MOTOR

(Darren Dugan) #1

than repaid by the singular skills that
he offers in return. His extraordinary
diagnostic talents can swiftly help others
to identify problems and, accordingly,
minimise the expense of exploration.
Equally beneficial is the early detection
of fault that these empowered senses can
offer, affording reductions both to later
expense and, potentially, danger.
A less predictable contribution to
road safety is the man’s combination of
knowledge and patience applied to the
often trying but nonetheless essential
area of early driver training.
But who better than Alistair to educate
youngsters in the principles of motoring
and the functions of basic controls? Who
better to teach and test the art of balance
in hill-starts?
It’s typical of the man that this


interplay with others, though born of
necessity, should be regarded by him as
one of life’s greatest gifts. “Through my
love of cars and boats I’ve met so many
lovely people who’ve been enthusiastic
to support a blind person’s experience
of such things,” he recounts, and clearly
feels the need to reward that kindness.
And he does so in ways that are more
than merely symbolic. For instance,
both his encyclopaedic knowledge and
diagnostic skills have been valued by
friends for years when searching for
older and vintage cars. And the selection
of any new vehicle can only be aided
by augmenting the traditional areas
of sight-dominated assessment with
Alistair’s additional perceptions. God
help the salesman that might choose to
differ on detail...

Just how profound these perceptions
may be was illustrated when, from
the passenger seat, the man responded
to my request for input on the car in
which I was driving him. The resultant
observations, ranging from ride,
ergonomics and state of tune through
to build quality and NVH integrity,
all perceived and relayed in exquisite
detail, were unlike anything I’ve ever
heard during conventional testing.
But what else could be expected from
a man excluded from the two key factors
of nearly all conventional automotive
judgement: seeing cars and tabulating
their performance?
Surprise would be expected, of
course. But nothing prepared me for the
realisation that his judgement, which I’d
presumed would be based on parameters
totally foreign to most, was instead of
factors intimately familiar to all of us,
drivers or passengers, every time we sit
in a car: comfort, quality, feel, sound,
ease of reach and adjustment – elements
infinitely more relevant than the swoop
of a bootlid or times to the tenth. So the
greatest surprise of all was this blind
man’s gift of vision.
We talked for some time on that drive
and have talked often since, a regular
subject being the experience of new cars
that this magazine allows. “It would be a
great joy for me to go on a road test with
some of the journalists from MOTOR,”
he has frequently said.
And, unblinkered, I can now see sense
in that. M

With every sense bar
sight far more finely
tuned than most,
Alistair is able to offer
concise, detailed and
accurate feedback on
a car in ways beyond
most of us

108 march 2015 motormag.com.au
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