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Old 10-06-2008, 10:57 AM
mintman72 mintman72 is offline

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News Ford feature will let parents set limits for teens

Ford feature will let parents set limits for teens

Quote:

By TOM KRISHER, AP Auto Writer 50 minutes ago

DETROIT - So you think junior is a little too lead-footed when he drives the family car? Starting next year, Ford Motor Co. will give you the power to do something about it.

The company will roll out a new feature on many 2010 models that can limit teen drivers to 80 mph, using a computer chip in the key.

Parents also have the option of programming the teen's key to limit the audio system's volume, and to sound continuous alerts if the driver doesn't wear a seat belt.

"Our message to parents is, hey, we are providing you some conditions to give your new drivers that may allow you to feel a little more comfortable in giving them the car more often," said Jim Buczkowski, Ford's director of electronic and electrical systems engineering.

The feature, called "MyKey," will be standard on an unspecified number of Ford models when the 2010 cars and trucks come out late next summer. The feature will spread to the entire Ford, Lincoln and Mercury lineup as models are updated, spokesman Wes Sherwood said.

Ford arrived at the 80 mph limit even though freeway speed limits are lower in most states because it wanted to leave a margin in case an unusual situation arises, Buczkowski said. In some states, freeway speed limits are above 70 mph, Sherwood said.

"Just lopping it off at exactly 70 mph was felt to be too limiting," Buczkowski said.

The company already uses computer chips in its keys to prevent thefts. The car won't start unless it recognizes the chip in the key.

"It's making use of existing technology, and through the magic of software, we're able to build features on top of the features we already have," Buczkowski said.

In addition to speed limits, MyKey also will limit the volume of the audio system, and it will sound a six-second chime every minute if seat belts are not fastened. The chime sounds for adult drivers, too, but ends after five minutes to avoid annoying adults who adamantly don't want to wear seat belts, Buczkowski said.

Parents also have the option of having the car sound a chime if the teen exceeds 45, 55 or 65 mph.

The feature will debut on the 2010 Focus compact car and quickly move to other company models as a standard feature, the company said.

Ford said its market research shows 75 percent of parents like the speed and audio limits, but as you might expect, 67 percent of teens don't like them.

Danisha Williams, a 16-year-old senior at Southfield-Lathrup High School in suburban Detroit, said she's against the idea.

"I wouldn't want my parents to have that much control over how I'm driving," she said. "If your parents are holding your hand, you're never going to learn."

Brittany Hawthorne, 17, another Southfield-Lathrup senior, said there may be emergency situations where she'd have to drive more than 80, possibly to accelerate to avoid a crash.

Ford's research shows that parents would be more likely to let teens use their vehicles with the system, Sherwood said, and if it gets them the car more often, the number of teens objecting drops by nearly half.

A top official from the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, a research group funded by the auto insurance industry that is pushing to raise the minimum driving age to 17 or 18, found the key intriguing and said she was not aware of any other manufacturer offering such a feature. IIHS says car crashes are the leading cause of death among teenagers.

"Research we've done has shown that speeding is a major factor in teen crashes, especially novice teen drivers," said Anne McCartt, the institute's senior vice president for research. "So I think a system that tries to correct the speeding behavior has the potential to improve safety."

More than 5,000 U.S. teens die each year in car crashes. The rate of crashes, fatal and nonfatal, per mile driven for 16-year-old drivers is almost 10 times the rate for drivers ages 30 to 59, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

Several U.S. auto insurers have begun offering in-car cameras or global positioning equipment to help parents monitor their teens' driving behavior, in the hope of reducing the number of crashes.
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Old 10-06-2008, 11:46 AM
KeizerMom KeizerMom is offline

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I'm glad to see the speed limit is 80 mph. 80 mph is FAST, yes, but there are the rare, rare situations when accelerating may be SAFER than slowing down. If your child were unable to escape a dangerous situation by accelerating because of limitations you set on the speed of the car, it'd be very hard to forgive yourself.

I know there are also systems that record how fast the car was driven that you can review, so I'd want that also. They better have one heck of a story to tell to explain why they needed to go 80 mph. Flash flooding, attacking locusts, a tornado, earthquake and erupting volcano ALL AT ONCE.

I have a child who's learning to drive. In less than a year she'll have her provisional license. I like that she can't have peers in the vehicle when she's driving unless there's also adult supervision even after she gets her license. I like that there are curfews, etc.

I was that child, that kid you went to high school with or heard about via the grapevine, who totalled her car on the way to school one morning just three weeks after getting my license. One of my dearest friends was in the passenger seat, and we're lucky we walked away with our lives after I flipped the vehicle, diagonally end-over-end four times. Dumb luck caused the car to hit the curb with enough force that we were thrown through the air OVER the steep embankment to tumble to a stop on the other side in someone's front yard. If we'd gone down that cliff instead of flying over it? I doubt I'd be here today.

All because my parents took me driving all of twice. For about five minutes each. Then they filled out the forms, signed everything and gave me a license and a car. And told me to drive only to and from school. Across mountains, 5 miles of winding roads.

Obviously my parents didn't care enough to have anything like the article describes, but I do, and between such devices and a bit of parental caring, I hope my children never, ever experience that kind of wreck.
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