When to Take Grandma’s Car Keys

When should the driving privileges of senior, elderly drivers be restricted or revoked?? It’s an age old question (pardon the pun), but it’s also a fiery debate that get’s reignited whenever a traffic calamity involving a senior driver at fault makes the news.  Should it be when they turn 70?…maybe 80?  Should any 100 year old drivers be allowed on the road?


The legitimate answer hinges on the health of the driver.  Jake Nelson, director of traffic safety advocacy and research for AAA tells us that “Older drivers are actually the safest on the road…They’re often misrepresented.”…“If they’re hitting a group of people or crashing into a super market, clearly there’s an issue there but that does not mean that all older drivers are safety hazards. It’s just the opposite.”

The reality is, drivers 35 to 54 years old are the real problem on our roads.  They cause over 17,000 fatalities a year.  Finishing at a close second place… 21 to 34 years old…killing 15,057 people annually, according to the National Center for Statistics and Analysis, a division of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

  • 55 to 85-plus years old — that’s a 30-year span — are responsible for roughly 11,260 fatal accidents a year.
  • 16-year-olds to 20-year-olds have more than double the fatal traffic crashes of 70+ year olds: 5,729 vs. 2,656.

But it’s the real life drama of tragic stories that get our attention because they make the news.

Medical issues more important than age

Director of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s AgeLab, Joseph Coughlin, says:

  • 110 million Americans are taking medications for one chronic condition that could be as mundane as seasonal sniffles to as debilitating as diabetes, Coughlin said.
  • 60 million Americans suffer from two chronic conditions while some
  • 20 million log five chronic conditions that they are under a combination of doctors’ prescriptions and/or an over-the-counter drug…

But two-thirds of people 65 and older take five or more medications every day that can affect driving ability. The side effects of taking an antihistamine or antidepressant may not be noticeable to people in their 40s, who as they age may then ignore warning signs.

Even worse, older drivers tend to have the highest death rates in car crashes versus their more accident-prone younger counterparts. The rates steadily rise as drivers age…80+ year olds are almost four times more likely to be killed in a car crash than 50-year-olds.  But the reason goes beyond drug issues: older, more feeble bodies with more brittle bones and weaker tissue.
Indications that something is wrong

Clearly, how to determine if and when an elderly driver you know…is no longer capable of safely controlling a car…is a sensitive and complicated issue. But they are conversations need to be engaged long before problems crop up.

Read More – MarketWatch

Auto Body Gilroy News: 3-31-13

Report: NHTSA looking for power to fast-track “noncontroversial” auto laws | Autoblog

by Jonathon Ramsey

When it comes to any new regulation that the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration deems “not controversial and therefore unlikely to receive adverse comment,” it would like the power to implement the regulation without the standard period of public comment. It seeks the change in order to be able to clear and finalize “routine” rules in a matter of days. If NHTSA is granted the power it seeks, people could still comment on such regulations and request changes, but the agency could ignore the feedback and the requests.

The Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers has questioned the proposal, which would expedite the “direct final rule” process, citing the decrease in transparency it could entail and the ambiguous definition of “controversy” – what NHTSA thinks is a routine regulation, others could consider anything but.

The notice was posted on the NHTSA site on Tuesday…

Read More

Hoodless: Top 10 Engines from Viva Las Vegas | HotRod

by Jesse Kiser
Here is a run down of our favorite engines from the show. There is a huge mix of engines and hard to tell what’s the most popular. If we had to guess, it would be a small block Chevy, but there are a surprising number of original flat heads powering these driven hot rods. Here… [Read More]

 

The Shelby Raptor Is A Crazed Power Hungry Beast Of A Truck | Jalopnik

by Travis Okulski

The Ford Raptor is a favorite of ours. More horsepower is also a thing that we like. So what if you give a Raptor to those lunatics at Shelby? You get this, the Shelby Raptor.

Read more…

VW Golf announced as World Car of the Year 2013 | Autocar

Matt Bird

Latest Golf is the fourth VW in five years to be awarded the titleThe Volkswagen Golf Mk 7 has been named World Car of the Year. It’s the 17th award bestowed upon VW’s latest hatchback since its launch last November.World Car of the Year is judged by 66 journalists from 23 countries. Contenders for this year’s title included the Porsche Boxster, Mercedes A-Class and Toyota GT86/Subaru BRZ. The top honour was reserved for the Golf thanks to what the jurors called ‘fresh, progressive design, a new range of engines, plus an impressive list of equipment and safety systems’.VW’s Chairman Prof. Dr. Martin Winterkorn said of  claiming the title: ‘To win this award again shows that the Golf is and remains in a class of its own all around the world’. The latest Golf continues Volkswagen’s strong showing in World Car of the Year; not only did the Up receive the prestigious accolade in 2012, it was also awarded to the Golf Mk 6 in 2009 and the Polo in 2010.The Golf range is set to expand in the upcoming months. In 2013 VW will launch the latest Golf GTI and GTD, whilst an all-electric Golf and range-extender Hybrid are due in the near future.

Auto Body Gilroy News: 12-13-12

First Drive: 2013 BMW ActiveHybrid 3 – AutoBlog

by Matt Davis

For Those Who Want Their Top Trim 3 Series Greener

The business case is pretty simple: BMW wants a green (or blue, if you like) “liaison” line of models between its standard lineup of cars and the upcoming mega-wow i models. This maximizes choices, fills all niches, and buys time while BMW waits to get those i cars just right before the start of deliveries.

These ActiveHybrid full parallel-hybrid electrics are also acting as the closest BMW can get to its amazing range of turbocharged diesel motors that not enough people want in North America and Asia. In European terms, there is no business case for these hybrid cars apart from curious and cash-heavy early technology adopters, since the EU is awash in BMW’s wonderful oil-burners. Those beloved turbocharged diesels would be a far better product in North America and Asia as well, but, hey, let’s not get all pipedream-y, now. And, no, we’re not trolling here.

So BMW has created a lineup of pretty darn good heavier and pricier models, coining the new brand word ActiveHybrid with versions of the X6, 7 Series, 5 Series and now the 3 Series, called “F30h” internally in this case. The efficiencies gained by this powertrain are fairly good as well, so we’ll try tempering our doubts.

Continue reading 2013 BMW ActiveHybrid 3

 

The Ten Most Important New Cars Of 2012 – Jalopnik

by Raphael Orlove

New cars are often predictable and conservative, but Jalopnik readers managed to find the ten cars that evolved their class or otherwise challenged our assumptions. The ten most important new cars of 2012.  More »

This Is The Best Feature Of The 2014 Silverado And Sierra – Jalopnik

by Travis Okulski

The 2014 Chevy Silverado and GMC Sierra are going to be brand new for 2014. They have engines. They have beds. You can put manure in the back.  More »

Who Was The Most Influential Person In The Auto Industry In 2012? – Jalopnik

by Thomas McIntyre

Critic, CEO, designer, or Jalopnik intern, who had the most impact in 2012?  More »

Four Myths About NHTSA’s Proposal for Mandatory Black Boxes – CarandDriver

by Justin Berkowitz

Twenty-four-hour news networks interrupted their coverage of skydiving cats earlier this week to light a fire under NHTSA’s announcement that it planned to mandate event data recorders, or black boxes, be installed in all new cars. Amidst the frenzy, it almost seems as though many reporting on the announcement didn’t actually read the proposed NHTSA rule or anything about what the event data recorders actually do. We’re here to debunk some of the rumors in circulation.

Myth 1: NHTSA’s Announcement Last Week Said Something We Haven’t Heard Before

Nope. NHTSA has been talking about mandating event data recorders since at least 2006, when it first set rules about how voluntarily installed EDRs had to operate. The only thing NHTSA announced recently is that it plans to put this rule into effect beginning in 2014, which was the date floated officially and unofficially during the past year.

Myth 2: The White House “Signed Off” on NHTSA’s Proposal for Event Data Recorders

A number of major news outlets based their reporting of the black box topic on a story published in the Detroit News, which was titled “NHTSA gets White House OK to mandate vehicle ‘black boxes.’” This makes it sound like Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood brought a bottle of brandy to the Oval Office, kissed Barack Obama’s ring, and said, “Mr. President, even though it’s not the day of your daughter’s wedding, we’d like your blessing for our plan to require automakers to install black boxes in every car. Can we go ahead with this?”

In reality, any time an executive agency proposes a new regulation—whether it’s NHTSA or the Forest Service—they have to clear it with the Office of Management and Budget to make sure the new reg doesn’t conflict with what another agency is doing, isn’t creating some new huge burden for the budget, and that the new rule wouldn’t be totally contrary to the president’s stated goals. The OMB is part of the White House organizational structure, so while it’s technically accurate that the White House cleared the black box plan, this routine rubber stamp is meaningless. [Read More]

Auto Body Gilroy News: 4-15-12

To prevent unintended acceleration, NHTSA proposes new standard – CNET

(Credit: Lexus)

Toyota has already made brake-throttle override a standard feature on all its vehicles; now the NHTSA wants all manufacturers to do the same.

If you press the brake, the car should always stop–even if you’re also pressing the gas pedal at the same time. That’s the way the National Highway Transportation and Safety Administration sees it, and it is proposing new regulations that would require brake-throttle override systems in all new vehicles.

In 2009, Toyota vehicles were recalled after a fatal crash involving a Lexus ES350. All occupants of the Lexus were killed when the driver, a 19-year veteran of the California Highway Patrol, was unable to stop the vehicle … [Read more]

 

Tesla banks on low factory outlays in drive to profits – AutoNews

Holding down costs at a refurbished California plant is crucial to the success of electric-car maker Tesla, which has yet to record its first profit.

Ford survey shows many European drivers ignore distracted driving risks – AutoNews

The risks posed by distracted driving don’t deter many drivers, according to a European survey commissioned by Ford. Half of the drivers who took part in the study admitted to taking their eyes off the road to read text messages.