

A slight technicality don't you think??Mikie711 wrote:I hate to be the one to point out the obvious but he wasn't on the road run when the accident happened. The run had finished, everyone had split up and he was heading home. It could (and probably will be) argued that he was still on the run but if you take that POV then supposing we had all been on some planned event, KH or flight museum trip as an example, and he had his accident returning from them would that mean that all organized outings should be stooped also?
Further, what constitutes a road run. They way I see it if 2 or more people meet up and have a common destination that is a road run in a nut shell. The big question is how you get there. Of course your going to have cars with differing performance as well as drives with different ability's but I maintain that it is the drivers responsibility for his/her vehicle.
That's how it should be done!alicrozier wrote: I lead off the run on Sunday for a few miles and those following (I think Mike was directly behind) would probably have noted a few things in my driving:
Appropriate speed in villages 30/40 limits (sometimes well below the limit).
Courteous overtaking, don't race up behind people or cut in. Give them a chance to see you are there.
Slowing down when traffic coming the other direction.
Slow right down for pedestrians etc (you'll have noticed the couple with pushchair?), give a wave.
Usually well within the car, conditions and visibility limits, only pushing on when it's clear.
Gareth wrote:Sorry to hear you crashed and I'm glad you're OK but for risk of being flamed...
This is not the 1st or 2nd time there's been a SE run crash. I'll eat my words if it's proven to be mechanical but it's a recurring theme of not driving to the road conditions. I was driving over probably the same roads as the Sunday run. Roads were very wet...then dry...then wet mud/snow/ice. Having been on many SE road runs in the past (but not for some time and probably will never again) i know what they're all about. Yes there's no pressure for anyone to do a "100 Tuts" but you get carried away.
Want to go fast...go on track where it's a whole lot safer with less things to hit and lower risk of things going very wrong or even fatal.
As for Lotus cars not being safe I disagree. Tut, Robin, Scotty have proven that theory wrong with some big impacts.