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To be able to react if the car ahead should suddenly brake you should keep a three second gap to the car ahead.
Two seconds.
the Wilderness road was built through the Cumberland gap
i am assuming the following: your vehicle totaled, you do not have GAP insurance and the value of your vehicle was less than your payoff...unfortunately you will still owe this balance, most lien holders will do what they call a 'transfer of collateral'' meaning they will finance (assuming you are in good standing) if you want. your replacement vehicle and put this balance on top of that note....immediately making you really upside down AGAIN ...pleeeeeeeeeeeeeease get gap insurance on this one, talk to your lien holder about it...gap insurance pays the 'gap' between the value of the vehicle and the note balance..
If you are on a dry, clear road and you reach the same fixed point before you have said the 'two' then you are too close and need to drop further back, to create the essential minimum of a two-second gap. And if you prefer three seconds, rather than two, that's okay.If you are on a wet road then you need to have at least a four-second gap.And if it's icy or you are driving on compacted snow or somewhere you know that something slippery (such as diesel fuel) has been spilled, then it is wise to create at least a ten-second gap, so you would need to count all the way up to 'one-thousand-ten' before you reach the same fixed point that you watched the vehicle ahead pass. Yes, it will look like a huge gap, but who cares? Your life, or even your car merely being damaged, are worth more than the opinions of those who
.031 is the correct gap for this vehicle
Varies between vehicle and vehicle.
In California it is normally necessary for you to currently have comprehensive and collision coverage in place at the time of the accident for your gap insurance to take effect.
.040"
Wilderness
GAP Insurance is not a specific company. GAP or Guaranteed Auto Protection is a type of insurance that covers the difference between the cash value of a vehicle and the balance still owed on financing for that vehicle.
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