Control Of A Vehicle - Pontiac 1998 Firebird Owner's Manual

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showers will speed that up. "I'll be careful" isn't the
right answer. What
if
there's an emergency, a need to
take sudden action, as when a child darts into the street?
A person with even a moderate BAC might not be able
to react quickly enough to avoid the collision.
There's something else about drinking and driving that
many people don't know. Medical research shows that
alcohol in a person's system can make crash injuries
worse, especially injuries to the brain, spinal cord or
heart. This means that when anyone who has been
drinking
--
driver or passenger
--
is in a crash, that
person's chance of being killed or permanently disabled
is higher than if the person had not been drinking.
Drinking and then driving is very dangerous. Your
reflexes, perceptions, attentiveness and judgment
can be
affected
by even a small amount of alcohol.
You
can
have a serious
--
or even fatal
--
collision
if you drive after drinking. Please don't
drink and
drive or
ride with
a driver
who
has been drinking.
Ride home in a cab; or if you're with a group,
designate a driver who
will
not
d r i n k .
Control of a Vehicle
You have three systems that make your vehicle
go where
you want it to
go.
They are the brakes, the steering and
the accelerator. All three systems have to do their work
at the places where the tires meet the road.
Sometimes, as when you're driving on snow or ice, it's
easy to ask more of those control systems than the tires
and road can provide. That means you can lose control
of your vehicle.

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