basingwerk wrote:
Yes, drivers have power hungry egos, that can be manipulated by the expert mind-management of advertising agencies.
Rather a sweeping statement that. If mind management is going on I'd say a significant amount of it is coming from the DfT. However, I'd agree that "power hungry egos" applies to some drivers, but I think the majority just want to get where they need to be, and get there intact. Whether current compulsory training and L test equips them to do so sufficiently is another issue.
basingwerk wrote:
Only a few of us are strong enough mentally to sustain prolonged media bombardment- most succumb to buying ever more powerful new vehicles in an endless and futile arms race, where only car companies profit. If only we could go back to the days when cars could manage just the NSL, sigh?
Current car advertising doesn't seem anything like as performance obsessed as it used to be. In fact I can't think of a single performance based advertising campaign at the moment. Probably there are some in certain magazines and motoring supplements, but I can't think of one TV car ad that's about performance. The closest I can think of is the Gene Kelly one for the VW GTi, and even that's pretty tenuous at best. While I'd agree that there's a worrying number of people who'll unquestioningly swallow any old crap that appears on the TV (which the government are just as able to take advantage of as advertisers), I think it's unfair and untrue to say that this has resulted in an "arms race" as you put it.
Challenge: name me one current TV ad that promotes either a car's top speed or its acceleration, or even mentions either.
basingwerk wrote:
Yes, we could get motorists to pay the full cost of the extra consultation and resources which would benefit them, or perhaps ask car and oil companies to contribute to road and signage improvements.
I'm not sure how you got onto that from my comments about consultation bascially being an illusion, but since you mention it we should ask why it is not already coming out of those contributions. In practice of course they already do. There's no ring fencing and so these things are effectively paid for out of general taxation. Personally I don't have an issue with paying for something that benefits me even if it's indirectly. I know you like to say that drivers should pay since they create the danger (arguable) but then shouldn't we extend that to say that criminals should pay for the construction, maintenance and staffing of prisons? Sounds like a great idea, but in the real world we'd simply have nowhere to lock criminals up. Same applies for people without children contributing to education, or healthy people contributing to the NHS, even the blind who contribute towards street lighting they cannot use. So why apply the principle to a large group of people that are basically law abiding i.e. make drivers pay for anything and everything that's vaguley connected with roads? Because you can? Because they'll cough up without much resistance? IMO that excuses almost any legalised mugging the exchequer could dream up, and is immoral in the extreme. If such a principle cannot or will not be applied evenly it should not be applied at all.
basingwerk wrote:
Gatsobait wrote:
basingwerk wrote:
Broken by the majority of drivers, you mean, but drivers are only one of the stakeholders in the speed limit issue.
All drivers are also pedestrians.
There is a matter of degree there. It is different to walk up the lane for the paper than to have to negotiate on foot the wretched city streets choking on traffic.
How is that relevant to the point that people demand one thing as a pedestrian and another when they get in the car?
basingwerk wrote:
Gatsobait wrote:
basingwerk wrote:
I dare say that balancing these priorities leads to some disgruntlement among some of the stakeholders.
I dare say that it's a near impossible task to satisfy everybody.
Shock horror! Do I sense a rare moment of agreement!

Rare, I know, but not unique. We've agreed on TIBMINs being a problem, if not what to do about them. I suspect we might disagree on how to solve the problem of these confilcting interests as well, but I'll happily eat those words if it turns out otherwise.
IMO we need to work towards the best for the most, and that should be determined as scientifically as possible by real road experts. All new limits should be considered as trials for a given period after implementation just in case the experts got it wrong. No limit should ever be considered permanent as any major changes could justify revision upwards or downwards. Consulting locals is fine but their say should not overule the experts, especially if the locals tend to bust limits themselves. Limits should always reflect what is needed, not what is wanted.
basingwerk wrote:
Gatsobait wrote:
Part of the problem is that the appropriate speed can vary by such a huge amount that it would not be appropriate to use either the low end or the high end as the limit. There's a nice straight NSL locally, no turnings or driveways, good for probably 80 in perfect conditions, maybe more. But covered in snow and ice something around 10 or so would be more like it.
You can?t be suggesting that someone changes all the signs every time it snows, so I assume you are saying that the human factor is very important, which it is.
Sorry, I thought I made it clear that the 60 limit in force there is pretty much ideal - I don't recall ever seeing or hearing of any crashes there - so no, I don't think there is any need for signs to be changed. As you say, the human factor is what's important there. A sensible limit has been set, the majority comply with it so no-one bothers to enforce it (there's nowhere for Talivans to park either come to think of it), almost everyone drives a bit faster in ideal conditions and almost everyone drives slower in poor conditions. It's absobloodylutely perfect. Well, almost. Like I said I've encountered TIBMINs who seem to think it's about 40-50, but then they also carry on at 40-50 through the 40 zone at the end, and though the 30 zone after that

. And of course HGVs are supposed to stick to 40 down there, which can create big queues and frustration as traffic coming the other way often makes overtaking an iffy prospect even to a suicidal driver.
basingwerk wrote:
Gatsobait wrote:
When they get the limits right it's virtually self enforcing.
When car drivers are in their right minds, it is. More often that not, they are off their heads, blaming everyone but themselves for their predicament, and refusing to pay to have it sorted out!
Then miraculously it seems that they are in their right minds as soon as they pass the top of the hill to get onto the straight bit. Who could have imagined a geographical feature having such a profound effect on the thought processes of so many drivers that encounter it? 'Course, that might just possibly be a load of b

ll

cks. Maybe it's just down to so few other road users being about, as more often than not they're off their heads and blame everyone but themselves for getting run over, and wouldn't even dream of coughing up towrds the trouble they've caused without someone putting a gun to their heads.
Actually I think it's neither. It's really very simple. The speed limit accurately reflects the hazards likely to be present and is more or less what most drivers would choose to do anyway. If you dropped it to 40 I am sure that the current tendency to comply with the limit there would vanish overnight -
without any real change in the speed of most of the traffic.