport.
I notice that these “least educated of road users” did not kill anyone last year (ignoring those who killed themselves) compared to the 2,222 total killed on the roads. Education does not seem a very effective argument does it.
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