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In fatal crashes involving a car and a truck, the car occupants are far more likely to be killed. Driving mistakes around trucks can have tragic consequences. In collisions, the sheer size of some trucks puts car occupants at a disadvantage. Many dri
In fatal crashes involving a car and a truck, the car occupants are far more likely to be killed. Driving mistakes around trucks can have tragic consequences.
In collisions, the sheer size of some trucks puts car occupants at a disadvantage. Many drivers are intimidated when they must share the road with large trucks, and not without reason. A manoeuvre by a car near a large truck may be more dangerous than the same manoeuvre near another car. Similarly, a large truck may perform a manoeuvre that carries low risk of a crash near another truck in the traffic stream, but a higher risk when performed near a smaller vehicle.
These are five driving behaviors that are factors in most of the fatal crashes:
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failing to stay in the lane or running off the road;
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failing to yield the right of way;
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driving too fast for conditions or above the speed limit;
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failing to obey signs and signals;
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driver inattention.
A few basic defensive driving habits could save a lot of lives:
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Don't change lanes abruptly.
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Slow down to let trucks have the right of way.
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Drive at a safe speed.
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Stay alert to traffic signals and road conditions.
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Use turn signals.
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Never cut in front of a truck.
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Avoid driving alongside trucks whenever possible - if you can't see the truck driver's face in the side mirror, he or she can't see you.
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Avoid tailgating.