A team from Canada found in 2007 that drivers asked to do math problems via cell phone with both
hands on the wheel spent more time looking straight ahead and less time scanning the periphery of their vision field — even while cruising through intersections — than people not talking on a phone did.
Not exact matches
Driving his combine tractor, his thick, calloused
hands wrapped over the vinyl steering
wheel, Trampe described his fields in the way that only someone who has
spent his entire life
on the land can.
Not that steel
wheels and placky covers should be dismissed out of
hand — especially given the hours
spent in an average life cleaning alloy
wheels and whinging when carelessness has scuffed those same alloys
on a kerb.