Seems2me I recall, many moons ago, I bought an old fashioned original
Passport radar detector (around 1980, was $300+ back then, but after I got
nailed 3x in 1 week rushing to the hospital during my fellowship while on
call, I bit the bullet...bought one offa ebay for the wife 2 yrs ago for $10
shipped) and around that time they published a set of data they had
commissioned by some independent organization showing drivers having radar
detectors in use were more cautious and safer than the rest...I think we
need a little data here, eh?

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Thursday, August 06, 2009 5:52 PM
Subject: Re: Computer gadgets in cars

On Thu, Aug 6, 2009 at 5:01 PM, Robert Carroll<[email protected]>
wrote:

> This is another black or white debate -- meaning that either all
electronic
> devices such as GPS units or cell phones should be banned, or there should
> be no laws regarding their use in cars.

  The thread was not initially whether or not to allow the use of GPS
or other devices in cars.  It was whether or not to allow a digital
device, or devices, to be affixed to windshields, particularly when
done so in a manner that is illegal, such as right at eye level and
interfering with the field of view of the operator.


> Since the GPS device is a useful tool, some safe way must be found for it
to
> be accommodated in a car.  I would prefer that it be mounted on the
> dashboard either underneath the rear-view mirror or on the left side of
the
> steering wheel.  But most GPS units, including mine, are intended to be
> mounted on the windshield and can't be mounted on the dashboard because of
> its texture.

  The fact that mounting such devices on the windshield is pretty much
illegal everywhere brings into question why makers of such devices
seem to be fixated on convincing buyers that's where they should mount
them.


> In my opinion, these units are here to stay so claiming that they are
> illegal and therefore must be banned is narrow-minded.  Let us engineer
> better solutions, not ban all improvements.

  Again, no one is suggesting that GPS units be banned.  Just don't
put them on the windshield if it is illegal to do so.


> If drivers who mount GPS units on their windshields are ticketed as Ms.
> Warner recommends, very soon there will be a change in the law which
permits
> windshield mounting.

  This has already happened in California, but with restrictions as to
where on the windshield only one device may be legally mounted, how
big they can be, and how much they can intrude into the windshield
area.  Still, there were cries of "foul" from manufacturer lobbyists
and car owner organizations with vows to fight back.

  Steve


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