| Track Talk A place to talk about Track and DE Events, share driving tips and other Track related items. |
![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
|
I was just chatting with my dad about these DEs I've been doing, and he expressed the usual parental concern about safety. I share his concern about safety (I hope we all do!), but I assured him that it's safer than it looks, with the risk of car damage being far higher than the risk to the driver.
That assurance is based on what I've seen and heard anecdotally, but does anyone have any actual data on accident, injury, and fatality rates, ideally broken down based on specific tracks, run groups, organizations, etc.? It would also be useful to know how DE risks compare with risks of driving on the road. Part of my job involves road design, with safety of course being a key design consideration, so the topic of DE safety is of professional interest for me also. |
|
#2
|
||||
|
||||
|
Most of our DE "lessons" have been in the $2.5 - $5K range
Know an instructor that broke his arm (in a couple of places) when his stu rolled her 996 Have a friend that rolled his car bad enough that every panel on the car (including roof) were bent Another that had his car T-boned by an other in T-2 Seen plenty with backend damage... penty with front end damage... some with both A couple of fires, some blown engines, bent wheels and brocken windshields But all drovers and pasengers were resonably "safe"
__________________
David I hope to arrive to my death, late, in love, and a little drunk! Just because I don't care doesn't mean I don't understand... Homer Simpson "That's what's keeping me out of F1.... Too much mental maturity...." N0tt0n Some cause happiness wherever they go; others whenever they go. CHAOS, PANIC, AND DISORDER my work here is done... Live without pretending, Love without depending, Listen without defending, Speak without offending Last edited by Trak Ratt; 07-10-2012 at 10:09 PM. |
|
#3
|
||||
|
||||
|
You might want to search for actual studies. I assume big groups like SCCA or NASA have studied incident rates. Anecdotally, I'd say less than 1% of cars have any contact incidents (tire wall, etc.) and based purely on internet babble, it seems that there's usually a fatality every year or two nationwide. And the fatalities generally involve very high performance street cars. You have the ability to govern your own safety based on car and equipment selection. And of course there is no way to measure how many accidents are avoided by the positive influence of HPDEs.
__________________
Greg Rockville MD |
|
#4
|
||||
|
||||
|
Quote:
Seriously, if you knew that the Blue Group in PCA Potomac had a higher risk then the Green Group, would you plead to not get promoted out of Green? Or would you avoid SP Main if you knew it had more accidents then VIR, WG and MO?
__________________
David D. '87 Targa - 2024 was the year, beeches... |
|
#5
|
|||
|
|||
|
I made the same argument to my dad as well. While DEs certainly entail more risk than say tennis, the resulting improved driving ability improves safety on the road. In fact, I now drive considerably more cautiously and defensively on the road because I feel like I'm surrounded by drivers who have very little driving ability, and worse, they don't realize it.
|
|
#6
|
|||
|
|||
|
Quote:
PCAP clearly has more stringent safety standards than TD. And I heard someone at a TD event claim that TD is just as safe as PCAP without being as anal. Is that true? Do PCAP's higher standards instead actually improve safety? Who can say without data? And yes, I do manage my track safety based on perception of risk. For example, if I hear that people tend to crash more often at T9 of WG, I'll slow down there and apex later. And if I hear that a particular track has a higher accident rate, I might still go there, but will dial it back to be safer. BTW, in addition to road design, a couple of my other areas of specialization are risk analysis and forensic investigation ... |
|
#7
|
||||
|
||||
|
where's the guy eating popcorn emoticon when you need it ???
__________________
Lane '93 RS America | |
|
#8
|
||||
|
||||
|
TD, is that you?
__________________
78 SC, the 'Red Car' |
|
#9
|
|||
|
|||
|
|
|
#10
|
||||
|
||||
|
Quote:
PCAP has their data, and the Safety Officer usually presents it once or twice a year to the particpants at DEs. It's broken down by tracks, run groups and turns. But there are more influencing variables there that become apparant once a dialog starts. If you send a nice email to the current Safety Officer (Dan Dazzo), I'll bet he would be willing to share the last round of data analysis with you. Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Look, you are still new enough at this that you have a ton of questions and are still trying to figure out a lot of things. It's natural, but kinda easy to get too extreme with it. Not many who attack it at the level you are attempting actually stick with it for more then a couple seasons. There is a danger in over-thinking things. Honestly, these DE programs have been around for many years, and continue to improve year by year. Focus on learning to read/ feel the car and learning how to stay ahead of it, and how to react to emergencies. That is what will make you a good driver and enable you to minimize risk. And if you are adverse to risk, you really should think twice about sticking with this hobby, as no matter how careful you are, you will at some point find yourself in an emergency situation due to a mechanical failure or due to someone else's actions. And all the track analysis in the world will not be able to help you -- you will need to rely on a different skill set.
__________________
David D. '87 Targa - 2024 was the year, beeches... |
![]() |
|
|