mpaton2004 wrote:
smeggy wrote:
Have you seen panic braking at camera sites? I know operators who have!
How many of these fatalities would have occurred had the camera already been installed? Many cameras are installed where none of the 4 KSIs used to justify them were nothing to do with exceeding the speed limit.
Yep, I've seen panic braking, sometimes when the driver has been at the limit or inside it but usually when the driver approaching the camera has been well over the limit (taxi drivers are notoriously bad for this behaviour!)
They do indeed. Pavlov dog effect

They seem to think all these speed doo-dahs are on 30 mph roads only. It's rather dangerous when they hit the panic button

You think they don't. We had this at Ings and one on a 60 mph limit in Lancs a few times now
martin wrote:
Still, your point is irrelevant to my question - how many deaths have been directly attributable to the presence of a safety camera?
How many lives have been "saved" by one
All they do is ping a driver who can be traced. Most of the cases I highlight are occurring daily and very few of these illegal scrotes are caught.

When they are - soul destroying for IG and Stephen and Ian as they get a ban and a fine. - then go off and do the same thing again

If they are locked up - not long enough and we all know it.

But these are the real killers out there and no speed camera is going to save folk from them.

On the R4 prog - Kev Delaney recounted how he was one of the first to deploy the scams when a senior officer with the Met.
On the prog - he was driving along with the BBC journalist - commenting on scams on that route.
Kev Delaney on R4 prog last month wrote:
This camera we are approaching now.. they claim a 100% success rate for it.
It was erected under the guidelines of 4 KSI at the site. Four kids died in one single horrific accident here. They were going too fast and they were also a bit tipsy. This was the
only accident at this site and it was a one off. There have been no other accidents here since. You could say it "regressed to the mean"
There are probably hundreds of cameras like it.. erected because of one horrific crash which happened by pure chance and has never ocurred again
martin wrote:
Quote:
There’s a big difference between exceeding the speed limit and excessive speed.
The way I see it:
Inappropriate speed is one which is unsuitable for the conditions.
Excessive speed is one which is both inappropriate and in excess of the limit.
You can accelerate out of danger as well as slow down. An example of this might to be to accelerate out of the way of something approaching you on a roundabout. It works for drivers just as much as cyclists (see IG's post from C plus magazine)
Or once Wildy

was overtaking a convoy of caravans on M6. They were at 60 mph in L1. Wildy tootles past at a legal speed and as she's about to complete her overtake and return to L1 ready to exit at our junction - the first caravan decides to accelerate. (He's very illegal by the way at this point in both speed and undertaking attempt). Wildy has a choice - she either stays legal and "hogs a middle lane" in a sort of bizarre "elephant race type scenario" or she drops the speed to a dangerously low level so as to drop back behind this entire convoy or she accelerates above the speed limit for a second to complete the overtake
She chose option three and within a blink of an eye reached a heady 70 mph - completed the overtake, returned to L1 with a courteous space to the muppet towing the caravan and eased back to 70 mph before reaching Shap

Now this was by far the safest and most logical option as the others could have caused some very real dangers to the those towing a van - one of which was old and a little "unstable" compared to the two more modern ones in that convoy.

(The muppet had one of the newer ones... Wildy said the middle one was " a bit dodgy and Hamster and Clarkson should have played "conkers" with it!

)
But Martin mate - there are then definitely occasions when exceeding the speed limit for an instance could save your life. Had Wildy done this very safe and life saving manoeuvre in front of a van at Shap - we might have been arguing this logic to a magistrate. We would also have used the illegal speed of the caravan tower which was far more dangerous as well as presumably they would have required their £60 from him too.
Fortunately though - this occurred before Shap and this was not a timetabled day either
I have no doubt that Ian would have pulled the caravan for trying to prevent an overtake and accelerating to create a danger to another road user too.
Er- that's why we want police and not silly vans who are just interested in speed and not the actual situation.
martin wrote:
Quote:
Yeah, like when a pedestrian (or an otherwise distracted driver) doesn’t look and places themselves in the path of the vehicle.
Which is why I said 'usually' and another reason to drive slower so you might have a better chance of not killing them if the worst does happen. It's very well to blame it on drunks, idiotic kids running out, etc.. they should be dealt with - but at the end of the day we have to try not to hit them. Sometimes it's not possible, granted.
But we still come back to COAST on this too

We also really need to deal with feral children, weak parenting skills and attitudes to alcohol in this country.
I once posted up the story of a teenager who drank 2 bottles of neat vodka - staggered out into the path of a car. He was speeding. He admitted this .. but even at a legal speed - she would have been just as dead given the alcohol levels in such a young immature body and the trauma of a collision

He escaped a death by dangerous conviction because of her drunken state. She died at the scene .. after 11 pm . Just aged 14 years. Her parents campaigned and got a speed camera. Funny how they discovered their love for her after allowing her to mope around the streets on chilly February nights drinking vodka like "pop"

Parental love - it's not about letting the kids have whatever they want. it's about nurturing and nurturing discipline, morals and ethics within them. That's the best gift you can try to give them.. and it is not an easy one to actually do either.

You can only try your best on that one
martin wrote:
Quote:
So what relevance is the speed limit if we are already able decide an appropriate speed? (at this point I should separate urban and non-urban roads)
Both are just as relevant. Urban has high hazard density, unpredictability. Rural has lots of nice hidden dangers (watch the Think! video on "a perfect day" showing examples of hazards in a rural environment!)
I must make it clear that I am not at all saying you should drive AT the limit all the time, just that you should never exceed it, before I get some cheap shots from other people.
See above comment re Wildy's overtake of the caravans which meant she had to accelerate to above the speed limit for a second or so to diffuse a rather daft manoeuvre

martin wrote:
Quote:
And what if like me you drive various pool cars?
Even more reason to know how the vehicle feels at speeds. It's no excuse - it doesn't take long to familiarise yourself with a vehicle.
Hmmm .. PC Milton :scratcchin:
But it does depend on the driver and the car. Some find it hard to re-adjust after automatics and vice-versa.
Besides you know your own car. Wildy and self each own a Moggie. Mine feels different to hers (a soft top version) and our two Jags are not at all alike either in "feel". It's a bit like a favourite pen or keyboard. You know the feel of your own. If you use another keyboard or even someone else's pen .. it somehow "feels" different to you

martin wrote:
Quote:
Ideally yes, but people have a habit of not respecting the law when it is being abused for the sake of money or saving face.
What about in the 1970s then when speed cameras weren't even heard of? What "money making" ideas did they have back then, when speed limit compliance was a lot worse (and cars were less safe)
You used to see loads of cops when I passed my test. They used to stop folk too.
Attitude then as now made a difference as to outcome
But people at least knew why they had been stopped and prosecuted.
martin wrote:
Quote:
How naïve. Do you know how speed limit reviews work?
What have speed limit reviews got to do with what I posted?
Lots. They are supposed to be doing an audit of all speed limits along with a complete revamp of the Highway Code.
By the way .. remember the CTC campaign and their cries of "victory" over 11K petition? I said at the time "wait and see"

The draft includes all the stuff they were protesting about . It also seeks to erase the word "accident" from each section.
Proposed rule 61:-
"Use cycle routes and cycle facilities such as advanced stop lines, cycle boxes and toucan crossings wherever possible, as they can make your journey safer."
See
http://www.dsa.gov.uk/Documents/consult ... _Draft.pdfand
http://www.dsa.gov.uk/Documents/consult ... report.pdfPlaying with words will not change anything though
martin wrote:
Quote:
Oh yeah, I regularly see cameras hidden behind signs and bushes:
The big "60" sign makes the speed camera irrelevant to those who obey the limit. It's not like you get flashed at 61 either.
Martin - far too often in Lancs - but to give Steve his dues - not so much here to be fair to him - we see them stationed just at the speed limit changes - pinging as people decelerate to comply with the new lolly - ie just at the border lines
And what about Folly Bottom? Incorrect placing of scams in tempo limits in Manchester (on archives here from Manchester press) and the M4 Wales stupidity?
These scams are not foolproof
