Welcome to the Australian Ford Forums forum.

You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and inserts advertising. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members, respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features without post based advertising banners. Registration is simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today!

If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact us.

Please Note: All new registrations go through a manual approval queue to keep spammers out. This is checked twice each day so there will be a delay before your registration is activated.

Go Back   Australian Ford Forums > General Topics > The Pub

The Pub For General Automotive Related Talk

 
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Prev Previous Post   Next Post Next
Old 12-08-2013, 12:01 PM   #1
Road_Warrior
Pity the fool
 
Road_Warrior's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Wait Awhile
Posts: 8,997
Arrow Go troppo for dash-cams: road safety expert

ITT we talk about flying cars



http://www.goauto.com.au/mellor/mell...257BC50004B79E

Quote:
EACH week brings the world a fresh batch of grainy Russian dash-cam videos showing drivers breaking the law – or their cars – in painful detail.

Now an Australian safety expert is encouraging Australian drivers to do the same.

Shane Richardson, the forensic engineering-based managing director of road safety consultancy Delta-V Experts, wants Australian drivers to think about adding dash-cams to their cars to help insurance companies and police correctly point the finger of blame.

He said this would help supplement information automatically gathered by a car in a crash.

“Foremost to every vehicle at the moment, if you’ve got an airbag in the vehicle, there’s a control module,” Dr Richardson told a Society of Automotive Engineers Australasia road safety conference in Melbourne last week .

“Now that control module, because of some legislation in the US, is now able to be interrogated in some cars. So you can now look at the last five seconds of what was happening before that airbag has deployed,” he said.

Dr Richardson said all insurance companies had to do to extract information from the car was to buy a translator box that plugged into the car’s onboard diagnostics port – or cut into the car and extract the module.

“You can extract some really good information about what the vehicle was doing,” Dr Richardson said.

This included longitudinal acceleration, and longitudinal and lateral speeds.

“You can tell a lot of information about how a vehicle has crashed,” he said.

“What could you personally do? You may have seen lots of Russian video recorders in cars – there are lots of them out there, and there are lots of people who have access to them and could fit them.”

He showed an example of video of an incident caught on another vehicle’s dash-cam in which the driver who crashed claimed he was travelling at a much lower speed than the video showed – 90km/h versus an indicated 118km/h in a 100km/h zone shortly before the crash occurred.

“For your own peace of mind, please consider getting, or at least fitting, something to your vehicle (that records video).

“For nothing else it is worthwhile in terms of reconstructing and analysing (a collision) from the additional information (from the video) that’s kept there.

“Police and other people that work in this area are using sources from CCT (closed-circuit television) cameras.

“I would encourage you to consider one, that in your vehicle if you have a good airbag control module, it is likely that someone can extract that information and work out what caused that airbag’s deployment – so big brother can monitor you for that.

“But I don’t think we should shy away from that ... but be aware that you can be interrogated for what speed you were doing – and I would encourage you to put an event-recording camera in your vehicle,” Dr Richardson said.

“They are really useful in saying here’s what happened in the crash – don’t write the story, have a look, here’s the video of the crash that occurred.”
So whose got one? I've never really considered them myself but after some idocy this morning I'm tempted.

__________________
Fords I own or have owned:

1970 XW Falcon GT replica | 1970 XW Falcon | 1971 XY Fairmont | 1973 ZG Fairlane | 1986 XF Falcon panel van | 1987 XFII Falcon S-Pack | 1988 XF Falcon GLS ute | 1993 EBII Fairmont V8 | 1996 XG Falcon ute | 2000 AU Falcon wagon | 2004 BA Falcon XT | 2012 SZ Territory Titanium AWD

Proud to buy Australian and support Ford Australia through thick and thin
Road_Warrior is offline   Reply With Quote Multi-Quote with this Post
 


Forum Jump


All times are GMT +11. The time now is 05:15 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.5
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Other than what is legally copyrighted by the respective owners, this site is copyright www.fordforums.com.au
Positive SSL