Car Driving and Safety
The Car Driving and Safety Channel offers safety tips and expert advice. Become a better driver with the Car Driving and Safety Channel.
Car Safety Systems Don't Always 'See' in Bad Weather, AAA Says
Your Chances of Hitting a Deer Rise in the Fall
Do Bikes Slow Down Car Traffic? Actually, No
10 Safest Cars on the Market Right Now
How to Escape a Sinking Car
Should Licensed Drivers Be Tested Periodically?
How Speed Limiters Work
How Seat Belts Work
How Speedometers Work
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If you are shopping for the safest cars, you want more than glossy ads and bold claims. You want proof from crash tests, real data, and trusted highway safety organizations.
When asking what state has the worst drivers, you might be wondering if the drivers you encounter every day in your home state are the actual worst, but what you're really asking which drivers in the country create the highest risk for crashes, injuries, and financial loss.
Left-side or left-hand traffic may seem backwards for most U.S. drivers, but it's nothing new; in the 17th and 18th centuries, it helped control the flow of horse-drawn carriages on London Bridge. These laws set the trend for many of the world's countries that drive on the left side of the road.
By Mitch Ryan
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You can probably guess what a speed limiter does by its name alone. But how do they actually work? And why would someone want to limit a car's top speed, anyway?
Seat belts save thousands of lives each year. How can a piece of fabric end up being the difference between life and death? What does a seat belt actually do? Learn how seat belts react in a crash.
By Tom Harris
Speedometers have been around since the early 1900s when cars began to grow in popularity and (literally) outpace the horse-drawn carriage.
A new study out from AAA found that advanced vehicle safety systems struggled when weather conditions weren't optimal. Some test runs even ended in collisions.
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And by the way, driving at dusk and during full moons aren't doing you any favors either.
By Tom Langen
If you're a motorist you may be silently cursing the bicyclist in front of you for making you late. But a study showed the speed difference was negligible.
Dashcams are inexpensive and easy to install. And they might be provide critical evidence if you're involved in a car accident. So why don't you have one?
The Green Mountain State has introduced a bill to allow motorists to include emojis on their license plates. And we are totally on board.
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The history of jaywalking is probably way more complex than you'd expect. Criminalizing crossing the street has roots in the auto industry, class wars and even racism.
School buses are some of the safest vehicles on the road. But most also don't have seat belts, leaving the children inside vulnerable to injury in a crash.
Two U.S. Senators have introduced legislation to mandate technology that could end drunk driving as we know it by 2024.
Plan on buying a live Christmas tree this year? Don't be that guy who loses it on the road between the lot and your house. We've got tips to help you get it home safely.
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The zipper merge is best. Drivers should stay in their lane until the very last minute and then take turns entering the open lane.
Seems like just when you've settled on a parking spot far out, some joker cruises by and gets a space in the front row. What do scientists think is the best way to score a good parking space?
The impossible happens. You're trapped in your car and it's sinking. Could you break a window to get out?
Sure, it's a good skill to have, but for how much longer?
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Who needs the DMV? If Texas HB 409 passes, parents could soon bypass it altogether and make their novice teens legal to drive.
JFK. Tupac. Bonnie and Clyde. They each died in a car, but what happened to those famous vehicles after the fact?
These personal air bags can help anyone prone to falling, including motorcyclists, horseback riders and senior citizens.
Opening your car door the right way could help you avoid a horrifying collision with a biker and save a life.
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Wouldn't it be a good idea to retest drivers every so often? Experts say not really.
The van driven by the recent pipe bombing suspect was literally covered from top to bottom with right-wing stickers. But, for the average law-abiding citizen, how many bumper stickers is too many?
By Oisin Curran