• Driving in Asia || TNL
    42 replies, posted
Some of these were in Europe.
Why is everyone taking this video as an attack on Asian drivers? You know he did a "Driving in Russia" video too, right?
I've been sandwiched between two buses several times before
This makes me want to play Burnout Revenge
Highways in Asia must have some sort of super magnets on them. One second they're driving in a straight line, and then all of a sudden, crash. [editline]6th August 2011[/editline] Also, what's that *beep* *beep* sound some cars make in the video?
[QUOTE=booster;31566321]Highways in Asia must have some sort of super magnets on them. One second they're driving in a straight line, and then all of a sudden, crash. [editline]6th August 2011[/editline] Also, what's that *beep* *beep* sound some cars make in the video?[/QUOTE] Proximity brakes? Some cars now have them, if another car stops suddenly or you're going at high speed into say a wall or something, a sensor will detect it and apply brakes.
Chinese and Korean drivers suck
what the.?
[QUOTE=Binladen34;31556453]Do they even have traffic and driving schools in those countries? Or can you just sign up for a license? God damn, and I thought New York was bad.[/QUOTE] These clips are almost exclusively from South Korea. Dozen from China. One or two from Japan.
And I thought the drivers in my state were bad
[QUOTE=LuckyLuke;31568331]Proximity brakes? Some cars now have them, if another car stops suddenly or you're going at high speed into say a wall or something, a sensor will detect it and apply brakes.[/QUOTE] I dont think brakes are going to save you if your going at highspeed into a wall
Braking power can, in theory, be applied asymmetrically to steer a vehicle [away from a wall being approached at a small angle] automatically without necessitating the rotation of the steering column. :eng101: ...but, yes, that was probably just a bad example.
Sorry, you need to Log In to post a reply to this thread.