Safe Driving with Motorcycles Yellowknife NT

The road in Yellowknife nowadays does not belong to four-wheeled vehicles anymore, a fact that should not be denied. Motorcycles and their drivers have recently made their presence more felt by the general driving public. The rise of motorcycle owners can be attributed to the truth that motorcycles are relatively cheap in terms of price and insurance. Gas mileage is also good and encouraging especially in these difficult times.


1. Local Companies

DJ's Towing
867-445-2500
201 Magrum Crescent
Yellowknife, NT
Yellowknife Motors Ltd
867-766-5000
49th Ave & 48th St
Yellowknife, NT
Age Automotives Ltd
867-873-5528
107 Kam Lk Rd
Yellowknife, NT
Ron's Auto Service & Equipment Rentals Ltd
867-766-6025
103 Kam Lake Rd
Yellowknife, NT
Diamond Cabs
867-873-6666
308B Woolgar Avenue
Yellowknife, NT
Superior Auto Body
867-873-5253
5 Nahanni Dr
Yellowknife, NT
Ahlstrom Wright Oliver & Cooper
1-800-994-7477
5016 47 Street
Yellowknife, NT
Autotec
867-920-4994
354 Old Airport Road
Yellowknife, NT
Bumper To Bumper
(867) 873-8940
Yellowknife, NT

2. Safe Driving for Youth

SATURDAY, May 23 (HealthDay News) -- Teen drivers are more likely than adults to crash their car, due to their youth and inexperience -- but don't try telling them that.

Studies have found that teens have an overblown sense of their driving prowess, one that can and does put them in the middle of some truly terrible crashes. They also don't understand that distractions such as cell phones and teenage passengers can make driving more dangerous.

"Kids tend to judge their experience on getting a license," said Dr. Kenneth R. Ginsburg of the Center for Injury Research and Prevention at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. "The truth is that getting a driver's license is the very first step to gaining experience."

It's an established fact that young drivers crash more often than older drivers, and with worse consequences. People between 15 and 24 years old represent just 14 percent of the United States population, but they account for 30 percent of the total costs of motor vehicle injuries among males and 28 percent among females, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

In 2005, 4,544 teens ages 16 to 19 died of injuries incurred in crashes, the CDC says. That same year, nearly 400,000 teenage passengers or drivers of vehicles involved in crashes sustained injuries severe enough to require treatment in an emergency department.

"A new driver at any age is going to have a higher crash rate, but with teenagers, you're combining that experience deficit with immaturity and risk-taking," said Anne McCartt, senior vice president for research at the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety.

Ginsburg headed a study that asked high-school students their opinions of a number of risky driving situations. Sixty percent of the students said that driving experience was very important, but only 15 percent said they had ridden with inexperienced drivers.

Most of the kids in Ginsburg's study didn't understand that cell phones could be a distraction to a driver. They also didn't realize that having other teenage passengers in the car posed a safety risk -- a troubling statistic given that two of every three teen drivers surveyed said they often traveled with teen passengers.

"Passengers for older drivers can be neutral or even beneficial, but when teen drivers have teen passengers, they are more likely to crash," McCartt said. "That's likely due to distraction passengers bring to the vehicle, and an increased propensity to take risks."

Another study, this one in Canada, found that high-school students tend to harbor mistaken beliefs that lead them to underestimate the risks of driving. The teens in that study believed that:

  • Their youth and agility make them better able than more experienced drivers to overcome poor driving conditions or intoxication.
  • Vehicle problems and highway design are more likely than human error to cause crashes.
  • If they were in a crash, doctors would be able to save their lives and bring them completely back to normal.

But the study did contain some bits of good news as well. Teenagers seemed to understand that drinking and driving were a bad mix, Ginsburg said.

"Substances are used by a relatively few kids, because they've heard that message, and they get what the risk is," he said. "On the other hand, having passengers in the car and talking on cell phones happens more frequently, and they're all distractions."

Ginsburg said that parents need to take a role in disabusing their kids of wrong notions about driving.

"Parents matter," he said. "Parents are the ones in charge of making sure kids follow restrictions and graduated driving laws. The challenge is for parents to make clear that these restrictions aren't about control, they're about safety, and they come from a place of love."

McCartt's group has recommended a tougher solution: Raise the driving age to 17 or 18. She points to New Jersey, which is the only state that issues licenses at 17 and which has a consistently lower rate of teen deaths in car crashes than its neighboring states.

"Teen drivers are not good at even identifying whether something's risky or not," McCartt said. "The evidence from New Jersey suggests other states would benefit substantially from increasing the age at which teens get their license."

More information

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have more on the risks of teen driving.

SOURCES: Kenneth R. Ginsburg, M.D., behavioral science investigator, Center for Injury Research and Prevention, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia; Anne McCartt, senior vice president for research, Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, Arlington, Va.

Author: By Dennis Thompson
HealthDay Reporter

Copyright © 2009 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.

Read Article at HealthDay.com

3.

The road nowadays does not belong to four-wheeled vehicles anymore, a fact that should not be denied. Motorcycles and their drivers have recently made their presence more felt by the general driving public. The rise of motorcycle owners can be attributed to the truth that motorcycles are relatively cheap in terms of price and insurance. Gas mileage is also good and encouraging especially in these difficult times.

However, contemporary statistics also show the rise of motorcycle crashes. Motorcycles are smaller and that makes them less noticeable for automobile drivers on the road. With this in mind, it is essential therefore, for automobile drivers to start conditioning their reflexes and driving techniques to avoid any untoward incident on the road.

Even in driving a car, or any four-wheeled or more vehicles for that matter, the basic driving technique to be mastered is defensive driving. Defensive driving entails the conscious effort of the driver to prevent a crash before it occurs. Putting on the defensive mode while driving will collectively bring about the other skills needed to ensure road safety. Simultaneously, this will ensure safety in sharing the road with motorcycle drivers.

Paying attention is basically the optimal rule in driving. Most drivers who encounter road mishaps with motorcycles say that they just did not notice them because they are either inconspicuous or the road conditions did not let them see the motorcycles. A driver should always make it a point to notice who are driving on both sides of his car. Adjust the rear view mirror of the automobile when needed to guarantee a full view of the road. Know your vehicle's blind spot. Even while driving on a wide highway, a driver should anticipate that a motorcycle could be speeding up beside his car anytime.

Tailgating is also important to consider if you want safe driving on a road with motorcycles. Motorcycle wheels are more exposed than automobile wheels. A slight touch of a car bumper to a motorcycles rear wheel can send that motorcycle up in the air and into the ground. Always make it a point to allow two to three car lengths away from a motorcycle or any other vehicle on the road. Tailgating is of greater importance when driving on a wet road. Motorcycles need longer braking distances when the roads are wet so be careful.

When overtaking a motorcycle in the road, always give it the same respect as you would have given any four-wheeled vehicle. Give it plenty of room and do not get too close. The motorcycle rider may get startled and lose control of his bike when a vehicle gets too close to it.

A motorcyclist, compared to a car driver, has less time to react in times of potential accidents. A simple road accident that can just give a scratch to a car driver may prove fatal for a motorcycle rider. Road safety is a shared responsibility among all the drivers using it. It is but important to do your share in being informed and applying it on the road.

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