Joined Nov 2005
quick, like a bunny
Forum Thread
backup cameras mandatory in all new vehicles
March 31, 2014 at
12:13 PM
in
Autos
(4)
Automakers will be required to install backup cameras in most new vehicles by May 2018, a federal agency announced Monday. [cnn.com]
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration finalized a long-awaited rule requiring all new cars, SUVs, and minivans, as well as some new small trucks and buses to carry rear visibility technology.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration finalized a long-awaited rule requiring all new cars, SUVs, and minivans, as well as some new small trucks and buses to carry rear visibility technology.
194 Comments
Your comment cannot be blank.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
without having that experience, i'd only guess that cameras are a cheaper and more standardized way to get to the goal (i'm assuming a basic camera and a fish-eye lens are cheaper than the sensors). i use my camera in addition to my mirrors and simply looking, but definitely miss it when i drive a car without it.
without having that experience, i'd only guess that cameras are a cheaper and more standardized way to get to the goal (i'm assuming a basic camera and a fish-eye lens are cheaper than the sensors). i use my camera in addition to my mirrors and simply looking, but definitely miss it when i drive a car without it.
Its actually the same technology that they have applied to blind spot monitoring where they took the sonars and put them on the sides of the car and it beeps if you put your directional on while a car or other object is in the lane next to you.
without having that experience, i'd only guess that cameras are a cheaper and more standardized way to get to the goal (i'm assuming a basic camera and a fish-eye lens are cheaper than the sensors). i use my camera in addition to my mirrors and simply looking, but definitely miss it when i drive a car without it.
I love when I read something especially sarcastic and witty. Our members do not disappoint..especially some of you !
And then the final deathblow ...poor llama...he loved to frolic.
Its actually the same technology that they have applied to blind spot monitoring where they took the sonars and put them on the sides of the car and it beeps if you put your directional on while a car or other object is in the lane next to you.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
I think backup sensors would be far more important than the camera as far as safety goes if they are making things mandatory. The backup sensor is going to work whether you are paying attention or not. The camera doesn't do much good if the driver isn't looking at it. If something is going to be mandatory for safety you have to take the driver out of the equation.
As far as anti-lock brakes--I'm still not a fan.
Air bags--I've never had one save me from injury but I do like the security of the added protection.
Power steering? Not mandatory as far as I know but a car with a good manual steering box gives you a better feel of the road.
Anybody remember the fiasco of the active seatbelt idea? I know Ford used it on the Escort and Tempo and I think some Toyotas had it for a while. The shoulder belt was motorized and when you turned the ignition on the belt wrapped itself around the driver automatically. The government tried hard to make this mandatory but didn't succeed and it died out with the airbag requirement.
The biggest problem I saw with it, (other than being annoying) was that the driver still had to manually put the lap belt on. In reality people forgot to use the lap belt because with the shoulder belt in place it seemed like you were already buckled in. Either that or they just intentionally didn't use the lap belt because to a cop looking from outside it appeared that you were buckled up. The shoulder belt alone was probably incredibly dangerous in an accident. The driver would likely still be thrown forward and the shoulder belt would hang them.
I hated my automatic seat belts. They were built into the car door, and when I got out of the car, I had to be careful not to bump into the protruding belt. Hurt like hell. I had several passengers who suffered that fate as well. Poor design.