SafeSpeed wrote:
That's not right is it? By far the most common accident type in "tailgating environments" (like motorways) is the shunt.
OK, I was just voicing my 'gut instinct' that, with the habitual and almost mandatory tailgating I see each morning and evening on the M54, there
should be more multiple vehicle shunts than there actually are.
adam.l wrote:
rigpig, if you could tell me how to do quotes I'd quote you
Just press the quote button in the top right corener of the post you wish to quote. It'll quote the whole post, just delete the bits you don't want quoting. You'll see how a quote is formatted that way too. (How many times can you quote the word quote in one quote

)
Lawman1965 wrote:
As a police officer I would be very unhappy if some of the speed limits were increased (with the exception of the motor-way by 10mph). My reasons for this is the level of competance of most drivers. I would guess that most of the poeple that post on this site are, by the very fact they are posting here, aware of the dangers of speed and are safe drivers. But most of the public in this land are not and without educating them further and changing driving behaviour it simply would not be safe to mess with limits (other than reducing them).
And herein lies my mental predicament with Pauls core arguments. Most of the folks who post here do so because of a shared interest in the process of driving and of road safety, plus a dislike (with varying degrees of passion) for speed enforcement in its current form. Many of the topics posted here discuss the issues to a depth that many of the driving public are either not prepared to consider themselves or (and I'll say this at the risk of appearing arrogant) are
capable of considering themselves.
For the vast majority, driving is the process of fumbling for the keys at the start of the journey, doing stuff in the middle, some of which may be that "ill advised but what the hell everyone does it and if I didn't do it as well I never get anywhere" kind of stuff then chucking the keys on the mantlepice at the end and forgetting about the whole thing.
For these people, simplicity is the key, and if that means driving below the speed of an arbitrary limit then thats the way it has to be. Meanwhile the more considered drivers get 'penalised'...<shrugs>.
The idea of a multiple tiered system in which drivers qualified to a higher level are less constrained seems attractive (particlarly if you are already an advanced driver) but the practicalities render the entire idea fanciful and unworkeable.
Lawman1965 wrote:
The government really needs to do more than just punish the motorist - it needs to educate as well, but, I guess that this will cost and if it means paying out then it's not likely to happen unless funded by the drivers
This is the really sad part isn't it? We've had two reports this year damning the standard of motorway driving in the Uk (Lane Discipline and Tailgating) and yet nothing gets done to educate motorists out of these bad habits. As a result, bad habits become 'driving norms' and then where do we go?
Hmmm, was that a bit of a rant? Hope not
