Danno wrote: Victor, there are ten times more people on the road now than there were ten years ago.
Danno wrote: Why have insurance costs not come down???
pleba wrote: .....we are currently forced to have our cars undergo an NCT after 4 years and then every two years after that. This is my opinion is ludicrous as the majority of NCT 'failures' are for minor conditons and not because the car is dangerous to drive.
Top Three Failure Items: Year 2003: the main failure items were Bodywork, Headlight Aim and Registration Plates Year 2002: the main failure items were Brakes, Front Suspension and Bodywork (in pre 92 vehicles) Year 2001: the main failure items were Brakes, Front Suspension and Emissions. In the year 2000: 43,000 pre 92 cars (1 in 6) were identified as having defective brakes. 34,000 pre 92 cars (1 in 8) were over the emissions limit set by the European Union. 32,000 pre 92 cars (1 in 9) had defective steering.
Rovi wrote: I've been banging on for years that it should be necessary to pass the test in order to renew your licence, or get it back after a ban. I reckon that this single thing would do more for road safety in this country than all the other finger wagging and empty threatening put together. It would require an army of testers though, so I know it'll never happen :mad:
mike65 wrote: Indeed I've often said it, imagine the mayhem if we did need to resit every 5 years say? Even if the system could cope and patienly it would'nt for the forseeble future, you'd have a whole new industry of "driving grinds".
r3nu4l wrote: I wonder if the CSO have any stats on whether those involved in fatal accidents were provisional or full license holders? I would bet there are far more fully licensed drivers responsible for deaths on Irish roads than provisional drivers. It seems far too easy to blame young untested drivers although that does not excuse the fact that they are driving on their own when they shouldn't be
Capt'n Midnight wrote: Sort of thing you expect from the Daily Mail, pity they can't give more relevant stats.
r3nu4l wrote: I wonder if the CSO have any stats on whether those involved in fatal accidents were provisional or full license holders? I would bet there are far more fully licensed drivers responsible for deaths on Irish roads than provisional drivers. It seems far too easy to blame young untested drivers although that does not excuse the fact that they are driving on their own when they shouldn't be (like I did! )!! And yes, I have a full, clean license and have had for almost four years.
r3nu4l wrote: In the UK, it's all anti-EU and occasionally anti-Irish, I bet the anti-Irish articles aren't printed in the "Irish" Daily Mail!
pH wrote: If we wanted to we could cut road deaths - safer roads, limit *all* cars to sensible speeds, enforce our L-driver regulatations, bring in a restricted category for young drivers.
tinkerbell wrote: Re. insurance rates not going down - after 9/11, reinsurance companies had to give massive payouts, which dried up all their funds. They had to hike their premiums for insurance companies, which resulted in insurance companies having to increase their premiums as well (would particularly apply to general, e.g. motor insurance where a claim could amount to hugh money).
Capt'n Midnight wrote: This really irks me because AFAIK here and in the UK, insurance companies don't cover terrorist damage in normal policies. Governments pay out instead.
tinkerbell wrote: In all fairness, it is not L drivers that cause accidents on the roads. The majority is fully licensed drivers.
MrPudding wrote: I have been looking for this information as it does not seem to be released. I think the license status of drivers in accidents would be interesting. Can you post the figures and the source please? MrP