An impatient Tesla driver collided with a hatchback after ignoring a stop sign at a busy intersection.
The dangerous error was caught on dashcam footage on Saturday with viewers speculating the vehicles collided on Alma Road in Dakabin, north of Brisbane.
The driver of a Tesla X fails to spot an oncoming white Mazda while turning right onto the road, T-boning the smaller car near its front left wheel.
Dashcam footage reveals the driver of the Tesla X ignored a stop sign before proceeding to turn right onto a busy road
The Mazda is thrown sideways from the impact of the Tesla as the collision forces both vehicles to come to a halt in the middle of the road.
Motoring by Anton Nilsson  Most drivers have experienced road rage in the last year, a new study has found. The NRMA surveyed more than 2000 members in NSW and the ACT and found 70 per cent had felt road rage over the past 12 months. One in four people said children had been present during the incident. An even higher percentage (79 per cent) said they had witnessed the behaviour in other drivers. Road rage was defined by those responding as physically assaulting another driver, getting out of a vehicle to confront another driver, tailgating and yelling. It s consistently a serious issue, NRMA spokesman Peter Khoury said.
Motoring by Anton Nilsson  Most drivers have experienced road rage in the last year, a new study has found. The NRMA surveyed more than 2000 members in NSW and the ACT and found 70 per cent had felt road rage over the past 12 months. One in four people said children had been present during the incident. An even higher percentage (79 per cent) said they had witnessed the behaviour in other drivers. Road rage was defined by those responding as physically assaulting another driver, getting out of a vehicle to confront another driver, tailgating and yelling. It s consistently a serious issue, NRMA spokesman Peter Khoury said.
Motoring by Anton Nilsson  Most drivers have experienced road rage in the last year, a new study has found. The NRMA surveyed more than 2000 members in NSW and the ACT and found 70 per cent had felt road rage over the past 12 months. One in four people said children had been present during the incident. An even higher percentage (79 per cent) said they had witnessed the behaviour in other drivers. Road rage was defined by those responding as physically assaulting another driver, getting out of a vehicle to confront another driver, tailgating and yelling. It s consistently a serious issue, NRMA spokesman Peter Khoury said.
Motoring by Anton Nilsson  Most drivers have experienced road rage in the last year, a new study has found. The NRMA surveyed more than 2000 members in NSW and the ACT and found 70 per cent had felt road rage over the past 12 months. One in four people said children had been present during the incident. An even higher percentage (79 per cent) said they had witnessed the behaviour in other drivers. Road rage was defined by those responding as physically assaulting another driver, getting out of a vehicle to confront another driver, tailgating and yelling. It s consistently a serious issue, NRMA spokesman Peter Khoury said.