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EVERYBODY NEEDS TO KNOW!!!

A 36 year old female had an accident several weeks ago and totaled her car.

A resident of Kilgore, Texas, she was traveling between Gladewater & Kilgore. It was raining, though not excessive, when her car suddenly began to hydroplane and literally flew through the air.

She was not seriously injured but very stunned at the sudden occurrence!

When she explained to the highway patrolman what had happened he told her something that every driver should know
-NEVER DRIVE IN THE RAIN WITH YOUR CRUISE CONTROL ON.

She had thought she was being cautious by setting the cruise control and maintaining a safe consistent speed in the rain. But the highway patrolman told her that if the cruise control is on and your car begins to hydroplaned - when your tires lose contact with the pavement - your car will accelerate to a higher rate of speed and you take off like an airplane...
She told the patrolman that was exactly what had occurred.

We all know you have little or no control over a car when it begins to hydroplane. You are at the mercy of the Good
Lord. The highway patrol estimated her car was actually traveling through the air at 10 to 15 miles per hour faster than the speed set on the cruise control.

The patrolman said this warning should be listed, on the drivers seat sun-visor - NEVER USE THE CRUISE CONTROL
WHEN THE PAVEMENT IS WET OR ICY - along with the airbag warning.

We tell our teenagers to set the cruise control and drive a safe speed - but we don't tell them to use the cruise control
only when the pavement is dry.

The only person the accident victim found, who knew this (besides the patrolman), was a man who had had a similar
accident, totaled his car and sustained severe injuries.

 
I thought it was going to be funny, but I guess not. I kept waiting for the punch, but it never came 🙁
 
Thats great information. I usually turn off my cruise control anyway when it rains.

As for geckojohn, get a life.
 
doesn't it just monitor the output shaft's rpm? why would it go faster? (not saying this isn't true, a friend of mine left cruise on... in a 600 horsepower firebird)
 
Some people use cruise control in every aspect of their lives.

I actually really never thought of that. I'll know better next time.
 
pussycat13,

I do have a life, that's why i don't have time to read it. You just sit at your computer all day and read this = you don't have a life.
 
Originally posted by: geckojohn
pussycat13,

I do have a life, that's why i don't have time to read it. You just sit at your computer all day and read this = you don't have a life.

shhh

you're making an ass of yourself
 
Originally posted by: geckojohn
pussycat13,

I do have a life, that's why i don't have time to read it. You just sit at your computer all day and read this = you don't have a life.

But you have enough time to reply several times?
 
Originally posted by: geckojohn
pussycat13,

I do have a life, that's why i don't have time to read it. You just sit at your computer all day and read this = you don't have a life.
In the time you took to post "cliffs notes please?" you could have easily read the entire post.

 
Thanks for posting..i think it's a really important information we all need to know : 0 )
I have always forwarded this out to all my co-workers and freinds.
coolllll😀
 
That "advice" makes no sense. The point of cruise control is to keep the car going the same speed, what difference does it make if the road is wet? If you start hydroplaning, the car isn't going to accelerate... the cruise control doesn't actually know how fast the car is moving relative to the ground, it just knows how fast the wheels are turning, and it will keep that speed constant. If you lose traction and the wheels keep turning at the same speed, the car will actually slow down.

I can see the wisdom in not turning on the cruise control in unsafe conditions where you may need to react quickly, but the claim that it will cause your car to accelerate makes no sense.
 
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