An occasional driver should only drive as many occasional miles as he might occasionally want to drive. The term Occasional driver is not indicative of how many miles they might drive but rather how often they may drive, there is no specific legal definition for an occasional driver. Most Insurers develop there own guidelines to determine if some fits the definition of an occasional driver. Generally an occasional driver would drive your vehicle no more than a few times a year. If they drive regularly once a week or regularly once a month, or once every 6 weeks, then they are a regular driver. By the very definition of the term, an occasional driver would not know how often they are going to drive. Any type of planned or scheduled use would define them as a regular driver.
An over-the-road driver can drive 100,000 - 150,000 miles in a year.
I drive approx. 80,000 km/year and I do only local
It will take a driver 5 hours to drive 300 miles at a speed of 60 miles per hour.
Once a year should be fine if you only drive it 1000 miles.Once a year should be fine if you only drive it 1000 miles.
5 hours
Five hours.
The average American will drive 33.4 miles a day.
Depends how you drive, where you drive (city, country). I am a conservative driver from a country area and mine would have lasted 100,000 miles had one of the calipers not got stuck and ruined the break pad. 10,000 miles to 100,000 miles, depends on driving habits.
It's not the car you need to worry about, it's the driver. Driver safety diminishes after about 8 hours or 500 miles, whichever comes first.
Well, let's see . . . If you can drive 200 miles in each hour, then it should take you 1 hour to drive 200 miles.
Well it should take 50 minutes to drive 25 miles.
If you drive at 60mph (miles per hour) it should take about 3hours and 15minutes