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Seatbelts

Featured Replies

On 8/16/2025 at 3:48 AM, Lacessit said:

If you hit your head on the windscreen, I'm pretty sure there won't be any brain damage.

Yes! -

I think he's already got brain damage!

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  • If you hit your head on the windscreen, I'm pretty sure there won't be any brain damage.

  • Why do leftists care so much about what other people do?    I wear seatbelts, I make the people that ride with me wear seatbelts, but I do not give a rat’s if others do.

  • seat belts are over rated. I refuse tom use them.

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On 8/15/2025 at 7:14 PM, mogandave said:

Why do leftists care so much about what other people do? 

 

It’s not “left vs right” — it’s just dim. When you refuse seatbelts or helmets, you’re not just risking yourself, you’re wrecking families and driving up costs we all pay through taxes and insurance. It’s not some heroic “individual choice” — you’re part of a society, like it or not, and that comes with responsibilities.

1 hour ago, kwilco said:

you always get it wrong, don't you?

A seatbelt works best if it is against your body, but it works by shock absorption  i.e. it stretches in an accident and slows down your bones and internal organs in order to minimise damage such as internal bleeding - An Air bags assists that but you need the seat belt to work in conjunction and keep you in the right position for th bag to be effective

I just play it safe and avoid any serious accidents :coffee1:

 

GOD is my Co-Pilot :cheesy:  Might have jinx myself, so I better pop into the local Wat, and get a few Amulets.

5 minutes ago, KhunLA said:

I just play it safe and avoid any serious accidents :coffee1:

 

GOD is my Co-Pilot :cheesy:  Might have jinx myself, so I better pop into the local Wat, and get a few Amulets.

Easier said than done on Thai roads.

 

About a year ago, I sustained a broken arm falling off my scooter, when I was taking evasive action.

 

Nothing I could do, the Thai woman driving the car gave priority to texting on her mobile over driving, and steered straight at me.

54 minutes ago, KhunLA said:

I just play it safe and avoid any serious accidents :coffee1:

 

GOD is my Co-Pilot :cheesy:  Might have jinx myself, so I better pop into the local Wat, and get a few Amulets.

as ever, totally the wrong end of the stick

On 8/16/2025 at 12:55 AM, it is what it is said:

 

no seatbelts on motorbikes, helmets though...

And there a lot of Thais that wear masks instead of helmets, It must be safer. 55555 I am astounded at the amount of Thai riders who do not wear helmets. No police enforcement

On 8/19/2025 at 2:13 AM, Purdey said:

Volvo invented the seatbelt and made it available free to all manufacturers. My father didn't like the idea as the gossip at the time was that the belt trapped you when the car caught fire. How we laugh at the old fogies today. Without seatbelts more people would be dead.

Oh yeah and growing up I would hear that it is better to be thrown clear of the car!

1 minute ago, KhunLA said:

I just play it safe and avoid any serious accidents :coffee1:

Easier said than done on Thai roads.

 

I sustained a broken arm about a year ago.

 

Nothing I could do. A Thai woman steered her car straight at me, texting on her mobile.

 

 

On 8/16/2025 at 5:35 AM, actonion said:

After a long conversation with  Thai Teenager   ( who spoke English) on road Safety , Minibus Drivers,  No Lights on Bikes at Night,   Seatbelts,  etc.. his response was " Farang scared to die, Thai's not scared", how to help people with that kind of thinking......you can't 

  

“You can help, but not by expecting one conversation with a teenager to shift a whole culture. Road safety attitudes here are deep-rooted. If you want to make a difference, it helps to speak Thai, to listen as much as talk, and to engage with more than one person out of 65 million. Change is possible, it’s gradual, and it comes from steady example and consistent messaging — not quick fixes.”

8 hours ago, kwilco said:

  

“You can help, but not by expecting one conversation with a teenager to shift a whole culture. Road safety attitudes here are deep-rooted. If you want to make a difference, it helps to speak Thai, to listen as much as talk, and to engage with more than one person out of 65 million. Change is possible, it’s gradual, and it comes from steady example and consistent messaging — not quick fixes.”

 

Just now, actonion said:

 

NO quick fixes thats for sure ,   a gradual change has'nt   happened either in my 24 years in Thailand

On 8/16/2025 at 1:14 AM, mogandave said:

Why do leftists care so much about what other people do? 

 

I wear seatbelts, I make the people that ride with me wear seatbelts, but I do not give a rat’s if others do.

I totally agree. If you don’t want to buckle up in my car, find another means of transportation.

8 minutes ago, jchfriis said:

I totally agree. If you don’t want to buckle up in my car, find another means of transportation.

 

A lot of people also forget........... it is often the people on the backseat not wearing a seatbelt that kill the people in the front seats.

 

Tried mansplaning this to my Thai family..........waste of time.

7 hours ago, actonion said:

NO quick fixes thats for sure ,   a gradual change has'nt   happened either in my 24 years in Thailand

I've been driving in Thailand since 1998, and worked lived in the Kingdom for 20 years - I also have driven extensively (more than most Thai drivers) for that period.  THe people I work with these days wear seat belts 20 years ago people were actually often buying their first cars just being in a car and not on a bike was new to them, now they have more experience and many have learned to drive wearing seatbelts. 

A lot of expats use the “nothing ever changes” cliché, but in fact it is seldom true.

With seatbelts, progress has been made, but there is still a long way to go
When the  mandatory seatbelt law was introduced back in 1996, usage rates have slowly  improved. However, they remain far behind those in most developed countries. Compliance is very uneven and it depends on where you are in the country, what type of vehicle you’re in, and whether you’re the driver or a passenger.

The average seatbelt usage rate across Thailand is still only 37.8%, based on recent research.
Bangkok leads the way with the highest usage at 78.9%. then the Northeast at 46.2%, followed by Central: 44.0%
North and South are the worst at  28.2% and 24.2% respectively 

I worked mostly in Chonburi and Rayong and certainly amongst th industrial employees, seat belt wearing was common

It also varies between drivers and passengers – ( I won’t drive off if people are belted up – including in the back) Apparently  67.3% of drivers wear seatbelts, whereas with front-seat passengers, only 18.9% wear them. Rear-seat passengers are an alarming 0.5%.

Use varies too according to demographics. As expected younger males, especially from the North and South, are the least likely to buckle up. Usage also drops in the early morning, during major festivals like Songkran, and even on main city roads.

Road safety is a public health problem yet the Thai authorities place very little importance on this, consequently things like public and Road Safety Campaigns are very scarce and ill-thought out.

Low exposure to public safety campaigns and less discussion about road safety within families or communities are strongly linked to non-use attitudes and awareness. Unaware of the dangers, people still think it’s a matter of “getting away with it” again a personal “freedom” choice. …and just a matter of paying a bribe when stopped.

So, 30 years after seatbelts became law, the numbers show that Bangkok is making progress, but other parts of the country is still far behind. Rear-seat passenger figures are alarming, they remain practically unprotected, and regional differences are stark. With Thailand’s notoriously high road fatality rates, these figures show that there is still much work to be done in changing behaviour and attitudes toward something that is as basic as wearing a seatbelt. But one has to bear in mind that over 75% of road deaths are motorcyclists and th death rate in 4-wheeled vehicles in actually lower than in the USA

5 hours ago, Will B Good said:

 

A lot of people also forget........... it is often the people on the backseat not wearing a seatbelt that kill the people in the front seats.

 

Tried mansplaning this to my Thai family..........waste of time.

do that thing with an egg in a box!

4 hours ago, kwilco said:

do that thing with an egg in a box!

 

 

Might do.....cheers.

On 8/20/2025 at 8:02 AM, Harrisfan said:

You just made it about left n right

Did you read the post I quoted, or is this just selective distraction?

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