hi lutz. it is interesting though, how we can all find stuff from so called "experts" to back our own opinion. does that not actually tell you something concerning who is right and who is wrong? No it shouldnt really as each view piont has its merits and demerits..although i would be interested in your viewpiont as to what else could have been the reason why fatalities went up on the introduction of daylight hours driving lights?And indeed its true austria didnt ban there use, but they did drop the requirement forcing you to use them,Wondering how that statement would work in your viewpionts favour? you know this is the new law, but hey we are not forcing it on you as we arent sure its a good thing!.Lutz said:There are a lot more research papers that conclude that daytime running lights contribute towards a reduction of accidents than those that claim the opposite. I doubt whether many of those that oppose daytime running lights have actually read and analysed the Dutch research paper referred to in the DaDRLwebsite. (http://www.swov.nl/rapport/Factsheets/UK/FS_DRL.pdf). At least one other cited report concludes that at least as many accidents are caused by inadequate lighting as by dazzle, but this fact is completely ignored by DaDRL. How certain can one be that any increase in road fatalities is directly attributable to the introduction of daytime running lights or headlights, or could not something else have happened at the same time with that being the actual cause? Anyway, even in Austria where they dropped the requirement for daytime headlights did not go so far as to ban them.
Furthermore, Regulation ECE87 covering the requirements for daytime running lights was issued by the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe and this organisation has nothing to do with the EU.
Certainly, the position taken by DaDRL is so biased and a lot of their 'findings' from other sources taken completely out of context, that it is difficult to take their arguments seriously. They also make no attempt to differentiate between daytime running lights and the use of headlights during the day.
One would have to look straight into a high intensity daytime running light at close range in order to suffer from split-second blindness.
strange didnt know that Austria was now classified as eastern europe and the USA certainly is not as their 2008 research found daylight running lights to offer no advantage what so ever over none daylight lights, unless you were in a van! dont you just like statistics. at the moment some prof has made noises towards the UK s government with concerns of daylight lights, but again he must have gotten his data all wrong too!Lutz said:The DaDRL website makes absolutely no attempt at serious discussion. It is no more than a list of criticisms of daytime running lights. To suggest that daytime running lights are a violation of human rights
shows to what degree of absurdity they are prepared to go to force their
issue through.
They seem to ignore that the prime cause of dazzle is improper adjustment and dirty lenses, not the intensity of the light. I am not 100% sure, but I believe that there is a requirement to fit xenon headlamps only in conjunction with automatic beam height adjustment and headlamp washers.
It is significant that statistics that apparently show an increase in road fatalities since introduction of daytime running lights originate primarily from eastern European countries. There is no information on how the data was collected so we have no means of assessing their validity. It is perfectly possible, for example, that the data before and after was collected at different times of the year, resulting in summer figures being compared with winter ones. Any increase in road fatalities linked solely to the introduction of daytime running lighhts is therefore pure conjecture. The DaDRL claims are meaningless because there is no way of verifying the data. They quote no sources or details of prevailing conditions to enable this to be done. There may also be other factors that could have affected the outcome, such as a general increase in traffic density during the study period (which is quite likely in countries like Poland and Bulgaria), changes in the weather, and so on. How do we know, for example, that more road deaths did not occur because there was an unusually cold or wet winter at some time during the study?
hi lutz.Lutz said:Statistics are good and can, in fact, be quite invaluable, so long as they can be verified, which is something those published by DaDRL are not.
I did say that the data mentioned originated primarily, not entirely, from eastern Europe. Before I am prepared to accept that these results are representative, I would like to know what other research sources elsewhere say, and not just Austria and the USA.
RogerL said:Can we focus (pun intended) on two things:-
Additional lighting on vehicles in daylight improves road safety for all road-users - fact, end of discussion.
Some DRLs and HID headlights are excessively bright - the law is based on restricting electrical wattage, 55w/unit, but the use of LED and HID makes it paramount that the law is revised to use Lumens as the measure.
Despite the EU's obsession with standards the revision on vehicle lighting is long overdue.
It's not sufficient to hide behind the caveat of "properly adjusted lights" - all vehicles move up/down according to variations in road surface so it's not uncommon for uncoming drivers to be below the horizontal for a significant part of their approach.
It's noticeable that German brands are worse but I suspect that's due to their take-up of LED/HID lighting being more rapid than other brands.
"Lobby" Well that's a usual kind of high jacking scenario with these kind of issues. Myself and many others in motor cycles groups were quite annoyed by a few people claiming to represent all of us.RogerL said:The motorbike lobby fought long and hard to stop cars having DRLs because they felt they should have a monopoly on their own visibility by being the only ones to use DRLs - or more usually a single lamp on mainbeam dazzling oncoming traffic.