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PostPosted: Fri Oct 21, 2005 01:16 
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johnsher wrote:
Wouldn't it be so much simpler to just put the repeaters in and be done with it? That way there can be no possible confusion.


Simpler, but expensive.

Just remember that every street on every housing estate in the country would need to have 30 repeaters, as well as all of the A and B-roads in urban areas (otherwise there'd be people complaining that there were no repeater signs to get off a speeding conviction in a residential area.)

That's an awful lot of repeaters which need putting up. If this were to become mandatory, I can see council tax rises beyond even the current rises.


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PostPosted: Fri Oct 21, 2005 10:00 
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RichardB wrote:

Simpler, but expensive.

Just remember that every street on every housing estate in the country would need to have 30 repeaters...


not if the law says "the limit is 30 unless there's a sign to the contrary."


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PostPosted: Fri Oct 21, 2005 10:03 
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RichardB touches on the reason I actually agree with the way the law is framed currently. 30 repeaters need to be either mandatory or prohibited, there can be no grey area.

Imagine if 50% of 30 limits had repeaters. What message would you then get if a road didn't have any? Is it 30 or isn't it? The more roads that were fitted with them the more chance you'd have of wrongly interpreting the lack of them as meaning a streetlit road was unrestricted.

As it is, if a road is streetlit then we assume 30 unless proven otherwise, which gives us the best possible chance of hanging onto our licences! Let's keep the signage as simple as we can, rather than encouraging more of it.

The problem has only really arisen due to over-zealous enforcement of 30 limits on roads where a higher limit would be sensible and appropriate. If we could stop that then the problem would go away.

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PostPosted: Fri Oct 21, 2005 10:44 
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orange wrote:
Dixie wrote:
14wheels, I would edit your post and remove the reference number to your NIP. That’s if you don’t want the wrong people to know who you are.


It's not his NIP, look at the link at the top of his post.


Sorry forgot to put it in a different type text! thought the link would explain all.

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PostPosted: Fri Oct 21, 2005 10:52 
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14wheels wrote:
- **It’s not about getting people to obey the speed limit, that’s the job of the police. Our job is to try and prevent needless death and injury on the roads. We do that by identifying the worst casualty/fatal crash “black spots” and installing cameras at them, in order to encourage motorists to watch their driver behaviour – particularly their speed. Why speed? Because the fatalities and casualties at these “black spots” have mostly been caused by drivers travelling at excess speed for the conditions. Why cameras? Because they are proven to be the most effective, high visibility deterrent to speeding behaviour. More info is attached that we hope you will find useful and relevant


Surely if it was about monitoring our driving habits then maybe they should consider a wee bit of flexibility when they catch offending motorist, perhaps in the form of a written warning you could get 2 warnings and then they could start sending you NIP's, it would certainley make the motoring public look at camera's in a different light.

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PostPosted: Fri Oct 21, 2005 10:58 
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Dixie wrote:
orange wrote:
Dixie wrote:
14wheels, I would edit your post and remove the reference number to your NIP. That’s if you don’t want the wrong people to know who you are.


It's not his NIP, look at the link at the top of his post.


Whoops! :o ah well, no harm done.:lol:


I hope that the people who put this up on the website had this guy's permission to do so. I would hate to think that a letter I wrote protesting my innocence of an offence, with full name and address etc. would be posted on a SCP website, especially if it was without a right to reply as appears to be the case here.


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PostPosted: Fri Oct 21, 2005 11:02 
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Teepee wrote:
Dixie wrote:
orange wrote:
Dixie wrote:
14wheels, I would edit your post and remove the reference number to your NIP. That’s if you don’t want the wrong people to know who you are.


It's not his NIP, look at the link at the top of his post.


Whoops! :o ah well, no harm done.:lol:


I hope that the people who put this up on the website had this guy's permission to do so. I would hate to think that a letter I wrote protesting my innocence of an offence, with full name and address etc. would be posted on a SCP website, especially if it was without a right to reply as appears to be the case here.

I was thinking the exact same thing. Indeed, if he were to plead NG and go to court would he have a defence that the publication of his details by the Prosecution denied him the right to a fair trial?

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PostPosted: Fri Oct 21, 2005 11:09 
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Teepee wrote:
I hope that the people who put this up on the website had this guy's permission to do so. I would hate to think that a letter I wrote protesting my innocence of an offence, with full name and address etc. would be posted on a SCP website, especially if it was without a right to reply as appears to be the case here.


You’re quite right... I didn’t look at the link and that’s why I thought it was a genuine NIP. The trouble is you don't know if it is genuine.

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PostPosted: Fri Oct 21, 2005 11:26 
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JT wrote:
RichardB touches on the reason I actually agree with the way the law is framed currently. 30 repeaters need to be either mandatory or prohibited, there can be no grey area.

Imagine if 50% of 30 limits had repeaters. What message would you then get if a road didn't have any? Is it 30 or isn't it? The more roads that were fitted with them the more chance you'd have of wrongly interpreting the lack of them as meaning a streetlit road was unrestricted.

As it is, if a road is streetlit then we assume 30 unless proven otherwise, which gives us the best possible chance of hanging onto our licences! Let's keep the signage as simple as we can, rather than encouraging more of it.

The problem has only really arisen due to over-zealous enforcement of 30 limits on roads where a higher limit would be sensible and appropriate. If we could stop that then the problem would go away.


The last statement is the crux of the matter. The over-zealous enforcement has lead to a problem that didn't exist before. There are very many roads that have street lights that clearly aren't intended to be 30 mph limits, but which don't have repeater signs. There are others where the repeater signs are so far apart, it's difficult to know whether it's supposed to be 30 or another limit, so some drive at 30, others at a higher limit. Other roads have lighting that doesn't meet the requirements of street lighting, so a 30 mph limit does not apply. Some drivers may know that and some don't. Drivers have traditionally used common sense, and driven at an appropriate speed - but with automated enforcement, it's just not possible to rely on this any more. The whole system is an absolute farce.

I simply don't buy the excessive cost argument (From a local/national Government standpoint, anyway).

IF you believe that breaking the speed limit costs lives, as the authorities persistently claim, and that the cost of each fatality is £1.4m, then there's a fair pot of money to go for by installing repeater signs. Each one would only need to be at, say, 600 yards. I would guess that they would cost around £100 each to install, so that's 14,000 of them for each fatality - covering a total area of, say, 3,000 miles of roads. I don't have a feel for how large an area that would be, but you're probably looking at a small city or large town. One life saved in a whole city to pay for the lot.

On the other hand, if you don't believe that breaking the speed limit costs lives, then yes, they may not be needed, but then rigorous enforcement of the speed limit is, at best, a waste of time.

The law as it stands on repeater signs, and the rigorous enforcement policy is totally incompatible with one another.


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PostPosted: Fri Oct 21, 2005 12:35 
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orange wrote:
Dixie wrote:
14wheels, I would edit your post and remove the reference number to your NIP. That’s if you don’t want the wrong people to know who you are.


It's not his NIP, look at the link at the top of his post.


That's a shame. It could have got interesting.


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PostPosted: Fri Oct 21, 2005 13:43 
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JT wrote:
RichardB touches on the reason I actually agree with the way the law is framed currently. 30 repeaters need to be either mandatory or prohibited, there can be no grey area.

Imagine if 50% of 30 limits had repeaters. What message would you then get if a road didn't have any? Is it 30 or isn't it? The more roads that were fitted with them the more chance you'd have of wrongly interpreting the lack of them as meaning a streetlit road was unrestricted.

As it is, if a road is streetlit then we assume 30 unless proven otherwise, which gives us the best possible chance of hanging onto our licences! Let's keep the signage as simple as we can, rather than encouraging more of it.




None of this ever seems to cause problems in France, where some roads have repeaters and others don't. The rule there is that the 50kph limit applies within the bounds of a town or village delimited by the signs that announce the name of the settlement, unless the limit is overridden by other speed limit signs. Where the limit might be in doubt, becuase perhaps of the nature of the road, there tend to be repeaters.

ISTM that there are two things we need to get right.

1. There must always be a sign of some sort where the there is a change of speed limit. The presence of street lighting alone should not be sufficient. I was fooled by this myself recently, where a road that had previously been a 40 limit was reduced to 30 simply by removing the 40 signs. It does have street lights. But occasional users of this road might not be aware that the limit had changed unless it was brought to their attention by a sign.

2. Repeaters should be allowed where they would serve a useful purpose, even within 30 limits. We do not need to mandate that they are needed in ALL 30 limits, only that they should be allowed where they might serve as a useful reminder.


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PostPosted: Fri Oct 21, 2005 14:18 
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mrtd wrote:
... a road that had previously been a 40 limit was reduced to 30 simply by removing the 40 signs. It does have street lights. But occasional users of this road might not be aware that the limit had changed unless it was brought to their attention by a sign.

The sort of road that Camera Partnerships refer to by the technical name of "a nice little earner".

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PostPosted: Fri Oct 21, 2005 15:12 
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14 wheels said"Surely if it was about monitoring our driving habits then maybe they should consider a wee bit of flexibility when they catch offending motorist, perhaps in the form of a written warning you could get 2 warnings and then they could start sending you NIP's, it would certainley make the motoring public look at camera's in a different light."

Or get rid of the cameras and partnerships , and cameras , go back in time to when we had traffic police ( as in Durham) , who used to do something like this , only they didn't earn the government as much money.


:roll:


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PostPosted: Fri Oct 21, 2005 16:08 
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mrtd wrote:


2. Repeaters should be allowed where they would serve a useful purpose, even within 30 limits. We do not need to mandate that they are needed in ALL 30 limits, only that they should be allowed where they might serve as a useful reminder.


Such as those areas where cameras operate. :wink:
In this case, it should be a requirement. After all, if cameras are located in high danger areas, then the minimum that should be required is a reminder of the speed limit that they are supposed to be ensuring compliance with. Prohibiting the use of repeaters in such areas is absurd.

Anyway, there are a variety of opinions here, so I've started a new poll here.


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PostPosted: Fri Oct 21, 2005 16:46 
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:880: - these sort are starting to be seen more, but very cnically - as they often appear just before a scam, meaning a lot of people who think that the limit is 40 have to slam on the anchors or get a ticket.


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