The anti-car lobby - then and now


Any outfit calling a report The Social and Cognitive Determinants of Aberrant Driving Behaviour clearly took itself seriously. So well it might. It is the Transport and Road Research Laboratory, Old Wokingham Road, Crowthorne, Berks in 1991. Its reports included An Examination of the Relationship Between Vehicle Noise Measures and Perceived Noisiness, and something called The Appraisal of Community Severance.
The Appraisal; not An Appraisal. That would have been too modest by half. The TRRL is not humble meek or unassuming, nor entirely unaware of how important it is to get a story in the papers. It helps sales, funding, budgets and safeguards jobs in the TRRL. Whatever else may have happened to the principle of balanced presentation of carefully researched information, it did not find refuge in Old Wokingham Road.
It may be hard to believe that TRRL reports carry much weight these days, but that is the road of the complacent and the irresolute. Even now they are being dispensed by the in-tray-load to the faceless clones of the apparatchiks turfed out of authority and influence by the robust citizenry of the former Soviet empire.
Dissidents in Britain should be aware of a TRRL document called Company Travel Assistance in the London Area, on the desks of bureaucrats in what we used to call the Home Counties, and in town halls up and down the country ere long. Its reactionary inferences will be eagerly seized by NALGO fellow-travellers and anti-car town planners.
The research itself was carried out in a tradition of eager inquiry and analysis by Paul Kompfner, Dr K Shoarian-Sattari, RHC Hudson, and DM Todd. The official digest was relatively anodyne; telling us pretty much what we might expect, namely that if you have a free parking space at work you are likely to use it. Also that drivers who have company cars are more likely to drive to their work place than those who haven’t.
It also concludes, a little sorrowfully it seemed, that heaping more tax on to the drivers of company cars and workers lucky enough to obtain subsidised train fares would not have much effect on traffic. The main attraction of driving to work, it concluded, is the door to door convenience (97% of respondents), lower cost than public transport (75%), and the need to make further business trips by car (60%). Half those interviewed disliked public transport because of overcrowding and 21% had no suitable bus or train links anyway.
Cogent reasons. No surprises here.
Yet in an effort to lend a little excitement to this Department of Transport-sponsored report, the press notice sent to publicise it was heavy with innuendo.
LONDON DRIVERS GET MORE TRANSPORT 'PERKS' THAN PUBLIC TRANSPORT TRAVELLERS SAYS TRRL.
Note 'perks'. Perquisites can be defined as casual profits in addition to regular revenue, or something subordinates claim for their own. At their utmost they are a tip.
The press notice said, 'People who drive into Central London are more likely to have help with the cost of their journey than those who travel by train, underground, coach, or bus... Researchers found that four out of five car drivers received some sort of financial help, ranging from a company car with all expenses paid, to the payment of a mileage allowance or the provision of a parking space.'
Note 'with all expenses paid'; all the rhetoric of envy is here.
'By comparison, only 39 per cent - less than two in five people - using public transport received any subsidy. Of those who did, three quarters of them had a season ticket loan. Only a few received full or partial refunds.'
Pity the honest toilers disadvantaged by company bosses in cars. Dickens himself could not have wrung more pathos from such iniquity. You can just see Tiny Tim dying in the Underground for want of a full or partial refund.
'Over 12,000 drivers and 12,000 public transport users took part (in the surveys).'
The anxiety of the headline-writer not to let the facts stand in the way of a good story is in the best tradition of the old, now happily almost extinct, left-wing tabloids. It hardly relates to the main thrust of the report and does not reflect facts of the matter at all.
The report's official digest said. 'A sample of 24 businesses were surveyed by personal interview, and nearly 1900 employees were given self-completion questionnaires. Companies believed that the provision of company cars would continue to expand in the future (sic)... Both car and public transport users favoured the improvement of public transport over measures to improve the road system.'
You could be forgiven for thinking that out of 24,000 commuters, 9,600 received largesse to the tune of cars with 'all expenses paid,' and among non-drivers, a miserable few were scraping along on 'full or partial refunds.'
The facts of the matter were quite the reverse. Anybody who took the trouble to read the report, and not simply gulp down the conclusions in the press notice, would discover than only 13 per cent of peak-hour travellers entered London by car. By far the biggest number, 42 per cent went by rail, 36 per cent by Underground, 7 per cent by bus, and the remaining 2 per cent by coach. So far from most 'perks' going to drivers, huge subsidies were going to nearly two in five of the remaining 87 per cent which travelled by other means.
Put another way, out of a million people coming into central London during the morning peak a measly 130,000 were driving cars (carrying 0.3 of a passenger each according to the report). A bare 104,000 got some sort of help towards their cars' upkeep, and six company car commuters out of ten used their cars for further business journeys during the day. But, no matter, a hundred thousand hapless motorists, according to the TRRL, seemed to be accepting tips, perks, and other advantages.
Of the 870,000 on the crowded trains, tubes and buses, some 348,000, it turned out, were also on some sort of travel 'perk', more than three times the number of car drivers. Cynically the press notice attacked only car drivers.
There are meddlers everywhere who would like to ban cars and some, it seems, were at the TRRL in 1991 as now. There is no question that reasonable people would like to see public transport improved. Car drivers and train travellers interviewed agreed on that. Lots of us approved principles for defeating pollution and even road pricing to help limit traffic. We even liked the new approach to railways.
But bureaucrats and politicians who attack cars and drivers going about their lawful occasions do so at their peril. I can only suggest they heed the advice given to Mr Arthur Scargill at a TUC conference in 1991. 'Look east', he was told. So should they all, and see what happened to regimes behind the old Iron Curtain which, for forty years and more, repressed demands for personal mobility.
Remember the 1975 Nottingham 'Zone and Collar' scheme? That was an experiment dreamed up by some bureaucrat aimed at coercing drivers to leave their cars at the ring road and take a bus to the city centre. The traffic lights were programmed with long delays to hold up journeys to work. The theory was that drivers would fret so much they would take the bus.
They fretted all right. They fretted so much they ignored the stupid red lights and the result was mayhem. It was people power at its best. The experiment was declared a failure and the bureaucrats retreated in disarray.
Company cars are still in decline; we all know that and although the TRRL's survey found an increase over an earlier one carried out by the Greater London Council, they amounted to only some 40 per cent of the traffic. And the anti-car lobbying by petty officialdom goes on.
Picture: Classic of 1991, the Rover 800 Coupe with Her Majesty The Queen's P5 at Windsor Castle

Silent Travel


Cars that cancelled out their own noise by playing it back in stereo was not sci-fi fantasy. I heard it working. Yet little has been done with Adaptive Noise Control developed 20 years ago at Lotus. Cars have become so quiet, it seems, there is no need.
Quietude by technical mastery. Crewe. Assembling a 12-cylinder Bentley engine (above).

Lotus's invention consisted of a computer, four loudspeakers some microphones, and sound sensors for tyre and exhaust noise. Development engineers chose a small Citroën AX for experiments because it was lightweight and noisy, and demonstrated it to me on the runways at Hethel.
Unitary small saloons tend to be boisterous inside. Layers of sound-damping materials would only cancel out the advantages of weight-saving for economy. The engineers decided the most annoying noises were low-frequency booming, which reverberated through the body shell from what they described as, “an acoustically complex mix of tyre swish, suspension rumble, engine vibration, and exhaust resonance.”
They had worked with Southampton University's Institute of Sound and Vibration Research since 1986 on a system they claimed was ready for a production car. There were four tiny microphones in the headlining, costing about 35p each, connected to a microprocessor control unit linked into the ignition to sense engine speed.
Detecting sound pressure levels inside the car through the microphones, the control unit matched them with changes in engine speed and played them back through an amplifier with 40 Watts RMS per channel. The effect was astonishing. You could switch the system in and out, making it easy to hear a 20dB reduction in noise in the lower-frequency sounds below about 100HZ.
It didn’t make the car silent. Tackling higher frequencies, the sort of buzz that comes from engine valvegear, or whine from gears, demanded more microphones and loudspeakers, as well as sensors in each seat to localise noise levels to each occupant. It could have been incorporated into a stereo system relatively cheaply for about the cost of the microprocessor Lotus used, under £100 then and probably a lot less now.
Anti-noise would have permitted softer engine mountings which, it was claimed, could make cars almost vibrationless. What high hopes. Adaptive noise control turned out difficult to engineer, much like active suspension Lotus and Volvo tried out in the 1990s. Noisy and heavy, it was overtaken by simpler computer controlled oleo and air springing.

Gaydon, cutaway MGB GT

Silver Arrows land on Goodwood


So, the Second World War is really over. Goodwood welcomes the Mercedes-Benz and Auto Union grand prix cars to the Revival in September. It is really about time. Westhampnett, satellite to Tangmere during the Battle of Britain, will echo to the noise of engines made by its adversaries and 75 years after their first appearance in the UK, it promises to be one of the most spectacular historic vehicle events ever.
(Top, Nick Mason drives the V12 Auto Union, above and below, W 125 Mercedes-Benz of 1937-1938)
It is 75 years since their first time in Britain and 74 since their second. This was 1938 for a Donington Grand Prix arranged on 2 October, but the teams had to pack their cars back into their transporters and retreat to Harwich for a ferry back to Germany as the Munich Crisis deepened. Only after Mr Chamberlain brought back his piece of paper was the race rescheduled for 22 October.

Although effectively British Grands Prix the 1937 and 1938 races were called the Donington Grand Prix. Dear old RAC, member of the Association Internationale des Automobile Clubs Reconnus (AIACR founded 1904), was chary about allowing provincial Donington to use the title. Even though Fred Craner, of the Derby and District Motor Club, and JG Shields, landowner, managed to persuade Mercedes-Benz and Auto Union to race against what were essentially local amateurs, the RAC couldn’t quite persuade itself that it should be a British Grand Prix.

Auto Union won both races, Bernd Rosemeyer in 1937, Tazio Nuvolari in 1938 after some disarray in the Mercedes camp.

D-type Auto Union, reconstruction of Nuvolari's winner.
There could be ten Silver Arrows at Goodwood. There were only six at Donington in 1937, eight in 1938 and they will compete with some of the also-rans, ERAs, Maseratis, Rileys, Bugattis and MGs. They will overwhelm them just as they did three quarters of a century ago. The German cars have appeared occasionally in Britain since then, John Surtees drove an Auto Union at Silverstone in 1990, along with Neil Corner in a Mercedes-Benz, but the prospect of seeing - and hearing – them all together is a heady one. Mercedes-Benz W25, W125, W154 and W165, plus the extravagantly rebuilt Auto Union Types C and D will take part

Perhaps it will make the Revival a touch less jingoistic. Motor racing at Goodwood was, essentially, a creation of the 1950s; it was only happenstance that it took place on a wartime airfield. Douglas Bader (below) and his brave contemporaries would be agreeably entertained by the most spectacular grand prix cars of all time on their old “perry track”.

Speed limit research


Speed limits should be related to the design speed of a road. Low limits on roads built for high speeds are likely to be disregarded, resulting in higher speeds than if a realistic limit is imposed. The Transport Research Laboratory TRL concluded in 1994 that changing the speed limit on motorways to 80mph might not alter traffic speeds by much. It might rise by about 3-4mph provided drivers feel the limit is reasonable. “Although there is no experimental evidence that raised speed limits result in lower speeds ... such effects are said to occur. The explanation ... has to do with the driving public's response to the reasonableness or unreasonableness of the limit. If the limit is raised to something more appropriate to the design speed of the road, then ... some drivers will respond by observing it and speeds fall.”

The TRL found evidence that “drivers driving much faster or much slower than the general traffic stream are more likely to be involved in accidents.” The speed traffic is actually doing is less important than making sure all the vehicles are going about the same speed in relation to one another.

Analysis of the effect of speed on accidents has always been problematical and the TRL’s findings endorses the view that blanket limits can sometimes be unproductive. Limits should reflect the dangers of individual stretches of road and there would be more benefit from reducing the speed of the fastest drivers than reducing speeds for all drivers. This is especially true for urban roads where engineering and enforcement targeting the fastest drivers tends to work.

In a report compiled in 2000 the TRL said: “The scope for reducing accidents by means of speed management depends on the operational characteristics of the road. The often-quoted broad result that a ‘5% reduction in accident frequency results per 1mph reduction in average speed’ has been investigated carefully; although it remains a robust general rule, the percentage reduction in accident frequency per 1mph reduction has been shown to vary according to road type and average traffic speed. It is: about 6% for urban roads with low average speeds; about 4% for medium speed urban roads and lower speed rural main roads; about 3% for the higher speed urban roads and rural main roads. In urban areas the potential for accident reduction is greatest on those roads with low average speeds. These are typically busy main roads in towns with high levels of pedestrian activity, wide variation in speeds, and high accident frequencies.”

Juan Manuel Fangio


When Juan Manuel Fangio drove for Ferrari in 1956, he accused it of skulduggery on a grand scale. He claimed he was given a car with no oil in the back axle, so that somebody else would win the Belgian Grand Prix. For the Mille Miglia mechanics cut holes in the bodywork to drench him in rainwater. They arranged a fuel gauge to fracture and spray him with petrol in the French Grand Prix.
As punishment for going off to drive for Maserati in 1957, Enzo Ferrari sent seductive women on the eve of big races to try and take the edge off Fangio’s driving. The rift between two of the greatest names in the sport became so much part of motor racing folklore that it was almost disappointing to find it no more, it seems, than a misunderstanding.
Fangio blamed it on Marcello Giambertone, his manager in 1956 when he won the fourth of his five world championships. The accusations were recounted in 'My Twenty Years of Racing', published in Britain by Temple Press in 1961. In a preface Fangio wrote, "It was Giamba (Giambertone) who finally persuaded me to write this book. Many people have tried, but I did not accept their offers."
Giambertone had demanded a personal mechanic for his driver then complained that despite winning the championship Fangio, alone of the team’s drivers, did not receive the customary gold medal. "Juan's title," he wrote, "was an exceptional performance which brought Ferrari 50 million Lire in prizes from the Italian Automobile Club alone."
Enzo Ferrari saw things differently apparently regarding Fangio as, "...a great driver, afflicted by a persecution mania," angrily refuting allegations of treachery and sabotage. It was a long running quarrel and the breach was never healed.
Ferrari died in 1988, and in 1990 Fangio produced another book, 'My Racing Life, also with a preface under his byline which said, "I have never before taken any direct part in any book written about me. This is the first book I have truly contributed to." He dismissed Giambertone's 1961 work as, ..."a book of which I appeared to be the co-author. In it, certain things were written that I did not agree with, and he was entirely responsible for. It was a responsibility I felt I did not share when Signor Ferrari asked for explanations."
Perhaps as a result of his experience, Fangio insisted that after tape-recording the material for the new book he would approve the contents, "In order to see that there was no alteration to the essence of what I said." The result was rather anodyne. The prickly relationship with Ferrari was effectively ignored, and although the rest was interesting and even entertaining, it added only ephemera to what we already knew.
Stirling Moss, who wrote a preface to both Fangio's books, told me the accusations were unworthy of both men. "Fangio was always the gentleman, and like me he had the greatest respect for Enzo Ferrari and all he did for the sport. They weren't exactly buddies. Nobody was that close to Ferrari, but I never knew of any animosity between them, and we both thought the world of Ferrari's cars. Nobody ever died in a Ferrari because the car broke, and you couldn't say the same about some other cars. I always thought Giambertone was a bit of a wheeler-dealer. A driver like Fangio didn't need a manager. He was above that." Juan Fangio died in 1995.
For collectors: Fangio: My Racing Life. Juan Manuel Fangio with Roberto Caruzzo, Patrick Stephens Ltd, £20.00 ISBN 1-85260-315-1. Picture, top:
Fangio signing copies of my book The Guinness Guide to Grand Prix Racing, Guinness Superlatives, 1980, on the starting grid at Brands Hatch. Copies are available from Amazon or ebay at around £15-£20. My Racing Life had various imprints. Pay £20-£35 for a good one. More for either with Fangio’s autograph.

Electrickery: It isn't working


If there was a way of storing enough electricity to drive a car it would have been discovered by now. In the 200 or so years since Michael Faraday (1791-1867), we have split the atom, been to the moon and back, invented aviation, television, computers and the world wide web. Yet it still needs a 4 ton battery the size of a 550 gallon petrol tank, to provide a family car with 500 miles’ range and 100 mph performance. Electricity is a means of transmitting power, not a source of power, and the electric car has not come far since 1899 when Camille Jenatzy did his 65mph flying kilometre.
He had to charge the batteries before he could do the return kilometre. Last week Auto Express admitted its Nissan Leaf on the RAC Future Car Challenge was charged up overnight at Brighton to ensure it would get back to London. Driver Sam Hardy slipstreamed a lorry for 25 miles and avoided using heater or demister. Some cars were so slow they caused traffic tailbacks.

Even electrophiles on Autocar revealed that UK electric car sales have hardly passed 1,000 and only the Chevrolet Volt (top and bottom) and Vauxhall Ampera, with on-board generators, stand any chance. More Ferraris were sold last year. The Nissan Leaf has not come near its wildly optimistic sales target. Car of the Year 2011 – what a joke; Chevrolet thought it might manage 10,000 Volts but sold 7700.

To appease greenery-yallery foot-in-the-grave lobbyists the government set aside £300million to subsidise electric cars. Yet hardly anybody’s tempted; throwing money at them hasn’t worked. Milk floats, fine – cars, not a chance. It might be all right for hybrids like the Toyota Prius (below). I tested one in 2004 and over 1,300miles it did 45mpg – about what I might have managed with a real car just driving slowly.


In America the National Highway Traffic Safety Adminstration (NHTSA) has been before a Senate sub-committee. Administrator David Strickland was asked why it kept quiet about lithium-ion battery fires following crash tests of the plug-in Volt. The wrecks ignited three weeks after the tests, but the NHTSA waited five months before owning up and only when a news reporter exposed it.

The Islay distillery of Bruichladdich would be fine for a Leaf. You could drive the 30 miles all round the island without running out of juice. Strickland claimed the NHTSA had not worked out why the Volt caught fire, only to be told nobody believed him. He was accused of keeping quiet in view of his taxpayer subsidy and his relationship with General Motors. The implication was that he had become so influenced by lobbying on electric cars he felt obliged to conceal bad news.

Some politicians will do anything ... Strickland was rather like climate change theorists suppressing anything that contradicts their dogma. Inability to distinguish matters of opinion from matters of fact is the last refuge of the dirigist. Everybody thinks they ought to believe electric cars work. It is politically incorrect to say they don’t. Let’s get real.