Pretty
Flashing Brake Lights!
by
Eric Peters
EricPetersAutos.com
My pal Dom
alerted me to a new annoyance inevitably touted (and likely,
soon to be mandated) as a safety measure: Third
brake lights that flash or blink instead of merely
illuminating, along with the main brake lights. He posted
a video of this phenomenon over at Clover
Cam, in case youre interested in seeing this latest example
of safety technology that arguably is going to make
the roads a lot less safe.
How so?
Visual clutter.
Too much input to process so instead of being noticed,
the input is ignored.
An example:
Those of a certain vintage will remember the world before always-on
headlights Daytime Running Lamps, or DRLs came into
play. Back then, you could easily pick out a funeral procession
or emergency vehicle because they were the only vehicles
that operated in the daytime with their lights on. They and motorcycles
which were as a result also easier to notice which
made things safer for them and everyone else.
Of course,
in those dread dark days of yore, people were also expected to pay
attention which today is apparently too much to expect.
Thus, today,
it is much harder impossible, even to identify which
cars are lined up in a funeral procession even when one is
paying attention, because every car well, almost every car
has its headlights on despite it being broad daylight.
Motorcycles
are invisible easily lost in the glare of all those always-on
headlights.
Ironic, isnt
it?
DRLs were sold
as a way to make cars more visible. In practice, having everyone
running around with their lights on has only made individual cars
(and all motorcycles) less visible, increased visual clutter
and made the driving environment more chaotic.
Which is exactly
what will happen when the no-goodniks in DC decide to mandate the
blinking third eye. They havent yet but rest assured,
its coming. A political Clover loves nothing more than safety
whether actually safe or not. We got saddled with
third-eye brake lights (CHMSLs) this way, too. Bet on blinking CHMSLs
in the near future.
Then, imagine
being in a pack of cars, in heavy traffic with literally
dozens of blinking, flashing brake lights assaulting your optic
nerve and overwhelming your brains ability to process.
There is a
reason why cop cars and emergency vehicles use flashing lights:
They are disorienting to the driver being pulled over. Which
is, you know, the opposite of what youd like when it
comes to encouraging a driver trying to maintain his focus on the
task at hand.
The flaw
the fly in the pie is the same as with DRLs. If you have
a single car coming down an empty road, it will indeed be more visible
and sooner if it is running with its lights on. The
problem is that America is no longer a land of single cars toodling
down empty (or even mostly empty) roads. One car with its lights
on is easy to pick out. One car with its headlights on in
a sea of cars with their headlights on is invisible. Worse
than that, actually. Because DRLs create glare a problem
that was nonexistent before DRLs were force-fed to the American
driver. (General Motors is the guilty party here. Because DRLs are
required by law in Canada and because GM sells a lot of cars
in Canada GM figured it would be cheaper to build all
its cars with DRLs
rather than build cars with DRLs for Canada
and cars without them for the US. Thats how
and why we got saddled with DRLs which GM touted as
a safety feature. Other automakers followed suit.)
October
2, 2012
Eric Peters
[send him mail] is an automotive
columnist and author of Automotive
Atrocities and Road Hogs (2011). Visit his
website.
Copyright
© 2012 Eric Peters
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