The question was, "Is speed dangerous?"
Well, one can play with words and offer an explanation as to why speed in itself may not be dangerous but anyone actually believing that possibility could be in for a major shock one day.
When I was a kid, at the Ideal Home exhibition or something similar back in the early '60s, there was a road safety stand, the sponsors of which I really cannot recall. Because there were growing calls for mandatory seat belts in an effort to reduce the carnage on our roads, the sponsor had set up a short, narrow-gauge railway track a couple of feet off the ground. There was a tiny little carriage affair with two seats, seatbelts and a set of buffers at the end of the track. the carriage was given a gentle push, sufficient to let it roll down the slope before colliding with the buffers.
From memory, the total length of the rig was probably no more than a family car and it looked a really innocuous piece of kit. I tried it. I knew what was coming as I'd seen lots of others do it before me but I have to tell you, I still got a real fright!
According to the people running the stand, the terminal velocity on impact with the buffers was 7mph. I know; it sounds nothing but without that seat belt, I would have been catapulted out of the carriage. Some years later, I survived a car crash at 30mph but ended up on the floor of the front passenger seat. Even after that, I resisted the wearing of a seat belt until the legislation arrived. I have never liked the idea of compulsion in such matter; education, yes but compulsion no.
I would imagine that many of those who advocate higher speed as some kind of safety element in certain circumstances......given the right stretch of road....used judicially and all the rest....etc, etc, etc......have never actually come to a dead stop in an impact with something solid. It's not like falling off a bike or dropping a motor cycle when you've just misjudged that bend in slippery conditions where you may be lucky and not hit anything solid while still travelling quickly.
So, for me, there aren't two sides to the story. The answer to the question is clear. Speed is dangerous. At what point it becomes so may vary but my experience at 7mph convinced me. Ayrton Senna was a racing god in my book and might have still been around today had he been less determined to "push the envelope" as they say today. Richard Hammond had loads of experience of fast cars and fast bikes long before he came to grief when he left the track a few years ago in that rocket-type contraption. That he survived is testament to the cockpit strength and safety harness developed for and worn by all speed freaks simply because they know from experience that speed is dangerous!
Donald Campbell knew a thing or two about fast driving on both land and water yet he came unstuck. There's a list of racing drivers I could mention who would still be alive today had they just been a bit slower. There's another list of pilots, many of them test pilots, who lost their lives in the pursuit of speed. Think IOM and there's another list. Some of them were good; some were particularly fast and some were just amateurs taking it just beyond their ability though they didn't discover that till it was too late!
Now, the question again was, "Is speed dangerous?" Too damned right it is!
Regards,
Indaalo