Tombo wrote:
Drivers like that need to go through a re-education system back onto their learners again to drill in the point again

I completely agree! I had a similar crash years ago. Early January, 2000. I'd had my Mini on the road - my first Mini - for
three weeks, and an idiot did similar. The differences were that it was on a four lane road (so he could've gone left lane and gone around me - there was no one else in our lane for at least 500m behind us - yes, there was that much visibility), my idiot braked (locked 'em up), and I saw and heard him coming, and started accelerating away before he caught me. My idiot had also had heart bypass surgery 6 weeks earlier...
It was just after this that I heard a statistic claiming that red cars - my car was cherry red with a white roof - had the most accidents. I can't help but think that's partially due to the lesser contrast of brake lights against red paint compared to brake lights against, say, yellow paint.

I might have to join the people putting in a high mount brake light (even though my current Mini's blue).
Thankfully, given I was accelerating away, my car was no only driveable, but cost less than $1k to fix, and we didn't have any major injuries. The biggest frustration was that it took the bloke
10 weeks to figure out he had an excess to pay before anyone would fix my car. Thankfully I worked only about 300m from home. And my other frustration was that, when I collected the car, the idiots at the panel beaters hadn't bothered to turn off the fuel tank tap - I found out by running out of fuel, then finding a puddle of fuel in the spare wheel well.
All the best with this - sure, it's a big set back, but it's only time. Hopefully it's only time - hopefully you make a full recovery. And make sure you find your way to a solicitor... Legal expenses are the responsible driver's problem. His insurance for your injuries might help fund the drinks for the working bee, on top of your own out-of-pocket medical and living costs. Good work on the photos, too - great idea to get the photos while the sawdust and debris are still there, to show just how big a shunt it was.
