Police drivers - would you

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Discussion

dmsims

Original Poster:

6,513 posts

267 months

Wednesday 21st September 2016
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Tom1312

1,018 posts

146 months

Wednesday 21st September 2016
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Yes?

Posted by their driving school skipper.

Don't forget it's filmed from the passenger seat so the perspective is completely different to the drivers when negotiating the bends.

That was all pretty much text book.

Only thing they missed is a car that blindly pulls out and the idiot that see you and panic stops.

tumble dryer

2,016 posts

127 months

Wednesday 21st September 2016
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dmsims said:
Sorry pal, but that was quality 'making progress' in emergency driving.



The way I could only hope for if it was me at the proverbial doorstep.




ETA. I've just looked at it again; that's exceptionally good driving.
Where are you seeing fault?


Edited by tumble dryer on Wednesday 21st September 23:44

InitialDave

11,882 posts

119 months

Wednesday 21st September 2016
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That seems pretty reasonable driving to me.

blearyeyedboy

6,285 posts

179 months

Wednesday 21st September 2016
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I see nothing wrong with that. Hope they're doing that when I need them.

LaneDiesel

170 posts

94 months

Wednesday 21st September 2016
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A very good and progressive run that was.

Stenasev

80 posts

110 months

Thursday 22nd September 2016
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"South Devon's narrow, winding, busy lanes"

That wasn't what I was expecting when I read the above. That's a motorway compared to most roads in that area!

The driving looked fine to me though.

Durzel

12,258 posts

168 months

Thursday 22nd September 2016
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I was driving behind some old lady who seemed oblivious to the blue lights and siren rapidly coming up behind us, so I flashed my headlights once to prompt her to look in rear view. She then saw the emergency vehicle and came to a dead stop right there and then in the lane, no attempt to pull to the side or anything. How can that possibly help?

It really ought to be taught in the driving test about making your intentions regards accommodating emergency vehicles clear, consistent and helpful - e.g. slowing down, not stopping, unless it's already crawling speed so they don't have to adjust their position or speed unduely.

Riley Blue

20,949 posts

226 months

Thursday 22nd September 2016
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blearyeyedboy said:
I see nothing wrong with that. Hope they're doing that when I need them.
Same here. I can't understand why anyone would question that driving, perhaps the OP could explain?

HantsRat

2,369 posts

108 months

Thursday 22nd September 2016
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Yes nothing wrong with it.

paintman

7,683 posts

190 months

Thursday 22nd September 2016
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Stenasev said:
"South Devon's narrow, winding, busy lanes"

That wasn't what I was expecting when I read the above. That's a motorway compared to most roads in that area!

The driving looked fine to me though.
+1

ashleyman

6,977 posts

99 months

Thursday 22nd September 2016
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Awesome display of skill. Fantastic!!

dmsims

Original Poster:

6,513 posts

267 months

Thursday 22nd September 2016
quotequote all
OK I am a civvy so not really qualified to comment on the driving, I did feel a bit uncomfortable watching it - thinking what if

I just wanted to see what the professionals thought

Thanks for all the responses

Durzel

12,258 posts

168 months

Thursday 22nd September 2016
quotequote all
dmsims said:
OK I am a civvy so not really qualified to comment on the driving, I did feel a bit uncomfortable watching it - thinking what if
I think it's a quality example of making progress without being dangerous. It was smooth both in terms of speed and direction changes. Don't forget they also have the benefit of blue lights and sirens and looked to be making use of the horn too to further advise of their presence.

Obviously you couldn't do this practically as a civvy for a number of reasons, not least of which because people wouldn't give way and wouldn't be anticipating you approaching.

TooLateForAName

4,744 posts

184 months

Thursday 22nd September 2016
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Durzel said:
dmsims said:
OK I am a civvy so not really qualified to comment on the driving, I did feel a bit uncomfortable watching it - thinking what if
I think it's a quality example of making progress without being dangerous. It was smooth both in terms of speed and direction changes. Don't forget they also have the benefit of blue lights and sirens and looked to be making use of the horn too to further advise of their presence.

Obviously you couldn't do this practically as a civvy for a number of reasons, not least of which because people wouldn't give way and wouldn't be anticipating you approaching.
This. They used the horn and varied the siren to help alert people to their actions and I didn't see any dangerous moves. The positioning and speed variation shows that their observation and awareness was good.

Prizam

2,335 posts

141 months

Thursday 22nd September 2016
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Nothing wrong with that, if anything he is being a bit cautious.

jesta1865

3,448 posts

209 months

Thursday 22nd September 2016
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bloody hell, what a nutter, have the police seen this? oh! smile

all joking aside, as a civvy i was totally impressed, they made very rapid progress, good observation (imo) and anticipated the traffic brilliantly.

could they pop up and teach essex police how to look in their mirrors and indicate before trying to change lanes into the side of my big red land rover smile

Pixel Pusher

10,191 posts

159 months

Thursday 22nd September 2016
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I've been fortunate enough to have had a passenger ride with a top police driving instructor in the past.

The level of concentration is unbelievable. Fantastic car control, anticipation, reaction, perception and an almost 6th sense for what other road users are doing.

'My' drive last approximately 20 - 30 minutes and was full commentary for most of it.

Try doing this at normal speed.

hehe

https://youtu.be/MRmiaQqWt7Y

PAULJ5555

3,554 posts

176 months

Thursday 22nd September 2016
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The police are trained professionals and never make mistakes, silly you for not knowing.

Fozziebear

1,840 posts

140 months

Thursday 22nd September 2016
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Looks pretty standard to me, those roads are huge compared to the ones around my dads place near stibs cross!