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"SOUND THE HORN, DRIVER"

There is one result of the enormous increase, in the number of cars on the road to-day to which very little attention has been paid, at least publicly. I mean the use and misuse of any kind of motor horn, electrical, mechanical, or pneumatic a very old and somewhat frayed subject. There is every kind of contrivance on the market for making every kind of noise to attract the attention of other people on the road, and it might safely be said of all of them that they achieve the hoped-for results. You can make .the most shattering din with an electrical signal worked off a 12-volt battery, and you can produce the most astounding bass notes on a six-guinea bulb horn and about six feet or more of brass tubing. It would seem, therefore,, that the problem of making your approach known to everybody concerned on the highway would be definitely solved. As a matter of fact X really believe that these new motor signals have less attention paid to them than since the day when motors first came on the world. We aro so accustomed to the various kinds of noises which are made, and when I say wo I mean not only the people who drive or who are driven in their cars or bicycles, but also pedestrians, 1

The correct sounding of your horn is an art which should he acquired as soon, as possible by everyone who is new to the open road, and there are one or two rules which may help you to make your existence impress itself on the consciousness of the people whoso lives you wish to save. The first of these'is this: If you want to overtake any' kind of vehicle do not sound your horn until you are so close that there can be no mistake about the' occupants of the vehicle really hearing it and not taking it for a vague and distant signal. You, yourself, must often, on hearing a repeated and unnecessary noise behind you, have unconsciously adopted the attitude which can be summed up like this: “I heard you hours ago: lam sick of you. If you want to p as a-—pass; if you dont, shut up.” This is an expression of natural feeling, but it tends to ' put everybody concerned off their guard, because he quite unconsciously gets the dangerous conviction that, having made a noise of warning, the other fellow must know that he is coming, and when. Sound your horn us little as possible Sound it as near as possible to the car whose attention you wish to attract; only sound it at its loudest when you are convinced' that a quieter note will not do. Finally, remember that use of a motor signal of any kind is as a polite warning, and not an ultimatum. There are far too many people to-day who think that simply because they have committed a dastardly uproar, whether close to their victims, or not, they are absolved from any consequences of. any subsequent accident.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MT19280224.2.60.1

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Manawatu Times, Volume LIII, Issue 6541, 24 February 1928, Page 10

Word count
Tapeke kupu
513

"SOUND THE HORN, DRIVER" Manawatu Times, Volume LIII, Issue 6541, 24 February 1928, Page 10

"SOUND THE HORN, DRIVER" Manawatu Times, Volume LIII, Issue 6541, 24 February 1928, Page 10

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