I keep seeing documentary films showing police drivers speeding to incidents, or even in pursuit of criminals, with ONE hand on the wheel and the other apparently holding down the transmit button on their police radio.
Police Class 1 drivers used to be taught (see ‘Roadcraft’) to keep two hands on the wheel at all times. What’s happened to police driving standards? And why don’t police radios have an on/off switch?
I support the police, but worry about falling standards.
You can keep both hands on the wheel when you have an operator to use the radio. When single manned, you have to do both.
What would you have them do?
Pull over and stop to transmit?
There is a vast difference between driving school practices and what actually happens in the real world.
A Police radio that is 'off' is as much use as a frig in Lappland.
there is no law saying you have to have 2 hands on the wheel, otherwise how would people indicate, wipe their windows, wave people through, operate their lights, turn on the radio etc?
A) I want officers to have their radios switched to transmit. Why are you defending poor design?
B) Driving with one hand on the wheel is dangerous, much more so in pursuits. One-handed steering is a Fail on the Institute of Advanced Motorists test.
C) Of course you can change gear, indicate, etc. Don’t be silly.
one handed driving cannot possibly be a fail - as i said you have to take one hand off the wheel to carry out all sorts of driving operations so what you say just does not make any sense.
If it was switched to transmit all the time, they would not be able to receive.
The default setting for all two way radios I've used over many years is always receive, providing they are switched on of course, so colleagues can attract your attention, you then push a button to transmit.
Simplessss
Radios consume much more power in transmit mode than they do in receive mode, so there could be a battery problem if the default mode was transmit (apart from the problems reported by others). The other point to notice is that police pursuit drivers have passed a stringent test to prove that they are competent to drive in the manner necessary to drive as they do, unlike the general public.
Douglas - why is that relevant? I can see no mention of him driving with one hand or using his radio before he crashed. There is no mention at all of the cause of the crash.