I've been hit by a car. The concussion caused personality changes for several months. Don't know if the driver made a habit of driving with care or not, I don't have any recollection of the actual incident.Yeh, have had peeps listen and then x the road, Darwin genes I recon
That's . . . quite disturbing.Parents forgot to teach their children to look both ways before crossing the street.
I love my silent i3s. If mine made noise I would have to remove it. If people literally walk out in front of a vehicle without looking it's entirely their fault.
It's not like vehicles are just sneaking around and not on obviously paved roads. I mean, what are they... squirrels?
That's not fair to squirrels. They're low to the ground, and can see around the tires of 5-foot tall parked vehicles. They're impossibly quick with a honed prey instinct. Their field of vision is over 300° and sharp. Their hearing is thought to be better than 2x that of humans. And if one makes a bad call and ends up in front of your moving vehicle, there's an 80% chance the vehicle will pass right over it and it'll live to bury another acorn.I mean, what are they... squirrels?
The city nerd guy made a youtube video on huge pickup trucks and got a lot of this noise in the comments, but I sure didn't expect that here."and yet given all those advantages over your typical 7 year old or distracted mother"
Don't let small children play in the streets... duh? At that point it doesn't matter if the vehicle is making noise. Small children that are running into streets without looking won't notice the noise anyway.
If they did they wouldn't get hit in the first place. It's an invalid argument.
Your "think of the children" argument is almost always invalid and made in bad faith.
I have provided the method to disable it.As I said in the third post, it depends on where you are and the legal position there. If it's legal to turn it off then (as I understand it) there will be an option in iDrive that allows the driver to turn it off. If it's not legally permissible in your jurisdiction then there will be no such option available, and the only way to disable it would be to physically disconnect it (I would expect you will get a fault warning continually on the dash if so) or to code it out with something like BimmerCode.
I agree, Rob. It's especially important for those on a bike. I depend a lot on my hearing to sense autos behind me. And I'm not always in a marked bike lane!That's . . . quite disturbing.
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