jimpastorius wrote:
A quick search found this from the California DMV (pretty much sttes what most of already know)
I only see one that could remotely be reduced by AX: Lack of Skill. But even that is questionable. I actually can invision AX contributing to Low Risk Perception and to Risk Taking.
I have to disagree. I wonder if any of you autocrossed as a teenager? My first autocross was when I was 17. I can tell you that it made a big difference. Did it make me drive slower? No. Did it make me drive faster? Definitely not. Did it help to make me the only one of my friends to NOT wreck a car? Yes. As for the statistics you posted, I would say that autocross helps with three of them at least.
#1. Poor hazard detection.
Quote:
The ability to detect hazards in the driving environment depends upon perceptual and information-gathering skills
Think about that statement. What is walking the course for? It helps you to pick out areas and see how things are in advance. Now when you first start autocrossing, walking the course means NOTHING unless someone is there explaining it to you. As you gain experience, you begin to recognize different things and how you would need to react to them. That goes into real life as well. You become more perceptive to what's around. Beyond that, it helps you to learn to look ahead. How many times have you seen someone swerve to avoid an accident and end up slamming into someone else that they didn't know was there? Situational awareness is something that can provide great benefits in daily driving.
#2. Risk taking. ALL teenagers are going to take risks. It's just a part of adolescence. Now you tell me what's better, taking risks when you don't know what a car can & will do or when you've actually pushed that car to its limits in a safe environment? Get the crap scared out of you when you spin on course and that's going to stick with you and keep you a little bit more reigned in. Car starts sliding and you know what to do because you're used to it. So instead of causing a total loss of control and damage, injury, or death, you get a rapid heart beat and maybe have to change your shorts.
#3. Low risk perception. That simply goes with the above two. You know what happens in situations. "If I do A, B will happen". So, instead of taking that curve at 115, they know that the rear end starts coming out around 60 on the sweeper at Laurenburg so there's no way that they can do it now. Risk taking is all about seeing if you can do it. If you already know you can, it's not as fun or rewarding. If you already know you can't, you typically stay away from it.
#4. Lack of skill. This one is obvious. To excel in autocross, you must have driving skill. We all know that the more you do it, the better your skill becomes. Driving is driving. No matter what, there's something that you can take with you in other driving situations.
#5. Not wearing seat belts. The human mind likes habit. You autocross, you are wearing a seatbelt or harness. So, when you are driving aggressively, you're wearing a seatbelt. I've known more than one person who didn't wear their seatbelt until they started autocrossing. They got used to putting it on when they got in the car at an event. Then they buckled it without thinking about it when leaving. Granted, it's not a definite but it still helps to set an example for the mind.
Personally, when I have children, they will be autocrossing when they turn 16. I don't care if its something they want to pursue later down the road or not (although I hope they do). They WILL learn skills there and it is my experience that those skills will help them later on in life when they're behind the wheel.