If there is absolutely no other traffic on the route taken, the driving conditions are excellent, your car is well maintained, and you're well rested and alert, then probably no harm will come to you. However, in a typical real world situation, there will be traffic on the roads as well as pedestrians and possibly children complicating …show more content…
It depends on the accident and the inflicted injury. A broken neck or a serious brain injury can happen to an unbelted person traveling at 25 mph. Picture slamming into a solid wall while racing your bicycle at 25 mph. You will hit your windshield or other object in your car in a crash at a similar speed. If the accident forces you off the road and down an embankment, the car could start rolling. This means tumbling unrestrained within the vehicle.
Driving less than 30 mph doesn't guaranty that another car moving at 50 mph won't crash into you. If it's a head-on collision, then the speeds add together. If the collision is with another slow-moving vehicle such as a semi-truck, then its superior mass rather than its speed will inflict substantial damage to your car.
Even though you're alert, that doesn't guaranty the alertness of others on the road. The presence of pedestrians and children in the neighborhood may cause a less than alert driver to make a last second evasive maneuver into your car in order to avoid hitting a pedestrian. In short, driving is dangerous regardless of where you do it or how fast you do it. Always wear your