Auburn Hills sits along major routes where commuter traffic mixes with commercial trucks. In the real world, that often means crashes happen during:
- Rush-hour lane changes and merges
- Turn movements near busier commercial corridors
- Construction-related detours and shifting traffic patterns
- High-speed highway entries/exits where visibility can be limited
Those details matter because they influence what investigators look for—speed, braking distance, lane markings, and whether the driver’s actions matched expected traffic conditions. A generic calculator won’t know whether the crash happened during a confusing traffic flow, whether there were road obstructions, or whether the truck’s maneuvering created the collision.


