In another thread
warwickshire police the old thing about "perceptions of speed" came up.
Many folk (and I don't mean the folk around here) apparently haven't understood that "numerical speed" is fundamentally different from "appropriate speed". Our perception of each sort of speed is quite different and our management of each sort of speed is quite different.
Here's are two experiments:
Experiment 1:
Required: Wide urban road preferreably 40mph limit near a motorway and regularly visited.
Part a. Drive along the road after urban driving. Try to set your speed to 30mph without reference to the speedo. Cover the speedo over if necessary. When satisfied, uncover the speedo and record your speed.
Part b. Drive along the road after a long motorway drive. Try to set your speed to 30mph without reference to the speedo. Cover the speedo over if necessary. When satisfied, uncover the speedo and record your speed.
Compare results from part a to part b. Expected result: Perception of numerical speed altered by high speed run.
Experiment 2.
Required: Quietish wide roundabout near a motorway.
Part a. Drive around the roundabout as fast as you feel comfortable without reference to the speedo after urban driving. Record speed.
Part b. Drive around the roundabout as fast as you feel comfortable without reference to the speedo after a long motorway drive. Record speed.
Compare results from parts a and b. Expected results: Speeds from part a and part b are the same - unaffected by motorway driving.
Drawing conclusions:
If the expected results are achieved, we have proved that two sorts of speed perception operate independently. You'll probably be 15mph too fast on the urban road after the motorway run, but spot on for the roundabout.
Does anyone find their speed on the urban road UNAFFECTED by the high speed run?
Does anyone find their speed on the roundabout AFFECTED by the high speed run?