Blind Spot Warning

Letas

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 25, 2025
Threads
7
Messages
447
Reaction score
460
Location
Reno, USA
Vehicles
Nothing Fun
As an USAF aviator for 20 years, I had to study accident causality, human factors, and human failure modes extensively. And I got to witness my share of accidents and deaths. There was always a chain of events, and there was almost almost a failure of one or more "infallible in their own minds" hunab beings.

Drivers are far worse. Absolutely untrained. Arrogant. Angry. Fatigued. Any safety system that keeps them from killing me or somebody else is a plus.

Of course, the ultimate in safe driving is to take humans out of the loop, and we're slowly but surely doing that.

Every time I'm on an auto forum and some arrogant person declares themself to be a safe driver, I immediately internally label that person as a menace to the driving public. Because arrogance and utter belief in your own perfection is the surest route to an accident.
Illusory superiority… the amount of drivers who I’d truly call ā€œgoodā€ or safe is a small fraction of the people who claim to be good. I’m smart enough to know I’m not the best driver on the road, And have just been lucky to not have been in a major accident up until this point.
 

E90400K

Well-Known Member
First Name
Francis
Joined
Apr 26, 2025
Threads
5
Messages
434
Reaction score
295
Location
Under a Bridge in the Middle of the Mid Atlantic
Vehicles
A Ford truck
Not sure how many people in this thread have actually driven a small 2-door pickup truck with the rear glass just a few inches behind your head, but there really are no blind spots.

With the SUV kit added, it gets a bit more critical to learn how to properly adjust the three rear view mirrors. And more reason electrically adjustable door mirrors should be standard equipment.
 
Last edited:

E90400K

Well-Known Member
First Name
Francis
Joined
Apr 26, 2025
Threads
5
Messages
434
Reaction score
295
Location
Under a Bridge in the Middle of the Mid Atlantic
Vehicles
A Ford truck
Without a doubt riding a motorcycle in traffic will tune up your defensive driving skills in general and improve your use of Road Strategy in particular.

By road strategy I mean doing things like riding / driving in the gaps (away from clusters of vehicles) because when there are no cars near you your ability to avoid a collision improves quite a bit.

There's a lot you can do, including some things you wouldn't think of on your own. This YouTube channel is a good resource:
MCrider - Motorcycle Training
It has been my fundamental belief that drivers education training should include that all students ride as a passenger on a motorcycle with a trained motorcycle instructor to gain an appreciation of the importance to learn and use good driving techniques.
 
Joined
Nov 29, 2025
Threads
0
Messages
9
Reaction score
12
Location
WA
Vehicles
2007 Toyota Corolla
I'm hoping the rear view mirror's shape accepts a Broadway Mirror.

Broadway_Mirror.webp


Is it dorky? Yep.
Does it help? Yes, a lot.

Edit
Of course there's always the four-panel Golf Cart Mirror option, haha. :)
Golf_Cart_Mirror.webp
I'm 100% on board with dorky. That's why I'm looking at a function-over-form Slate.

Not sure how many people in this thread have actually driven a small 2-door pickup truck with the rear glass just a few inches behind your head, but there really are no blind spots.

With the SUV kit added, it gets a bit more critical to learn how to properly adjust the three rear view mirrors. And more reason electrically adjustable door mirrors should be standard equipment.
I got to sit in one when they still allowed it, and the rear column is actually fairly wide. I'm assuming that's where they keep the airbags, but it does also introduce a blind spot to the head turn check. I won't buy the shell kit if it feels blind at all.

I still don't want any driver assist more complicated than traction control or ABS-type systems. If I wanted those features, I'd buy a Tesla or a Subaru.
 

SparkYellow

Well-Known Member
First Name
Sam
Joined
Nov 17, 2025
Threads
3
Messages
52
Reaction score
56
Location
California
Vehicles
R56, CX3, SA, C1500, E150
I am pretty good at dodging. 😁 The only time that I got rear-ended in the last 17 years (460K+ miles across 5 cars) was when my rear hatch was blocked by items in the trunk. Luckily it was an elder lady in a very old camry at low speed. The damage still cost her insurance $9K including a rental for 3 weeks. Anything bigger and faster would have totaled my high-mileage car. A different driver would probably try to argue that it was my fault.

After the car was fixed, I had to carry an empty water barrel in the trunk, again fully blocking the rear view, so I set up a WiFi cam pointing at the hatch glass and kept the live stream on a separate phone all the way.
 

Luxrage

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 28, 2025
Threads
4
Messages
433
Reaction score
599
Location
Sherman, TX
Vehicles
1993 Geo Tracker, 1989 Ford Country Squire, 2007 Honda Element, 2011 Honda Fit
This thread had me curious on the aftermarket blind spot warning setups offered, proper radar based ones,

https://www.crutchfield.com/p_212RD1600/Brandmotion-RDBS-1600.html?tp=78399


It's pricey but seems to work from the research I did.

The power mirror thing goes along with the same argument many have had for the power windows. At this point, with every OEM offering them, surely the tech is cheap enough per unit that it wouldn't even be noticable. Heck, my manual mirrored 87 LTD Fleet had LOCALLY adjustable manual mirrors via a knob and cable:

Left and right manual mirror controls (mine didn't have vent windows so it also works on standard full size windows:
Slate Auto Pickup Truck Blind Spot Warning 1766371664444-lx
 
Joined
Nov 29, 2025
Threads
0
Messages
9
Reaction score
12
Location
WA
Vehicles
2007 Toyota Corolla
This thread had me curious on the aftermarket blind spot warning setups offered, proper radar based ones,



It's pricey but seems to work from the research I did.
Perfect. I'm super happy that aftermarket options exist for people who want those options.
 

zipn

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 30, 2025
Threads
6
Messages
137
Reaction score
219
Location
memphsi, tn
Vehicles
25 ford maverick hybrid awd, 91 mazda miata
FWIW I won't purchase a vehicle without BSM. An incident last night made me think of this thread.

I know how to adjust mirrors. Been driving 50+ years, only accident was a stupid young woman texting and rear-ended me (at 50mph! Didn't even brake!).

Helped my daughters purchase vehicles recently. Wouldn't make the deal without the safety nannies including BSM.

True real world example from last night:

We were driving home in the dark on rural ( and very unlit) interstate through north Mississippi in a 25 Maverick. doing mid 70s, traffic was light with a mix of slow cars, heavy trucks, and speeders. I had moved over in fast lane and just passed a much slower car, then was looking to get back over in the right lane. It was a casual maneuver.

I glance at the mirrors and it all looks clear, I engage my turn signal and as I have always done, also physically turn my head to look though the side and rear window as I am about to move over. At the VERY FIRST glance, it still looks clear. BUT BSM lights up and Beeps causing me to pause my lane change. I see there's actually freaking large Suburban (Black, of course) that came up fast behind me and is at that moment flying past me in the right lane. IT was that very moment when the car was positioned perfectly where the headlights (not the car, just the headlights) were in the little blind spot the mirrors missed. (guess he couldn't wait for me to move back over) I didn't notice the black body against the black background on the first glance.

I aborted my lane change. The BSM worked as it should (and the other driver was a inpatient ass).

Would I have actually turned into the suburban? Probably not, as I did register it a second or so after I turned my head, but the mirrors missed it and the BSW provided that extra WTF alert.

I don't care how good of a driver you are, or how good your mirror technique is. There are idiots out there, and if modern safety tech can keep you from having a very very very bad day, IMHO; I think it's ignorant to not have it.

I'll probably get a refund on my (very early) Slate reservation if I feel that they are skimping on the safety tech, but I'll wait and see if SLATE offers something first.
 
Last edited:

OldGoat

Well-Known Member
First Name
Chuck
Joined
May 23, 2025
Threads
1
Messages
77
Reaction score
102
Location
Michigan
Vehicles
Mustang Mach E, Honda Odyssey
zipn wrote: I see there's actually freaking large Suburban (Black, of course) that came up fast behind me and is at that moment flying past me in the right lane. IT was that very moment when the car was positioned perfectly where the headlights (not the car, just the headlights) were in the little blind spot the mirrors missed. (guess he couldn't wait for me to move back over) I didn't notice the black body against the black background on the first glance.

Yup! The problem with my BSW is that other drivers are going 80-90 MPH and changing lanes so quickly that they are already in a crash zone for me before the BSW registers. My strategy when traffic is heavy and nutty is to stay in my lane even if it means slowing down or perhaps going faster than I would prefer.
Now, I failed to note that Slate might not have any way to adjust the mirrors from the inside. :confused: But very happy others on this post had aftermarket solutions that might save the day for me. Still, just having an interior joy stick adjuster for the side mirrors seems important enough that Slate should include them OEM
[/QUOTE]
 
Last edited:

OldGoat

Well-Known Member
First Name
Chuck
Joined
May 23, 2025
Threads
1
Messages
77
Reaction score
102
Location
Michigan
Vehicles
Mustang Mach E, Honda Odyssey
OK I've calmed down about Slate not having any interior adjustment for side mirrors. Mostly...
But I have no issue with Slate building some aftermarket accessory business for those wanting gizmos and gadgets. I can see where I'd go to one of their chosen installers to have a few things done properly provided the price was fair. The key to getting Slate off the ground is keeping the purchase price as low as possible so yeah....some content will have to be bypassed if they are going to enter the market and stay there.
 
 
Top