Donald Stanfield
Well-Known Member
This reply has nothing to do with the topic at hand. Miles driven is irrelevant to the rate of fatalities in a crash. Those rates are really easy to calculate. Take the number of fatalities divided by the number of crashes. Itās simple math, and miles driven couldnāt be more irrelevant.yes it does. Because they have no idea how many miles any of these vehicles have driven. So they get it from the only place they can. Used cars.
So then you are comparing say a honda crv which has been sold for many years, to a car which had come out in 2021
you can't buy another brand of car and not lose 20% off the lot so it is an entirely different scenario
Sponsored
It's a list of manufacturers and models with the highest fatality rates.