Posts in safety
What to do if you get a flat tyre

Prevention

Most flat tyres are preventable. Blowouts are caused by excessive flex in underinflated tyres. They overheat and let go, basically. Solution? Simple – check your tyre pressures every two weeks. The recommended pressure is on the car’s tyre placard, usually located inside one of the front door frames.

Location, Location, Location

Most flat tyres are unscripted – you don’t choose where or when they occur. Andrew Ticker, a technical specialist for Mercedes-Benz and veteran mechanic of 22 years says you should never attempt to change a flat tyre if you’re stopped close to the prevailing traffic flow. “Drive slowly [read: jogging pace] to an area where you can pull safely off to the side,” he advises. “Don’t worry about damaging the tyre – your safety is more important than that.”

Owner’s Manual

No, really. Check it out, if only to identify anything quirky about your car – such as whether your car has a space-saver spare tyre (these thinner spares are increasingly prevalent and often speed-limited to 80km/h.)

Standard Equipment

The standard toolkit usually boils down to a

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safetyJohn CadoganComment
Airbag safety - are you placing yourself at risk?
The major airbag no-nos: driving with your arms diagonally across the steering wheel, and passengers with their feet up on the dash. Clarke: “Being in the wrong position spoils the deployment of the airbag, and it can hurt you – if you’re twisted sideways, the pre-tensioner could break your collarbone. An airbag could break your arm, or your ankles if your feet are up on the dash. Worse, because you’ve spoiled its deployment, then it can’t protect you properly. Seat covers and dash mats that aren’t designed for airbags can ruin the deployment, too.”
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safetyJohn Cadogan Comment
Road rules you need to know
Greg, a police prosecutor in NSW, who declined to be identified, said: “This still catches people out. They think, ‘I’m on private property, the road rules don’t apply’. They’re wrong. Say you’ve had a few drinks at the pub. You think: ‘I’ll get a cab, but first I’ll move my car down the back of the carpark, where it’ll be safer.’ The cops show up; you’re driving in the carpark. They breath-test you; you’re over the limit. You get arrested for drink driving. Legally, it’s a slam-dunk.”
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safetyJohn CadoganComment