2003 Oldsmobile Alero Owner's Manual - Page 175

2003 Oldsmobile Alero Manual

Page 175 highlights

Your Driving, the Road, and Your Vehicle Defensive Driving The best advice anyone can give about driving is: Drive defensively. Please start with a very important safety device in your vehicle: Buckle up. See Safety Belts: They Are for Everyone on page 1-9. Defensive driving really means "be ready for anything." On city streets, rural roads or freeways, it means "always expect the unexpected." Assume that pedestrians or other drivers are going to be careless and make mistakes. Anticipate what they might do. Be ready for their mistakes. Rear-end collisions are about the most preventable of accidents. Yet they are common. Allow enough following distance. It's the best defensive driving maneuver, in both city and rural driving. You never know when the vehicle in front of you is going to brake or turn suddenly. Defensive driving requires that a driver concentrate on the driving task. Anything that distracts from the driving task - such as concentrating on a cellular telephone call, reading, or reaching for something on the floor - makes proper defensive driving more difficult and can even cause a collision, with resulting injury. Ask a passenger to help do things like this, or pull off the road in a safe place to do them yourself. These simple defensive driving techniques could save your life. Drunken Driving Death and injury associated with drinking and driving is a national tragedy. It's the number one contributor to the highway death toll, claiming thousands of victims every year. Alcohol affects four things that anyone needs to drive a vehicle: Judgment 0 Muscular Coordination Vision Attentiveness. 0 Police records show that almost half of all motor vehicle-related deaths involve alcohol. In most cases, these deaths are the result of someone who was drinking and driving. In recent years, more than 16,000 annual motor vehicle-related deaths have been associated with the use of alcohol, with more than 300,000 people injured. 4-2

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Your
Driving,
the
Road,
and
Your
Vehicle
Defensive Driving
The best advice anyone
can give about driving is: Drive
defensively.
Please start with
a very important safety device in your
vehicle: Buckle up.
See
Safety
Belts:
They
Are
for
Everyone
on page
1-9.
Defensive driving really means
“be ready for anything.”
On city streets, rural roads or freeways, it means
“always expect the unexpected.”
Assume that pedestrians or other drivers are going to
be careless and
make mistakes. Anticipate what
they might do.
Be ready for their mistakes.
Rear-end collisions are about the most preventable of
accidents. Yet they are common.
Allow
enough following
distance. It’s the best defensive driving maneuver, in
both city and rural driving. You never know
when
the vehicle in front of you is going to brake or turn
suddenly.
Defensive driving requires that a driver concentrate on
the driving task. Anything that distracts from the
driving task
-
such as concentrating on a cellular
telephone call, reading, or reaching for
something
on
the floor
-
makes proper defensive driving
more
difficult
and can even
cause
a collision, with resulting injury.
Ask
a
passenger to help do things like this,
or
pull
off
the
road in a
safe place to do
them yourself. These
simple
defensive driving techniques could save
your
life.
Drunken
Driving
Death
and injury associated with drinking and
driving is
a national tragedy. It’s
the
number
one
contributor
to
the highway death toll, claiming thousands of victims
every year.
Alcohol affects four
things that anyone
needs to drive
a
vehicle:
Judgment
0
Muscular Coordination
Vision
0
Attentiveness.
Police records show
that
almost
half of all
motor
vehicle-related deaths involve alcohol. In most
cases,
these deaths are the result of someone who
was
drinking and driving.
In
recent years,
more
than
16,000
annual motor vehicle-related deaths
have
been
associated with the use of alcohol, with more
than
300,000
people injured.
4-2