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Emergency

It would not be so necessary to introduce laws to govern the speed af cars if only driers would really understand the mechanism of their cars. It is not always the speed at which the car is travelling that constitutes the danger, but the inability on | the part of the driver to act I promptly in an emergency. An engineer has to pass exhaustive ; tests before he is allowed to control machinery of any kind. Yet I the. average owner-driver, after mastering a few elementary facts ! governing the car, casts aside I the instruction book and takes to j Ihe road ignorant of the capabilities of the machine he is driving i This, of course, is not true ot j every driver, but it may be sug- ! gested that a large majority of I the drivers of the present day are | not capable of taking down and 1 reassembling an engine, nor do they fully understand the principles of many of the niceties of driving, such as double declutching or intentional skidding in order to avoid an accident. It is I the little scraps of knowledge one | acquires while experimenting j and tinkering that count in a crisis. They help to bring about a complete understanding between the driver and his car.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NORAG19290417.2.11

Bibliographic details

Northland Age, Volume 1, Issue 18, 17 April 1929, Page 2

Word Count
213

Emergency Northland Age, Volume 1, Issue 18, 17 April 1929, Page 2

Emergency Northland Age, Volume 1, Issue 18, 17 April 1929, Page 2