Go Back   986 Forum - The Community for Porsche Boxster & Cayman Owners > Porsche Boxster & Cayman Forums > Boxster General Discussions

Post Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 12-12-2013, 02:57 PM   #1
Registered User
 
AKnowles's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2012
Location: Southern, CA
Posts: 460
Quote:
Originally Posted by stephen wilson View Post
I'm a believer in personal accountability. If you choose to buy a "dangerous" car, without stability controls, that's on you, not the manufacturer.

I don't undeerstand how people get large payouts for on-track accidents of any sort. When you enter any such event, you assume responsibility, even for other driver's boneheaded moves.
+ 1

As tragic as it is, same goes for personal accountability for getting in any car as a passenger. trust is great, but doesn't absolve you of the responsibility for your own actions. Meaning, Paul Walker would be alive today if he just said "No thanks".

I remember the controversy and limits when motorcycles were required to not exceed a specific horsepower per CC. Or even the requirement to were a helmet if you ride a motorcycle (I always did and felt anyone that didn't wear a helmet had no right to complain about the injury they received when their head hit the pavement). I don't see ANY difference in this than a high performance car without traction control.

Legislation and limits are not the answer. Personal responsibility is. Most people will not assume responsibility for their own actions. It's somethings else that is the cause, someone else is he cause, etc. For my view, it's simple, from the day you are born it's about choice. You make your choices and accept the responsibility for them.

It is not the manufacture's responsibility as they did not force you to buy it. You made a choice to buy it (whatever it is) and use it. Similar to the the old adage ... "It's not guns that kill people. It's people that kill people."
__________________
1999 Boxster Zenith Blue Metallic/Savanna Beige
AKnowles is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-12-2013, 04:09 PM   #2
Registered User
 
Nine8Six's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2013
Location: Montreal, QC. (currently expat to Shanghai)
Posts: 3,249
Quote:
Originally Posted by AKnowles View Post
"It's not guns that kill people. It's people that kill people."
People don't kill people, do they?! Doesn't sound natural with our instinct anyway.....

I live in a country where any sort of weapon is highly prohibited and nobody dies mate. 1.4billion and growing healthy
__________________
______________________________
'97 Boxster base model 2.5L, Guards Red/Tan leather, with a new but old Alpine am/fm radio.
Nine8Six is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-12-2013, 04:37 PM   #3
Registered User
 
woodsman's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2013
Location: Land of naught
Posts: 1,302
Taking responsibility means 'suffering' is involved and north americans are taught that 'there are ways around that'- like drugs, for example. Maturity has never been so scarce.
__________________
Death is certain, life is not.
woodsman is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-12-2013, 04:51 PM   #4
Registered User
 
Nine8Six's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2013
Location: Montreal, QC. (currently expat to Shanghai)
Posts: 3,249
Maturity = no thanks
Common Sense = yes
Experience = yes
Sport cars = Yes!
Race bikes = Yes!
Drugs = old school

Back on topic, I'd be interested to know what's written in little characters on that Dealer's release contract when you sign-off a purchase on a 'performance' street-legal vehicle - such as a CGT. Anybody knows?
__________________
______________________________
'97 Boxster base model 2.5L, Guards Red/Tan leather, with a new but old Alpine am/fm radio.
Nine8Six is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-12-2013, 05:18 PM   #5
Registered User
 
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Pittsburgh
Posts: 143
Quote:
Originally Posted by AKnowles View Post
+ 1

As tragic as it is, same goes for personal accountability for getting in any car as a passenger. trust is great, but doesn't absolve you of the responsibility for your own actions. Meaning, Paul Walker would be alive today if he just said "No thanks".

I remember the controversy and limits when motorcycles were required to not exceed a specific horsepower per CC. Or even the requirement to were a helmet if you ride a motorcycle (I always did and felt anyone that didn't wear a helmet had no right to complain about the injury they received when their head hit the pavement). I don't see ANY difference in this than a high performance car without traction control.

Legislation and limits are not the answer. Personal responsibility is. Most people will not assume responsibility for their own actions. It's somethings else that is the cause, someone else is he cause, etc. For my view, it's simple, from the day you are born it's about choice. You make your choices and accept the responsibility for them.

It is not the manufacture's responsibility as they did not force you to buy it. You made a choice to buy it (whatever it is) and use it. Similar to the the old adage ... "It's not guns that kill people. It's people that kill people."
Yeah, you're probably right. When you get paralyzed in an accident caused by a drunk driver, you should accept personal responsibility and realize that you chose to drive on that street at that time and if you would have taken a different route you would not have been injured. Too bad for you. Or when you are electrocuted by a defective toaster you should accept the responsibility that it was your decision to have toast with your eggs and just live with the consequences. Or when you are poisoned by tainted chicken, just accept the responsibility and realize you should have eaten beef. I guess in your perfect world it would always be the fault of the person who is injured or killed. After all, they could have made a different decision. I'm just glad I don't live in your world.
linklaw is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-12-2013, 05:56 PM   #6
Registered User
 
woodsman's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2013
Location: Land of naught
Posts: 1,302
Ethics, chance and the law- hmmn. We're gett'in down to it now.
__________________
Death is certain, life is not.
woodsman is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-12-2013, 06:25 PM   #7
Track rat
 
Topless's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Southern ID
Posts: 3,701
Garage
Quote:
Originally Posted by linklaw View Post
Yeah, you're probably right. When you get paralyzed in an accident caused by a drunk driver, you should accept personal responsibility and realize that you chose to drive on that street at that time and if you would have taken a different route you would not have been injured. Too bad for you. Or when you are electrocuted by a defective toaster you should accept the responsibility that it was your decision to have toast with your eggs and just live with the consequences. Or when you are poisoned by tainted chicken, just accept the responsibility and realize you should have eaten beef. I guess in your perfect world it would always be the fault of the person who is injured or killed. After all, they could have made a different decision. I'm just glad I don't live in your world.
I realize that this stuff hits pretty close to home for you Link and I am certain that Walker's attorneys will win a significant settlement from both Rodas estate and Porsche. From all the preliminary evidence it looks like they were going roughly 100 mph over the speed limit on that street. Any time you are 100 over and you hit a fixed object, bad things happen. I suspect that this car did not get there by itself and it could have easily been any high performance sports car. Someone had to pull the trigger and at this point it looks like Rodas.
__________________
2009 Cayman 2.9L PDK (with a few tweaks)
PCA-GPX Chief Driving Instructor-Ret.
Topless is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-12-2013, 06:57 PM   #8
Beginner
 
Jamesp's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2013
Location: Houston
Posts: 1,659
Garage
You right wing nutcase lunatics drive me crazy!!! Personal responsibility, Bah! Dont you get it? So exactly who put a parking lot NEAR A TREE!!!! Who sold concrete to make a surface that was easy to go fast on IN A PARKING LOT!!! Who made the gasoline with the energy in it to propel the car, with NO regard how it might be used?!?!?!?!? MY GOD! THINK OF THE BABY HARP SEALS!!! Who planted the tree? Did they have money? Don't even get me started on the car company, I KNOW they have money. Somebody has to pay , and pay big, right? That's justice, and there isn't any justice until a lawyer gets paid. Oh yeah, and as an aside, Paul Walker is still dead, so is Nelson Mandela, so lets all just move along, nothing to see here...
Jamesp is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-12-2013, 08:23 PM   #9
I am my own mechanic....
 
Timco's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2013
Location: Salt Lake City, UT
Posts: 3,432
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jamesp View Post
You right wing nutcase lunatics drive me crazy!!! Personal responsibility, Bah! Dont you get it? So exactly who put a parking lot NEAR A TREE!!!! Who sold concrete to make a surface that was easy to go fast on IN A PARKING LOT!!! Who made the gasoline with the energy in it to propel the car, with NO regard how it might be used?!?!?!?!? MY GOD! THINK OF THE BABY HARP SEALS!!! Who planted the tree? Did they have money? Don't even get me started on the car company, I KNOW they have money. Somebody has to pay , and pay big, right? That's justice, and there isn't any justice until a lawyer gets paid. Oh yeah, and as an aside, Paul Walker is still dead, so is Nelson Mandela, so lets all just move along, nothing to see here...
Hmmmm, sounds more like left-wing, nut case, lunatic, guns kill everyone by themselves magically, let's protect everyone from everything with MORE LAWS, big settlements send messages, thinking.....

Maybe leave politics out of this? Is this Obama's fault or the fault of the person driving wreckless?
__________________
'04 Boxster S 50 Jahre 550 Spyder Anniversary Special Edition, 851 of 1953, 6-sp, IMS/RMS, GT Metallic silver, cocoa brown leather SOLD to member Broken Linkage.
'08 VW Touareg T-3 wife's car
'13 F150 Super Crew long bed 4x4 w/ Ego Boost
Timco is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-12-2013, 08:46 PM   #10
Registered User
 
Perfectlap's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: New Jersey
Posts: 8,709
Quote:
Originally Posted by Topless View Post
I realize that this stuff hits pretty close to home for you Link and I am certain that Walker's attorneys will win a significant settlement from both Rodas estate and Porsche. From all the preliminary evidence it looks like they were going roughly 100 mph over the speed limit on that street. Any time you are 100 over and you hit a fixed object, bad things happen. I suspect that this car did not get there by itself and it could have easily been any high performance sports car. Someone had to pull the trigger and at this point it looks like Rodas.
I really don't believe that car was going 100 mph at the point of impact. This wasn't a normal car, it was an as close to racing car as you may ever see short of something like the P1. Such a car hitting anything at 100 mph would have disintegrated. People forget that most of that damage was done by the fire after the crash. And indeed the fire left it a rubble but the wheels were still attached to that car and the tub looked to be relatively whole, the occupants still strapped in. I said it from the start, the impact did not kill both of those guys, this was a survivable crash for at least one of the guys. The one who didn't take the brunt of the light pole impact the door side.
__________________
GT3 Recaro Seats - Boxster Red
GT3 Aero / Carrera 18" 5 spoke / Potenza RE-11
Fabspeed Headers & Noise Maker
BORN: March 2000 - FINLAND
IMS#1 REPLACED: April 2010 - NEW JERSEY -- LNE DUAL ROW

Last edited by Perfectlap; 12-12-2013 at 08:51 PM.
Perfectlap is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-12-2013, 10:12 PM   #11
I am my own mechanic....
 
Timco's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2013
Location: Salt Lake City, UT
Posts: 3,432
Quote:
Originally Posted by Perfectlap View Post
I really don't believe that car was going 100 mph at the point of impact. This wasn't a normal car, it was an as close to racing car as you may ever see short of something like the P1. Such a car hitting anything at 100 mph would have disintegrated. People forget that most of that damage was done by the fire after the crash. And indeed the fire left it a rubble but the wheels were still attached to that car and the tub looked to be relatively whole, the occupants still strapped in. I said it from the start, the impact did not kill both of those guys, this was a survivable crash for at least one of the guys. The one who didn't take the brunt of the light pole impact the door side.
I don't believe the 100mph thing either. 45 is closer.

At 100+ that car would have continued into those shops!
__________________
'04 Boxster S 50 Jahre 550 Spyder Anniversary Special Edition, 851 of 1953, 6-sp, IMS/RMS, GT Metallic silver, cocoa brown leather SOLD to member Broken Linkage.
'08 VW Touareg T-3 wife's car
'13 F150 Super Crew long bed 4x4 w/ Ego Boost
Timco is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-14-2013, 09:16 AM   #12
Track rat
 
Topless's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Southern ID
Posts: 3,701
Garage
Quote:
Originally Posted by Perfectlap View Post
I really don't believe that car was going 100 mph at the point of impact. This wasn't a normal car, it was an as close to racing car as you may ever see short of something like the P1. Such a car hitting anything at 100 mph would have disintegrated. People forget that most of that damage was done by the fire after the crash. And indeed the fire left it a rubble but the wheels were still attached to that car and the tub looked to be relatively whole, the occupants still strapped in. I said it from the start, the impact did not kill both of those guys, this was a survivable crash for at least one of the guys. The one who didn't take the brunt of the light pole impact the door side.
I'm sure we will find out soon enough. A back-of-a-napkin calculation of the forces required to break off the starter motor and hurl it 120' into a second story office window suggests 100mph+ to me... but I could be wrong.
__________________
2009 Cayman 2.9L PDK (with a few tweaks)
PCA-GPX Chief Driving Instructor-Ret.
Topless is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-14-2013, 09:59 AM   #13
Registered User
 
tanque55's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2012
Location: mexico
Posts: 173
I certainly don't want anyone telling what I can or can not buy. Porsches fault? Give me a break. You can do as much or more damage with guns, speed boats, wave runners, motorcycles. I'm almost certain that if it was in our price range and available more than half of the guys on this fórum would have the same car in their garage .
tanque55 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-14-2013, 10:36 AM   #14
I am my own mechanic....
 
Timco's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2013
Location: Salt Lake City, UT
Posts: 3,432
Quote:
Originally Posted by tanque55 View Post
I certainly don't want anyone telling what I can or can not buy. Porsches fault? Give me a break. You can do as much or more damage with guns, speed boats, wave runners, motorcycles. I'm almost certain that if it was in our price range and available more than half of the guys on this fórum would have the same car in their garage .
Yes. Yes I would.
__________________
'04 Boxster S 50 Jahre 550 Spyder Anniversary Special Edition, 851 of 1953, 6-sp, IMS/RMS, GT Metallic silver, cocoa brown leather SOLD to member Broken Linkage.
'08 VW Touareg T-3 wife's car
'13 F150 Super Crew long bed 4x4 w/ Ego Boost
Timco is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-14-2013, 11:43 AM   #15
Registered User
 
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: Waco, Texas
Posts: 409
Amen to that...

I would pay someone to drive it for me I think so I could drive behind it just to hear the exhaust note. (the engine sounds good from the inside too but the exhaust....) Better yet, I might just buy two of them so I could chase the other one and listen to the exhaust note or buy a mountain with a tunnel cut through it.
papasmurf is online now   Reply With Quote
Old 12-14-2013, 11:59 AM   #16
Registered User
 
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Midwest
Posts: 1,746
Quote:
Originally Posted by Topless View Post
I'm sure we will find out soon enough. A back-of-a-napkin calculation of the forces required to break off the starter motor and hurl it 120' into a second story office window suggests 100mph+ to me... but I could be wrong.
I'm in total agreement, 45 mph is completely laughable.

Here's a video of a pair of Carrera GT's screaming around the streets somewhere in Cali, watch how easily they break traction. Imagine how quickly they could bite you in the arse, they would without a doubt be a handful to drive. The sound they put out is indeed intoxicating but watching these two clowns drive them through city traffic like that is pretty poor form.


Last edited by coreseller; 12-14-2013 at 12:02 PM.
coreseller is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-14-2013, 01:07 PM   #17
Registered User
 
Porsche9's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2013
Location: Chandler, AZ
Posts: 1,796
They are sure driving like a bunch of asshats. Easy to see how quick one can lose it in this car. In this video if they had lost control it would be total their responsibility. I could see that being the case in Paul's situation. If your cruising at 45 and hit it for a couple seconds your going to be going pretty fast.

The traffic in this video reminds of why I no longer live in LA. Lasts time I was out there I was driving my E55 and I felt like a gorilla caged up. All the power but no way to use it.

Funny, the exhaust from the CGT made my dogs go ballistic.
__________________
03 Carrera
02 Boxster S Guards Red, black interior with matching hardtop
89 Carrera 4
89 944 S2
78 911SC
Porsche9 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-14-2013, 11:14 PM   #18
Registered User
 
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: Waco, Texas
Posts: 409
It is ironic you referenced that video

as the black CGT was owned by a somewhat notorious fellow (VR Alexander) that frequently drove and filmed his CGT around the LA area. He was killed while driving up pikes peak I believe a few years ago (911 turbo I think). Driving the cars sanely like a normal car especially in traffic and around the city should not present any more issues than any other car. A viper, t-bucket roadster, cobra kit car, etc. can get you in just as much trouble as any CGT when driven irresponsibly. It is as much the mentality of the driver that is at fault in these situations as anything.

On an irrelevant side note...VR Alexanders CGT had straight pipes and/or an aftermarket exhaust and while louder, does not sound nearly as good as the stock exhaust system.
papasmurf is online now   Reply With Quote
Old 12-14-2013, 09:22 PM   #19
Registered User
 
Perfectlap's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: New Jersey
Posts: 8,709
Quote:
Originally Posted by Topless View Post
I'm sure we will find out soon enough. A back-of-a-napkin calculation of the forces required to break off the starter motor and hurl it 120' into a second story office window suggests 100mph+ to me... but I could be wrong.
If we were in fact talking about a standard road car you could say that. When you are talking about a full on carbon fiber racing car, all bets are off. The only thing that is designed not to tear apart and not go flying in pieces into the next county is the tub. In that respect the Porsche engineering paid off -- tub in tact, seats still bolted down. Even the wheels were still attached. look at Allan McNish's Le Mans crash into that one corner, he was doing 100 plus, hit the wall and one of the wheels came down into the crowd mere inches from photogs And fans.
__________________
GT3 Recaro Seats - Boxster Red
GT3 Aero / Carrera 18" 5 spoke / Potenza RE-11
Fabspeed Headers & Noise Maker
BORN: March 2000 - FINLAND
IMS#1 REPLACED: April 2010 - NEW JERSEY -- LNE DUAL ROW
Perfectlap is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-15-2013, 05:02 AM   #20
I am my own mechanic....
 
Timco's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2013
Location: Salt Lake City, UT
Posts: 3,432
Quote:
Originally Posted by tanque55 View Post
I certainly don't want anyone telling what I can or can not buy. Porsches fault? Give me a break. You can do as much or more damage with guns, speed boats, wave runners, motorcycles. I'm almost certain that if it was in our price range and available more than half of the guys on this fórum would have the same car in their garage .
Quote:
Originally Posted by Perfectlap View Post
If we were in fact talking about a standard road car you could say that. When you are talking about a full on carbon fiber racing car, all bets are off. The only thing that is designed not to tear apart and not go flying in pieces into the next county is the tub. In that respect the Porsche engineering paid off -- tub in tact, seats still bolted down. Even the wheels were still attached. look at Allan McNish's Le Mans crash into that one corner, he was doing 100 plus, hit the wall and one of the wheels came down into the crowd mere inches from photogs And fans.
From what I understand, giant explosions from gas tanks have been known to toss very large objects for great distances.
__________________
'04 Boxster S 50 Jahre 550 Spyder Anniversary Special Edition, 851 of 1953, 6-sp, IMS/RMS, GT Metallic silver, cocoa brown leather SOLD to member Broken Linkage.
'08 VW Touareg T-3 wife's car
'13 F150 Super Crew long bed 4x4 w/ Ego Boost
Timco is offline   Reply With Quote
Post Reply


Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is On
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On




All times are GMT -8. The time now is 06:04 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Content Relevant URLs by vBSEO 3.6.0
Copyright 2025 Pelican Parts, LLC - Posts may be archived for display on the Pelican Parts Website -    DMCA Registered Agent Contact Page