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bob youel  
#41 Posted : 22 June 2015 16:37:30(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
bob youel


I advise that what ever is used that its reliable hence [after guidance from the RAC and AA lads] I not recommend VW, Audi or BMW as it would not look good if the H&S bod could not get to an investigation after all we are supposed to be the reliable people

stonecold  
#42 Posted : 22 June 2015 17:41:25(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
stonecold

I had a BMW previously, honestly was the best car I have ever had.
Roundtuit  
#43 Posted : 22 June 2015 20:30:22(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Roundtuit

And when I drag myself home after a day of frustration my daughter always makes me smile with:

"Remember Dad your job still isn't as pointless as the man in the BMW factory who fits the indicators!"
Roundtuit  
#44 Posted : 22 June 2015 20:30:22(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Roundtuit

And when I drag myself home after a day of frustration my daughter always makes me smile with:

"Remember Dad your job still isn't as pointless as the man in the BMW factory who fits the indicators!"
biker1  
#45 Posted : 24 June 2015 14:52:53(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
biker1

As you may guess from my forum name, my main form of transport is a motorcycle, and I can endorse the things said about modern drivers; I come across them every day.

Volvos are not the tanks they used to be, so not much point to me in buying them, and you have to wear a flat cap to drive one. In a previous job, fleet cars were chosen on the basis of several factors, one being crash test ratings, another one a flat boot entry to reduce manual handling problems, etc. We ended up with a Toyota Avensis. They were talking to BMW about fleet cars, and I remember pointing out to them the awful reputation that drivers of these have. I long ago concluded that if anyone was going to do for me, it would be a BMW driver. Indeed, I got knocked over at a roundabout a few years ago, when I stopped but the idiot behind didn't. Guess what he was driving? Probably yakking on his mobile (when is the government going to get tough on this practice, it really is ridiculous?). Bad enough, but he blamed me for damaging his car! If I hadn't had half of Birmingham passing by as witnesses, it wouldn't have been the only thing damaged!

Driving standards are declining in inverse proportion to the growth in safety features in cars, and I suspect a link between these. I think this move to more and more features to protect drivers (rarely other road users, I notice) is barking up the wrong tree. Until something meaningful is done to raise driving standards, we will continue to suffer the consequences of having so may numbnuts on the road.

Most modern cars are full of safety features (even Land Rover have tried to improve their previously awful crash test ratings by redesigning the car shell, even if they now look like an elephant has sat on them), so I think most of them are much of a muchness. Even car adverts have abandoned the notion of publicising the features of the cars, trying to reel people in by lifestyle factors, as there is relatively little to differentiate between them (when I see a modern advert of the latest model flashing down an empty road, I just want to know where the blessed road is!)
aud  
#46 Posted : 24 June 2015 15:19:58(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
aud

My last employer did not believe that it was essential for safety advisers to have a car at all. Or at least they stopped paying for it to be essential.
If it was that important I got to an investigation site then I decided I would either take a taxi (and claim) or get the HR person who decided this policy to take me.

To be fair, in an urban setting - with taxis - this works fine. Covering Cumbria would be a different matter. And it also opens up the job to non-drivers, much more inclusive.
Animax01  
#47 Posted : 24 June 2015 15:33:55(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Animax01

I drive a Renault sport Clio... I live 2.5 miles from work so fuel economy isn't a worry for me. Personally, I understand that the thread is a joke, but I know the car not maketh man (woman). I've had motor bikes and I also cycle for fun (fitness not because I'm poor), therefore understand that we need to look out for our own safety at all times. I've found that the more engaging the vehicle, the likely the driver is to be paying attention. As opposed to everything being autonomous and the driver switching off.
Next car?? Nissan GTR maybe....
ExDeeps  
#48 Posted : 24 June 2015 17:21:43(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
ExDeeps

Others have already mentioned it. Jag XF, makes me smile every time I start it and the air vents rotate round to blow cool air at me.
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