
Here  Are  Questions  Many  People  Ask Q: If I’m  a good  driver,  and I never  drive  far  from 
About  Safety  Belts -- and the  Answers home,  why  should  I  wear  safety  belts? 
Q: 
A: 
Q: 
A: 
Won’t  I be  trapped  in  the  vehicle  after  an 
accident  if 
I’m wearing  a safety  belt? 
You could be -- whether  you’re wearing a safety 
belt  or  not.  But you  can unbuckle 
a safety belt, 
even  if you’re  upside  down. And your chance 
of 
being  conscious  during  and after  an accident, so 
you can unbuckle and  get  out, is much greater if 
you  are  belted. 
Why  don’t  they  just put  in  air  bags so people 
won’t  have  to  wear  safety  belts? 
Air bags  are  in many vehicles today and will  be in 
more of them in the  future.  But they  are 
supplemental  systems only; 
so they work with 
safety  belts -- not instead of them.  Every  air bag 
system  ever offered  for  sale  has required the use of 
safety belts. Even if you’re in a vehicle that has  air 
bags,  you still have 
to buckle up to get  the most 
protection.  That’s  true  not  only in frontal  collisions, 
but  especially  in  side  and other  collisions. 
A: You  may  be an excellent  driver, but  if you’re  in an 
accident 
-- even  one that isn’t your  fault -- you and 
your passengers can  be hurt. Being 
a good driver 
doesn’t protect  you from things beyond your 
control,  such 
as bad drivers. 
Most  accidents  occur  within 
25 miles (40 km) of 
home.  And  the  greatest  number  of  serious  injuries  and 
deaths  occur  at  speeds 
of less than 40 mph (65 kt-&). 
Safety belts  are for everyone. 
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Theft 
Glove Box 
Use one of the vehicle’s keys  to lock and unlock the 
glove box. To open,  pull the  glove box handle  toward 
you. 
Vehicle  theft is big business,  especially in some  cities. 
Although your Oldsmobile has  a number 
of theft 
deterrent  features,  we know that nothing  we put 
on it 
can make  it impossible  to  steal. However,  there  are ways 
you  can help. 
Key in the  Ignition 
If you walk away from your  vehicle with the keys 
inside, 
it’s an easy target fm joy  riders  or professional 
thieves 
-- so don’t  do it. 
When you park your Oldsmobile and open the driver’s 
door, 
you’ll hear a chime  reminding  you to remove your 
key from 
the ignition and  take it with you. Always  do 
this. 
Your steering  wheel will  be  locked, and so will 
your ignition. 
If you  have an  automatic  transaxle, taking 
your key out  also  locks your transaxle.  And remember 
to lock the  doors. 
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Fog Lamps  (Option) Daytime  Running  Lamps  (Canada  Only) 
7 %. 
OFF 
LIGHTS 
The 
button  for  your 
fog  lamps  is  below the 
instrument  panel 
intensity  control.  Daytime Running 
Lamps (DRL) can  make  it  easier  for 
others  to  see the front  of your  vehicle  during the  day. 
DRL  can  be helpful in many different driving 
conditions, but they  can 
be especially helpful in  the 
short periods  after dawn and  before sunset. Several 
countries, including Canada,  require  DRL. 
A light  sensor  on top of the  instrument  panel makes the 
DRL  work, 
so be sure it isn’t  covered.  The  DRL  system 
will  make  your  high and low-beam  headlamps  come  on 
at a reduced brightness  when: 
0 The  ignition is  on, 
Push the button  to turn the  fog  lamps  on. 
When  using fog  lamps,  the  parking lamps or low beam 
headlamps must  be  on. 
Fog  lamps  will go off  whenever the high  beam 
headlamps  come on. When  the  high  beams  go 
off, the 
fog  lamps  will come  on  again. 
0 The  headlamp  switch is off, and 
0 The  parking brake is released (manual transaxle);  or 
0 The transaxle is not  in PARK (P) or NEUTRAL (N) 
(automatic transaxle). 
When  the DRL  are  on, only your high and low-beam 
headlamps will  be  on.  The taillamps, sidemarker and 
other  lamps  won’t be  on. Your  instrument panel won’t 
be lit up either. 
When  it’s dark enough  outside, your headlamps will 
come  on at 
full brightness.  The other lamps that come 
on  with your headlamps will  also  come on.  

AM 
The  range  for most AM stations is greater  than for FM, 
especially  at night.  The longer  range,  however, can 
cause  stations  to interfere  with each other. 
AM can also 
pick  up noise  from  things  like  storms  and power lines. 
To lower  this  noise,  try reducing the treble  level. 
Be aware  that hearing  damage  from  loud noise is almost 
undetectable  until it  is  too  late.  Your hearing  can adapt 
to  higher  volumes  of sound.  Sound  that seems  normal 
can  be loud and  harmful  to  your  hearing. Take 
precautions  by adjusting  the volume  control 
on your 
radio  to  a  safe  sound  level before  your  hearing  adapts  to 
it. 
To help  avoid  hearing loss  or  damage: 
Adjust  the  volume  control  to  the lowest  setting. 
Increase  volume  slowly until you hear comfortably 
and clearly. 
NOTICE: 
Before  you add  any  sound  equipment  to  your 
vehicle 
-- like a tape  player, CB radio,  mobile 
telephone 
or two-way  radio -- be sure you can 
add  what  you  want.  If you  can,  it’s very 
important  to do  it  properly. Added  sound 
equipment  may interfere  with the  operation  of 
your  vehicle’s  engine, Delco@  radio or  other 
systems,  and even  damage  them. And,  your 
vehicle’s  systems may interfere  with the 
operation 
of sound  equipment  that  has  been 
added  improperly. 
So, before  adding  sound  equipment,  check with 
your  retailer  and  be sure 
to check  Federal  rules 
covering mobile  radio  and telephone units. 
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The  body  takes  about an hour  to  rid  itself of the  alcohol 
in one  drink. 
No amount of coffee or  number of cold 
showers 
will speed  that up. “I’ll  be  carefbl”  isn’t the 
right  answer.  What if there’s  an  emergency,  a  need  to 
take  sudden  action,  as  when  a  child  darts  into  the  street? 
A person  with  even  a  moderate BAC might  not  be  able 
to  react  quickly  enough  to  avoid  the  collision. 
There’s  something  else  about  drinking  and  driving  that 
many  people  don’t  know.  Medical  research  shows  that  alcohol  in a  person’s  system  can  make  crash  injuries 
worse,  especially  injuries  to  the  brain,  spinal  cord  or 
heart.  This  means  that  when  anyone  who  has  been  drinking 
-- driver  or  passenger -- is in  a  crash,  that 
person’s  chance 
of being  killed  or  permanently  disabled 
is  higher  than 
if the  person  had  not  been  drinking. 
4-4  

Do not  get too  close  to  the  vehicle you want to  pass 
while  you’re  awaiting  an opportunity. For  one  thing, 
following  too  closely reduces  your  area 
of vision, 
especially 
if you’re  following  a  larger vehicle. Also, 
you won’t have adequate  space  if the vehicle ahead 
suddenly  slows  or  stops. Keep back a reasonable 
distance. 
When  it  looks  like a  chance  to  pass  is coming  up, 
start 
to accelerate  but  stay in the right lane and don’t 
get  too  close.  Time  your  move 
so you  will be 
increasing  speed as the  time  comes to move  into  the 
other  lane. If the  way  is clear  to  pass, you  will  have a 
“running  start” that more than  makes up 
for the 
distance  you would  lose by dropping  back.  And if 
something  happens 
to cause  you to cancel  your pass, 
you need  only slow  down  and  drop  back again  and 
wait  for  another  opportunity. 
If other  cars  are  lined up  to  pass a slow vehicle,  wait 
your turn. But take  care that someone  isn’t  trying  to 
pass  you as you  pull out 
to pass the slow vehicle. 
Remember 
to glance  over  your shoulder  and check 
the blind  spot. 
0 Check your mirrors,  glance  over  your shoulder, and 
start your  left  lane  change  signal  before  moving out 
of  the right  lane  to pass. When  you are  far  enough 
ahead 
of the passed  vehicle to see  its front in your 
inside  mirror, activate your right lane  change  signal 
and  move  back  into the right lane.  (Remember that 
your right  outside mirror is convex.  The  vehicle you 
just  passed  may seem  to  be farther  away from  you 
than 
it really is.) 
Try  not  to pass more than one vehicle  at a time on 
two-lane  roads.  Reconsider before passing the next 
vehicle. 
0 Don’t  overtake  a  slowly  moving vehicle too rapidly. 
Even though the  brake  lamps  are not flashing,  it may 
be  slowing down  or starting to turn. 
If you’re being passed,  make it easy for the 
following  driver to  get ahead 
of you. Perhaps  you 
can ease  a  little to the right. 
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Loss of Control 
Let’s review  what  driving  experts  say about  what 
happens  when the three  control  systems  (brakes, steering 
and acceleration)  don’t have enough friction  where the 
tires meet the road  to  do what the driver  has asked. 
In 
any emergency, don’t  give up. Keep trying to steer 
and constantly seek  an escape  route or area  of less 
danger. 
Skidding 
In  a skid,  a driver  can  lose  control of the vehicle. 
Defensive  drivers  avoid most skids by taking reasonable 
care  suited 
to existing  conditions,  and by not 
“overdriving” those  conditions. But  skids are always 
possible. 
The three types of skids  correspond  to your 
Oldsmobile’s three control  systems. In the braking skid 
your wheels aren’t rolling.  In the steering  or cornering 
skid,  too  much speed  or steering  in a  curve  causes tires 
to  slip  and lose  cornering  force. And  in  the acceleration 
skid  too much throttle  causes 
the driving wheels to spin. 
A  cornering skid  and  an acceleration  skid  are best 
handled  by easing your  foot off the accelerator pedal.  If 
your vehicle starts  to  slide, 
ease your foot off the 
accelerator  pedal and quickly  steer the way 
you want the 
vehicle to  go. If 
you start steering quickly  enough, your 
vehicle  may straighten out. Always be ready  for  a 
second skid  if it occurs. 
Of  course,  traction  is reduced when water,  snow, ice, 
gravel,  or  other  material 
is on the road. For safety, you’ll 
want  to slow down and adjust your driving  to these 
conditions.  It is  important  to  slow down on slippery 
surfaces because stopping  distance will be longer and 
vehicle control more limited. 
While driving 
on a  surface with reduced traction,  try 
your  best to avoid sudden steering, acceleration,  or 
braking (including  engine braking  by shifting to 
a lower 
gear).  Any sudden changes  could  cause the tires to slide. 
You may  not realize the  surface is slippery until  your 
vehicle  is skidding. Learn 
to recognize warning  clues -- 
such as enough water, ice  or packed  snow on the road to 
make a “mirrored  surface’’ -- and slow down when  you 
have any  doubt. 
Remember:  Any anti-lock  brake system 
(ABS) helps 
avoid only 
the braking  skid. 
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-  

Driving at Night 0 
0 
0 
Night driving  is more  dangerous than day driving.  One 
reason  is that  some  drivers are likely to  be impaired 
-- 
by  alcohol or drugs, with night vision problems,  or by 
fatigue. 
Here 
are some  tips on night driving. 
0 Drive  defensively. 
0 Don’t drink and drive. 
0 
0 
Adjust your inside rearview mirror to reduce the 
glare  from headlamps behind you. 
Since  you can’t  see as well,  you  may  need 
to slow 
down and  keep more space between  you and other 
vehicles. 
Slow down, especially  on higher speed roads.  Your 
headlamps can light 
up only so much  road ahead, 
In  remote areas, watch  for animals. 
If  you’re tired, pull  off the  road in  a safe place and 
rest. 
Night Vision 
No one  can see as well at night  as in the daytime. But  as 
we  get  older  these  differences increase. 
A 50-year-old 
driver  may require  at least twice as much  light  to  see 
the 
same thing at night as a 20-year-old. 
What you  do in the  daytime can 
also affect your night 
vision. For example,  if you  spend  the day in bright 
sunshine  you 
are wise to wear sunglasses.  Your eyes will 
have less trouble adjusting  to night. But  if you’re 
driving, don’t wear sunglasses  at night. They may cut 
down  on glare from headlamps,  but they also make  a lot 
of things invisible. 
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