http://money.cnn.com/2014/03/31/autos/rear-facing-cameras/index.html?hpt=hp_t2
3/31/2014 3:10:03 PM
i don't think it'll save lives. i do think they're a handy feature to have for difficult parking situations. for example, our driveway is on an incline and when i'm backing my truck up to the garage it's almost impossible to get it just right. of course a decent lookaround mirror on the garage would do just as well, but that wouldn't help me for things like parallel parking.odd to make them required.
3/31/2014 3:14:33 PM
I have a backup camera on my new daily, and actually like it, whereas before I had it I thought I wouldn't care or ever use it. However, it's a tool to be used along with mirrors and turning around, which is still my default position when backing.I think it'll save some of the particular kind of deaths they're trying to prevent, which is kid directly behind the vehicle (mostly vans/trucks) in the blind spot that the camera reveals. However, the problem is people like a friend of mine, who despite being extremely intelligent says "I love my backup camera, I never have to use my mirrors anymore." When I said "What about turning around and looking?" she said "Why would I do that?". So the cameras being on every car will probably kill more cyclists/joggers/bikers/etc who are moving in from the sides at a decent clip while people are backing up. How the overall numbers work out would be hard to tell of course, but the real problem is driver training and distracted driving, not lack of ability to see.[Libertarian]And while I'm a big fan of car companies offering it as an option, the government mandating it really ticks me off.[/Libertarian]
3/31/2014 3:24:21 PM
I could've sworn it was required for all new vehicles in MY2014 going forward. Everyone that drives in my company was wondering how in the hell I got a backup camera on a company fleet vehicle. Damn, that means I owe the CFO when he comes to me in the future to ask a favor (no homo)
3/31/2014 3:44:28 PM
I've driven a car with a backup camera, it was only useful because visibility out of the car was horrible (2013 Camaro SS Rental). In a car with good visibility this is a waste. Just another option I'll have to pay for.
3/31/2014 3:46:39 PM
My silverado had one and I loved it. Definitely a great additional tool for backing. Comes in really handy when backing up to a trailer with no guide. My silverado had the camera view in the rear view mirror, which was really handy, as you could easily look from mirror to camera, and then to the side mirrors (muscle memory). However, the new ones, and like many vehicles, the camera view is shown on the radio/nav screen, which I did not like. I guess you get used to it, but it certainly wasn't as efficient as having it embedded in the rear view mirror.I, too, think this will lead drivers to be even lazier and less safe, resulting in more accidents. It may reduce backover deaths some, but overall collisions while backing will increase.What about back-up/parking sensors? Figured those would be first; unless those are already slated to be mandatory?
3/31/2014 4:26:31 PM
3/31/2014 4:43:25 PM
3/31/2014 6:05:23 PM
this is some more fucking silly bullshit. how the fuck does this happen without there being an uproar?fuck mandatory stability control, backup cameras, data recording, and pedestrian crash standards that ruin the lines of cars and necessitate bloated, blocky, oversized designs.airbags might be worth the cost and weight. ABS is definitely worthwhile.
3/31/2014 6:11:37 PM
Im just waiting for the day the government starts to tax the fuck out of people with cars older than 10 years or start Cash for Clunkers 2.0
3/31/2014 11:17:40 PM
^They may do what some European cities have done, which is to ban cars older than a certain point (usually 10 years) from the city center or from the entire city limits.Also I'm 100% sure at some point in our lifetime, once self-driving cars become common, the interstate system will be reserved for them and if you "drive your own" you'll be restricted to small highways and back roads.[Edited on April 1, 2014 at 1:44 AM. Reason : plus]
4/1/2014 1:43:02 AM
This is a symptom of a larger problem. Until people are liable for their own fuckups nothing will ever be in stasis. Natural consequences are no longer enough. Won't somebody think of the children? Let's mandate backup cameras. Welcome to the future.
4/1/2014 1:51:56 AM
4/1/2014 6:30:20 AM
4/1/2014 9:08:44 AM
It's typical government bullshit. The obvious solution is better driving training, and frequent (mandatory) re-testing of driver skill to ensure that people driving around actually know what the fuck they're doing and how physics work in a vehicle's day to day operation.
4/1/2014 10:28:20 AM
better training can't teach a 4'11" woman to see what's in the 30 yard long blind spot behind her giant oversized SUV with high rear window.
4/1/2014 10:56:55 AM
Would you buy a car/truck you have no (physical) business driving and have a difficult time seeing out of? I wouldn't.
4/1/2014 1:13:36 PM
People do, and you can't create a law to prevent them from doing so.
4/1/2014 1:16:56 PM
Okay sounds good, that's on them then and they can bear the responsibility of their actions/decisions.
4/1/2014 1:26:42 PM
"oh well, that's on them" is easy until someone's toddler gets squishedi don't mind them being mandatory, i just wish there was some guidelines so that they are only mandatory on vehicles where they are necessary (for example, a backup camera is required if you can't see X feet behind your vehicle).[Edited on April 1, 2014 at 1:52 PM. Reason : or maybe they already included those. ]
4/1/2014 1:51:37 PM
Because women are safer driving top heavy SUV's.
4/1/2014 1:52:12 PM
road use tax should be based on GVWR
4/1/2014 3:39:57 PM
^^^&^Agreed.
4/1/2014 4:51:25 PM
If they had that law, every Camaro would have one. I've never been a car that was that uncomfortable. Glad I rented before buying one. I don't know how people are ok with cameras on cars but are terrified of google glass? The last thing I need is a camera watching me pick my nose at 90 mph
4/1/2014 4:58:05 PM
yeah its not just SUVs, plenty of cars have terrible visibility out of the back also
4/1/2014 5:59:06 PM
Anti-lock brakes, seat belts, air bags, stability control, window (a.k.a. glazing) materials, mirrors, instrument cluster info, data recording… The presence of all of these (and probably a slew more that I'm forgetting) should be up to the manufacturer and the consumer, not the government.If companies want to agree upon an industry standard made by an independent (read: non-government-affiliated) group, then that's perfectly fine. Throttle pedal always on the right, clutch always on the left, agreed? Ok, done. But no company should be forced to include all these options in their products, nor should any consumer be forced to buy these options.The market will naturally dictate safety through strict punishment for irresponsibility. By being punished for bad/dangerous driving (e.g. revocation of license for risky maneuvers or at-fault wrecks, manslaughter charges for backing over a kid, etc.), consumers will buy vehicles that offer the best balance between (A) an environment in which they are less likely to cause accidents and (B) a good price.The market will also naturally dictate safety through the consumer's desire for self-preservation. By driving in inherently dangerous situations (e.g. trees, ditches, bad weather, road debris, other motorists, etc.), consumers will buy vehicles that offer the best balance between (A) occupant safety and (B) a good price.Applied to the topic at hand: Either consumers will buy cars with lots of visibility and no/few camera screens, or they will buy cars with shitty visibility and loads of camera screens. I think we can all tell which is the more likely choice to best avoid the harsh penalties for at-fault situations. And I think we can also tell that such a choice is OPPOSITE of what the government is effectively imposing upon vehicle consumers via law.In closing, #WhoeverRunsLibertarian2016[Edited on April 1, 2014 at 6:19 PM. Reason : .]
4/1/2014 6:09:46 PM
that would all be fine if the punishment for being cheap could only hurt yourself, but that's not the case. because that's not the case, there is a public interest in making sure cars are safe. because there is a public interest in making sure cars are safe, the public has represented instelf with an organization that sets safety standards.
4/1/2014 6:18:10 PM
4/1/2014 6:32:54 PM
^Because your passengers may want to live, even if you don't. All of the government mandated standards have to do with safety (for passengers and pedestrians as well, not just the driver), emissions (which relate directly to public health), or economy (which is done on per-manufacturer basis, not per-vehicle, and relate to resource consumption)
4/1/2014 10:45:38 PM
Also, the current styling trend of high beltlines and gunslit windows has made cars with good visibility a thing of the past. Perhaps that will change eventually, but unless everyone stops buying new cars and goes looking for 1992 Accords, public opinion isn't going to push the manufacturers to do an about-face in a hurry.[Not to mention that part of the reason for high beltlines is due to pedestrian impact standards requiring the nose to be so damn high. That 1992 Accord wouldn't even come close to passing, it's way too low in front, hence the great visibility.]
4/1/2014 11:38:24 PM
^furthermore, outward visibility is also hurt by these inane crash standards. A car's roof has to withstand something like 3-6 times it's own weight, thus you have super thick pillars for strength...and then you have the air bags being mounted there as well. Our vehicles will only be "safe" in the government's eyes when we're all driving tanks
4/2/2014 8:09:26 AM
4/2/2014 8:38:03 AM
Nobody has ever complained about their personal safety while riding in my Integra. They complain about the noise, vibrations and rattles but not safety And this while riding in a 2600 lb car with no ABS, airbags, traction control, stability control, etc etc.
4/2/2014 8:52:17 AM
if the market can set safety standards by itself, then why are traffic fatality statistics so terrible in developing nations with relaxed or nonexistent safety standards?
4/2/2014 9:30:50 AM
4/2/2014 9:46:07 AM
4/2/2014 10:02:19 AM
beh.if anyone wants a bare bones car, nut up and:- build it.- buy an old fucker and resto-mod it.- buy an ____. (as igorski mentioned above)I'm satisfied with finding automotive bliss with existing (old/current/whatever) platforms, and part of the fun can be finding one without all the gizmos.
4/2/2014 10:04:18 AM
Buy a 2015 Z28 Camaro
4/2/2014 10:19:10 AM
While I don't agree with him on most of his points, I can respect theDuke866's libertarian-ish views on this issue. jawhitak on the other hand, is spewing stupidity. He reminds me of a buddy who once tried to argue against the need for an FDA by saying "if drugs hurt/kill people, then people will stop taking them. We don't need a government entity to test our drugs. The free market will handle it."
4/2/2014 10:22:58 AM
4/2/2014 10:26:45 AM
4/2/2014 11:03:53 AM
do you not agree that it would be more cost effective and less complicated if the government just required people to be better drivers?
4/2/2014 12:43:19 PM
that's different than telling manufacturers to build safer cars?
4/2/2014 12:48:52 PM
4/2/2014 12:57:18 PM
4/2/2014 1:35:36 PM
4/2/2014 2:20:53 PM
4/2/2014 2:26:33 PM
^^^exactly, if they removed requirements manufacturers would make cheaper cars and people would buy them. the market won't make anything safer on its own, it will fill the roads with cheap shitty cars.[Edited on April 2, 2014 at 2:28 PM. Reason : .]
4/2/2014 2:27:05 PM
I disagree. Volvo basically made a living at providing much safer cars than other car companies. Now they are going under.Great post bobbydigital. One has to really love the comparisions to a developing country when they have no idea what that really means. LIke saying a three year old doesnt know algebra and he is at home all day. So home schooling is obviously terrible compared to public schooling.
4/2/2014 3:16:41 PM
4/2/2014 3:23:23 PM