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Natural Laws and Driving

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Presentation on theme: "Natural Laws and Driving"— Presentation transcript:

1 Natural Laws and Driving
Chapter 14 Natural Laws and Driving

2 Natural Laws Natural Laws are ALWAYS at work Inertia Friction Momentum
Kinetic energy Gravity

3 Inertia Two properties govern inertia:
- Objects at rest do not move unless some force acts on them. Moving objects continue to move in a straight line unless some force acts on them. 3 parts of the crash- Vehicle, body, internal organs.

4 Friction Friction occurs when two surfaces, such as a tire and the pavement, rub together. We call the friction between a tire and the road traction. The condition of your tires and the road’s surface, as well as curves in the road, can affect traction

5 Friction and Traction Questions
What are three things that can reduce your traction? What three steps can you take to check your traction? Name three factors that can affect your vehicle in a curve?

6 Factors that affect traction
Tire pressure Tire condition Rain Ice and Snow Road Condition

7 Momentum Momentum is the product of weight and speed. All objects in motion have momentum. The greater the momentum of vehicles, the greater the damage in a collision will be. The vehicles momentum depend on its weight and speed. Weight/speed doubles=double momentum

8 Gravity and Kinetic Energy
Gravity is the force that pulls all things to Earth. It affects driving up and down hills as well as taking turns. The vehicle’s energy of motion, Kinetic Energy, increases as the vehicle increases in weight and speed. Kinetic Energy is the energy of motion. Faster a vehicle moves, the more energy of motion it has.

9 Center of Gravity Gravity gives objects their weight. The weight of an object distributed evenly about a point. The lower an object’s center of gravity, the more stable the object How would changes in a vehicles center of gravity affect its stability?

10 Steering and Braking Total stopping distance is comprised of three parts: 1.Perception Distance 2. Reaction Distance 3.Braking Distance The four-second rule will help you estimate stopping distance, but the actual total braking distance will be affected by speed, vehicle condition, road surface, driver ability, antilock brakes, hills, and vehicle load.

11 Natural laws that affect steering
Ability to steer depends on steering mechanism, tires, and suspension. Wheel alignment and road conditions

12 Lesson 3 What does it mean to skid What can make your vehicle skid?
Lose control of the direction of speed of your vehicle’s movement because of reduced traction. What can make your vehicle skid? Reduced Traction- Change in conditions, your tires can lose their grip on the road’s surface=sliding Changing speed to quickly (esp. on a slippery road) Changing direction too quickly- Ex: Large football player trying to make a sharp turn at a full sprint. How fast is too fast? Depends on the road. Chapter 6 pg 104 Advisory speed limits (Roads that are not straight/flat), Fixed Speed limits (Max and Min), day and night speed limits

13 Kinds of Skids Braking- Brakes are applied so hard that one or more wheels lock. Locking of wheels will reduce traction and cause loss of steering control. Power- Gas pedal is pressed suddenly and too hard. Cornering- Tires lose traction in a turn. Lose steering control in a turn, curve or lane change Blowout- Tire suddenly loses air pressure.

14 Risk Managements and Collisions
Braking is a natural reaction to avoid a collision. However, it is not always the correct action. Accelerating- may reduce your risk. Situations- most often occur at intersections or merging in traffic. A vehicle may be coming at you from one side, if you brake you may be in that vehicles path, If the road ahead is clear, a quick burst of speed by accelerating, may take you to safety, or move the crash farther back on the vehicle.


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