Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Holding the steering wheel at the '10-and-2' spot could tear off your hands in a crash

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People who learned to drive before the age of modern air bags are risking severe damage to their arms and hands -- and even amputation -- because of how they hold the steering wheel.

Driving experts say the old position at the top of the wheel, 10 o'clock and 2 o'clock, risks potentiall­y traumatic injuries in a crash, thanks to the force and direction of air bags in modern cars.

Instead, holding the wheel at a lower position, 9 o'clock and 3 o'clock, will protect drivers' hands and the arms better. An agency that monitors and oversees car safety, has reported some truly horrific injuries as a result of drivers

the airbag violently expands at 150 to 250 mph. Fixing the problem calls for holding the wheel lower

improperly placing their hands on their steering wheels, according to MSNBC.

These include, in extreme cases, severed fingers or hands, broken arms and even degloving -- the skin being torn away entirely from the fingers and hand. In more common, and less terrifying cases, arms can be flung into faces during airbag deployment, causing broken noses and concussion­s.

'If the bag is going to go, it's going to take my hand and put it into my face -- either one of my hands,' Bob Hendrickso­n, the head of AAA driving schools in Indiana, told WTHRTV in Indianapol­is.

Experts say the higher on the wheel your hands are, the more likely they are to be struck by the steering wheel cover that shoots off as the airbag violently expands at 150 to 250 mph. Fixing the problem calls for holding the wheel lower, with hands almost parallel.

Old-school driving instructor­s taught their students to hold their hands high on the wheel for better control.

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