User Guide

@
Check your mirrors, glance over your shoulder and
start
your
left lane change signal before moving
out
of
the right lane
to
pass. When
you
are far enough
ahead
of
the passed vehicle
to
see its front
in
your
inside mirror, activate
your
right lane change signal
and
move
back into the right lane. (Remember that if
your right outside mirror
is
convex, the vehicle
you
just passed may seem to be farther away from
you
than
it
really
is.)
Try
not
to pass more than one vehicle at a time
on
two-lane roads. Reconsider before passing the
next
vehicle.
Don’t overtake
a
slowly moving vehicle
too
rapidly.
Even though the brake lamps are not flashing,
it
may
be
slowing down or starting to turn.
If
you’re
being passed, make
it
easy
for
the
following driver to get ahead
of
you. Perhaps you
can ease a
little
to
the right.
Loss
of
Control
Let’s review what driving experts say about what
happens when the three control systems (brakes, steering
and acceleration) don’t have enough friction where
the
tires meet the road
to
do
what
the
driver has asked.
In
any emergency, don’t give up. Keep trying to
steer and constantly seek an escape route
or
area
of
less danger.
Skidding
In
a
skid, a driver can lose control
of
the vehicle.
Defensive drivers avoid
most
skids by taking reasonable
care suited
to
existing conditions, and by not
“overdriving” those conditions.
But
skids are always
possible.
The three types
of
skids correspond to your vehicle’s
three control systems.
In
t.he braking skid, your wheels
aren’t rolling.
In
the
steering or cornering skid, too
much speed or steering
in
a curve causes tires
to
slip and
lose cornering force. And
in
the
acceleration skid,
too
much throttle causes the driving wheels to spin.
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