Earl Purple wrote:
Well I've always thought it crazy that some country roads have NSL and thus a speed limit of 60mph when it is totally unsafe to drive at such a speed, yet decent 3-lane dual carriageways are often 50mph and sometimes even 40mph with a lot of enforcement.
Of course the problem is that just because 60mph is the speed limit it doesn't mean it is safe to drive at that speed, but certain authorities are so bent on enforcing "limits" rather than enforcing driving safe for the conditions.
Oh dear. It's reached the BBC news, and there's another article in the Times here:
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2-2302900.html
Leaving aside how much it will cost to assess every country lane in the country to see whether it should be reduced from NSL to 40, and the cost of signage, have they considered the effect it will have?
1. Those who drive too fast (and I mean speed relative to the conditions, not relative to the speed limit) will continue to do so. Enforcement will be zero or at best minimal.
2. Those "safe" drivers who never exceed the speed limit - many of whom probably have no idea what NSL means - will now see that it is "safe" to drive at 40, and will drive along at exactly that speed - including round blind bends where they have no idea if anything is coming the other way, there are horse riders and walkers on the road, and so on. I read somewhere that the fastest drivers are the most dangerous, closely followed by the slowest ones. The people who drive at a constant speed, exactly on or just below the speed limit, and hoot and gesticulate at you if you are "reckless" enough to overtake them.
3. The reductions will of course be applied entirely haphazardly, most likely in response to KSIs or "pressure from locals". Respect for speed limits will be further devalued.
