Grumpy Old Biker wrote:
handy wrote:
PeterE wrote:
handy wrote:
If the speed limit was correct there wouldn't be any problem with this. Actually If the speed limit was set correctly and there was a mass education to explain what the word "limit" means, with worked examples and a discussion paper examining the difference between "limit" and "target".
To imagine you can somehow get an absolutely "correct" speed limit is a chimaera. A speed limit is by definition a blunt and imperfect instrument, and can only represent a rough approximation of conditions along the length of a road. If it is never, in any circumstances, "safe" to exceed a speed limit, then that speed limit is set far too high.
your answer is proof of why we need
me, PLEASE READ IT THIS TIME wrote:
education to explain what the word "limit" means, with worked examples and a discussion paper examining the difference between "limit" and "target".
I've been keeping up with you so far - but you've lost me now.
You've acknowledged that Speed Limits are usually wrong - not quite sure if you agree with
PeterE about a correct limit being a chimera, and you now seem to think that mass education on the meaning of the words "Speed Limit" is the solution!?!
Unless you're playing with semantics, do you not think that the government has been performing "mass education" for years now?
I do not agree with PeterE - he has missed the point of the word "limit", hence my repetition.
I can't recall any Government message telling me that the limit is something to drive within, rather than at. The only mass thing the government seems to be good at is mass debate
I will try to explain this in simple terms for you:
This site suggests that a major problem with "the system" is that some drivers (swayed by government rhetoric and policy) assume that the speed on the sign is safe, and speed above that is inherently unsafe. This, I think we can all agree, is not true.
The problem is that the limits are often too low, sometimes (not as often) too high, and are inflexible for changing conditions.
Taking each of these issues in turn:
Too Low
Some drivers ignore the limits. The whole limit system loses credibility because of the drivers who ignore the limits. Most of limits were not always too low, but have become too low because cars (power, braking, even something as simple as tyres) have improved, roads have improved (surfaces, signage, engineering out things like difficult corners, bad cambers), and you could even argue that (some) drivers or driving capability has improved.
Too High
Some drivers assume the limit is a target, they don't drive "within the limit", they drive "at the limit". So when they scoot off NSL single carrieway into a field, there first reaction is "but I wasn't speeding".
Inflexible
The same road that can support a 60 mph journey in the dry becomes a nightmare in the wet. Stopping distances increase in the wet, snow and ice. Visibility reduces in the fog.
For me the most important thing is my comment on the second one - it's as simple as understanding that the limit is the outer edge of normally acceptable behaviour, not the norm to be adhered to. The first 2 issues can be addressed by the same thing - set the limit at the outer edge of acceptable normality (NOTE: Not the extreme outer edge of capability) and EDUCATE, EDUCATE, EDUCATE that the requirement for drivers is to drive WITHIN the limit set, not AT the limit set.
Just setting the limit higher without this education would be the wrong thing to do. Carrying out this education first, then raising limits where appropriate (motorways, as the best example) would work better. Then reducing the limits where it was necessary, but arguably if the driving public was starting to understand the
within message as opposed to the
at message, reduction would be less important.
Similarly, I've advocated flexible limits in the past, but I don't think these are really necessary if the
within message becomes commonly observed. There may be a case where flexible INCREASED limits are appropriate - for example, standard motorway speed limit is 80, overnight limit is 100.
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COAST Not just somewhere to keep a beach.
A young loner on a crusade to champion the cause of the innocent, the helpless, the powerless, in a world of criminals who operate above the law.