[OC] Ich habe reale Überlebensraten im Auto in „Zigaretten pro Jahr“ umgerechnet. Das tödlichste Auto ist so, als würde man 259 Zigaretten pro Jahr rauchen. Am sichersten ist 0.
[OC] Ich habe reale Überlebensraten im Auto in „Zigaretten pro Jahr“ umgerechnet. Das tödlichste Auto ist so, als würde man 259 Zigaretten pro Jahr rauchen. Am sichersten ist 0.
Just curious, where does the Dodge Viper fall on this chart?
Top-Bonus-9876 on
Never, ever thought of it this way! Never!! No wonder the whole world loves the first two, up there on your list. Genius 👏👏👏🪙
woodrax on
Take the number of vehicles in the field, (A), and multiply it by the probable rate of failure, (B), then multiply the result by the average out-of- court settlement, (C). A times B times C equals X. If X is less than the cost of a recall, we don’t do one.
igotnocandyforyou on
Is it the vehicle or the buyer profile of the vehicle?
electricity_is_life on
Have you compared these numbers against crash test data to see if they actually correlate with how good the car’s safety system is? Because otherwise I would have to assume a lot of the differences between cars are differences in who tends to buy them, what areas they’re most popular in, and some amount of random noise.
Also the graphic is a bit weird because it seems to imply that 115 cigarettes a year is a standard amount (since it’s shown as approximately the length of a normal cigarette), but actually the average smoker consumes like 10-20 a day so that’s thousands a year, not hundreds.
flyin_hi on
If there is a oposite of r/dataisbeautiful, this should be sticky post there 🤣
srirachaninja on
Those are not a lot of cigarettes. A normal smoker goes through a pack (20) a day, so that’s just 2 weeks of smoking in the worst case.
j01101111sh on
Why would you take a value people have connection to (fatality rates or lives lost or whatever) and insert an unnecessary step to convert to something completely unintuitive? Then you’re encoding colors with no underlying logic? And what’s the base rate, no driving at all? Because pedestrians die too so how could have any good comparison?
FromStars on
My mom is such a hypocrite nagging me for taking up social smoking with the boys on the weekend when she just traded her Outback for a RAV4 like a lunatic with a death with. Couldn’t be me.
cheekujodhpur on
This is also a good representation of how dangerous smoking is
snakesnake9 on
The safest cars here are premium SUVs. Guess if you pay for a big premium car, it should protect you.
Stewman9000 on
Now do motorcycles!
slimj091 on
I always wondered why it smells like cigarette smoke in my garage when I don’t smoke.
Isotheis on
How many cigarettes is it for literally everyone else outside of the car?
Grease_the_Witch on
interestingly, i just quit smoking 67 days ago, and according to my app, that’s 1019 cigarettes that i haven’t smoked, so 259 cigarettes is basically nothing in the context of smoking
Cavalish on
Anything except fucking metric
kurbel_welle on
FYI: there is a unit called Micromort, which measures the probability of dieing doing certain things. you followed the same principle. the conversion is 1 micromort=smoking 1.4 cigarettes. check out the article on wiki for a fun read
cherrystillness on
i dont understand this. if you quit smoking by a certain age its medically like u never smoked. its not as if „10 cigarettes a year“ are dropped into a mortality bucket.
mckapy on
That is like smoking 5 macanudo cigars
FlyingBike on
Tesla Full Self Driving is just „immediate lung cancer“ levels of cigarettes
Kage9866 on
I hate things like this because it doesn’t look at the amount of people that own these vehicles. Rav 4 vs Audi Q7… yeah… a lot more people will be driving the Rav 4
Crio121 on
How about pedestrians and passengers in the other car?
ranisalt on
National to what nation?
Interesting that the Camry Hybrid is half of the non-Hybrid. Almost as if the buyer profile was a big part of it, as others have suggested
EfficientActivity on
So how do you calculate the cigarette per year danger? Is it pressumed to be a linear curve you can extrapolate?
wehuzhi_sushi on
why is the Nissan altima filter red?
Green_L3af on
Why do I want a cig every time I buckle up now?
preedsmith42 on
It doesn’t make any sense if it’s not the same driver.
What are we comparing here exactly?
Since maybe some bad drivers buy the same type of car, or those cars are used in particular traffic environments that make more accidents happen.
Or some cars are rare enough to not have been involved in fatal accidents. Like I doubt those Audis are sold the same than Mitsubishis.
Muff_in_the_Mule on
Does this mean I can smoke an Audi Q7 4WD or Volvo XC90 4WD with none of the risks normally associated with smoking?
DoodleDangWang on
Didn’t know there was a 4wd rav4…
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Just curious, where does the Dodge Viper fall on this chart?
Never, ever thought of it this way! Never!! No wonder the whole world loves the first two, up there on your list. Genius 👏👏👏🪙
Take the number of vehicles in the field, (A), and multiply it by the probable rate of failure, (B), then multiply the result by the average out-of- court settlement, (C). A times B times C equals X. If X is less than the cost of a recall, we don’t do one.
Is it the vehicle or the buyer profile of the vehicle?
Have you compared these numbers against crash test data to see if they actually correlate with how good the car’s safety system is? Because otherwise I would have to assume a lot of the differences between cars are differences in who tends to buy them, what areas they’re most popular in, and some amount of random noise.
Also the graphic is a bit weird because it seems to imply that 115 cigarettes a year is a standard amount (since it’s shown as approximately the length of a normal cigarette), but actually the average smoker consumes like 10-20 a day so that’s thousands a year, not hundreds.
If there is a oposite of r/dataisbeautiful, this should be sticky post there 🤣
Those are not a lot of cigarettes. A normal smoker goes through a pack (20) a day, so that’s just 2 weeks of smoking in the worst case.
Why would you take a value people have connection to (fatality rates or lives lost or whatever) and insert an unnecessary step to convert to something completely unintuitive? Then you’re encoding colors with no underlying logic? And what’s the base rate, no driving at all? Because pedestrians die too so how could have any good comparison?
My mom is such a hypocrite nagging me for taking up social smoking with the boys on the weekend when she just traded her Outback for a RAV4 like a lunatic with a death with. Couldn’t be me.
This is also a good representation of how dangerous smoking is
The safest cars here are premium SUVs. Guess if you pay for a big premium car, it should protect you.
Now do motorcycles!
I always wondered why it smells like cigarette smoke in my garage when I don’t smoke.
How many cigarettes is it for literally everyone else outside of the car?
interestingly, i just quit smoking 67 days ago, and according to my app, that’s 1019 cigarettes that i haven’t smoked, so 259 cigarettes is basically nothing in the context of smoking
Anything except fucking metric
FYI: there is a unit called Micromort, which measures the probability of dieing doing certain things. you followed the same principle. the conversion is 1 micromort=smoking 1.4 cigarettes. check out the article on wiki for a fun read
i dont understand this. if you quit smoking by a certain age its medically like u never smoked. its not as if „10 cigarettes a year“ are dropped into a mortality bucket.
That is like smoking 5 macanudo cigars
Tesla Full Self Driving is just „immediate lung cancer“ levels of cigarettes
I hate things like this because it doesn’t look at the amount of people that own these vehicles. Rav 4 vs Audi Q7… yeah… a lot more people will be driving the Rav 4
How about pedestrians and passengers in the other car?
National to what nation?
Interesting that the Camry Hybrid is half of the non-Hybrid. Almost as if the buyer profile was a big part of it, as others have suggested
So how do you calculate the cigarette per year danger? Is it pressumed to be a linear curve you can extrapolate?
why is the Nissan altima filter red?
Why do I want a cig every time I buckle up now?
It doesn’t make any sense if it’s not the same driver.
What are we comparing here exactly?
Since maybe some bad drivers buy the same type of car, or those cars are used in particular traffic environments that make more accidents happen.
Or some cars are rare enough to not have been involved in fatal accidents. Like I doubt those Audis are sold the same than Mitsubishis.
Does this mean I can smoke an Audi Q7 4WD or Volvo XC90 4WD with none of the risks normally associated with smoking?
Didn’t know there was a 4wd rav4…