SCE wrote:
I am curious what roads you drive on if you feel only unsafe to drive at limits for a few minutes a month, round here we have pedestrians, parked cars, junctions, bends, crests, horses, tractors, schools, other traffic, fog, snow, ice, rain, etc, etc - all of which may involve an adjustment to speed, sometimes slight, other times may mean coming to a stop.
pedestrians : yes, you do get the occasional pedestrian, but they don't generally represent a significant hazard in that you can see from a distance that they are aware of their surroundings, walking along the pavement in a predictable manner, not likely to suddenly jump into the road. There are typically proper crossing points that they will use if they wish to cross the road. One of the roads has a large green next to it where you get people playing on the grass, but it is large enough that the people are many tens of metres from the road, and drivers have a completely unobstructed view of them, so they can guarantee that a hazard will not suddenly arise from that direction.
parked cars : yes, some, but the main reason these represent a hazard is because pedestrians might emerge from between them, but people don't do that on these roads, they cross at the proper crossing points. But I would say most people do slow down when they pass parked cars, perhaps going past them at 10-20% over the speed limit rather than 30-50% over the limit.
junctions / other traffic : yes, and clearly you will slow down to below the limit if another vehicle is obstructing the road. I don't personally include this in my definition of "conditions", that would be like saying that whenever you're not the first car at traffic lights, conditions make it unsafe to drive at the speed limit, when the conditions are in fact fine it's just that the flow of the traffic hasn't got up to speed yet.
bends / crests: typically, the speed limit will be set such that you can stop in the distance you can see to be clear on all bends / crests on the road, and there is generally significant safety margin built in such that you can almost certainly exceed the speed limit by 50% and still always stop in the distance you can see to be clear.
horses : very rare indeed, I think I saw one a few months ago.
tractors : never.
schools : I leave for work after everyone has arrived at school and drive home after everyone has left school, so these are a non-issue on my drive to and from work. It's extremely rare that I would drive past a school at a time when its presence represents a hazard.
fog / snow / ice : Exceptionally rare, and the roads are well enough gritted and driven on that you don't get snow on the roads as such.
rain : Yes, if the rain is very heavy, people might slow down enough to get close to the speed limit. If it is really heavy and there is localised flooding, people will go much more slowly through the flooded patches. You do get some flooded patches perhaps a couple of times a year.
Note that in the above I'm not talking about my own driving, more my observations of general driver behaviour along these roads.
I also do understand that there are other 30mph limit roads where the limit is completely appropriate. An example that springs to mind is Briercliffe Road in Burnley as you get closer to where it meets up with Colne Road. Very hazardous indeed, I frequently drop below the 30mph speed limit on that stretch when I'm up there. But contrast that with Eastern Avenue in the same town - same speed limit, vastly lower risk level.