Jump to content


  • Tweets

  • Posts

    • I have never heard of any such law. Please post a link to what you have read online that explains this law. And please confirm whether you were ever married to or in a formal Civil Partnership with your Ex.
    • Today has been hectic so  have been unable to complete the whole thing. If you now understand it and want to go ahead with a complaint to the IPC, fine. If not then I won't need to finish it. But below is my response to your request  on post 64. No you don't seem stupid, the Protection of Freedoms Act isn't easy to get one 's head around at first. The part of the above Act referring to private parking is contained within Schedule 4 which you can find online under the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012. Section 9 of SCH.4 relates to how the parking scrotes have to perform so that they can transfer their right to pursue the keeper from the driver when the PCN is still unpaid after a certain amount of time. In your case the PCN was posted to you the keeper and arrived within 14 days from when they claimed a breach occurred. That means they complied with first part of the Act. The driver at that time was still responsible to pay the charge demanded on the PCN and PCM now have to wait for 28 days to elapse before they can write and advise the keeper that as the charge has not been paid, that they now have the right to pursue the keeper. They claim they sent the first PCN on the 13th March, five days after the alleged breach and it arrived on Friday 15th March. So to comply with the Act they have to observe Section 8 subsection 2f   (f)warn the keeper that if, after the period of 28 days beginning with the day after that on which the notice is given— (i)the amount of the unpaid parking charges specified under paragraph (d) has not been paid in full, and (ii)the creditor does not know both the name of the driver and a current address for service for the driver, the creditor will (if all the applicable conditions under this Schedule are met) have the right to recover from the keeper so much of that amount as remains unpaid. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------So the first PCN was deemed to arrive on the 15th March and for 28 days to have elapsed is when the time is right for them to write and say you are now liable as keeper. So they sent the next PCN on the 12th April which is too early as you could still have paid until midnight of the 12th. So the earliest their second PCN should have gone to you was  Saturday 13th April so more likely on Monday 15th April. The IPC Code of Conduct states "Operators must be aware of their legal obligations and implement the relevant legislation and guidance when operating their businesses." So by issuing your demand a day early, they have broken the Act, the IPC Code of Conduct, the DVLA agreement  to abide by the law and the Code of Conduct not to mention a possible breach of your GDPR .   I asked the IPC  in the letter on an earlier to confirm that  CPMs Notice misrepresenting the law was a standard practice for all of PCMs Notices or just certain ones. Their distribution  may depend on when they were issued and whether they were issued in certain localities or for certain breaches. Whichever method used is a serious breach of the Law and could lead to PCM being black listed by the DVLA . One would expect that after that even if the IPC did not cancel your ticket, PCM could not risk going to Court with you nor even pursuing you any further.
    • thanks jk2054 - do you know any law i can quote (regarding timeframe) when sending the email as if i cant they'll probably just say no like the normal staff have done? thanks.
    • I lived there with her up until I gave notice. She took over the tenancy in her name. I had a letter from the council and a refund of the council tax for 1 month.    She took on the bills and tenancy and only paid the rent. No utility bills or council tax were paid once she took it over. She will continue to not pay bills in her new house which I'm now having to pay or will have to. I have looked online I believe the police and solicitors are going by the partner law to make me liable.   I have always paid my bills and ensured her half was paid then see how much free money is over.   She spends all her money on payday loans and rubbish then panics about the rent. I usually end up paying it or having to get her a loan.   Stupidly in my name but at the time it was because she was my partner. I even paid to move her and clean and decorate her old house so she got the deposit back. It cost me £3000 due to the mess she always leaves behind.
  • Recommended Topics

  • Our picks

    • If you are buying a used car – you need to read this survival guide.
      • 1 reply
    • Hello,

      On 15/1/24 booked appointment with Big Motoring World (BMW) to view a mini on 17/1/24 at 8pm at their Enfield dealership.  

      Car was dirty and test drive was two circuits of roundabout on entry to the showroom.  Was p/x my car and rushed by sales exec and a manager into buying the mini and a 3yr warranty that night, sale all wrapped up by 10pm.  They strongly advised me taking warranty out on car that age (2017) and confirmed it was honoured at over 500 UK registered garages.

      The next day, 18/1/24 noticed amber engine warning light on dashboard , immediately phoned BMW aftercare team to ask for it to be investigated asap at nearest garage to me. After 15 mins on hold was told only their 5 service centres across the UK can deal with car issues with earliest date for inspection in March ! Said I’m not happy with that given what sales team advised or driving car. Told an amber warning light only advisory so to drive with caution and call back when light goes red.

      I’m not happy to do this, drive the car or with the after care experience (a sign of further stresses to come) so want a refund and to return the car asap.

      Please can you advise what I need to do today to get this done. 
       

      Many thanks 
      • 81 replies
    • Housing Association property flooding. https://www.consumeractiongroup.co.uk/topic/438641-housing-association-property-flooding/&do=findComment&comment=5124299
      • 161 replies
    • We have finally managed to obtain the transcript of this case.

      The judge's reasoning is very useful and will certainly be helpful in any other cases relating to third-party rights where the customer has contracted with the courier company by using a broker.
      This is generally speaking the problem with using PackLink who are domiciled in Spain and very conveniently out of reach of the British justice system.

      Frankly I don't think that is any accident.

      One of the points that the judge made was that the customers contract with the broker specifically refers to the courier – and it is clear that the courier knows that they are acting for a third party. There is no need to name the third party. They just have to be recognisably part of a class of person – such as a sender or a recipient of the parcel.

      Please note that a recent case against UPS failed on exactly the same issue with the judge held that the Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999 did not apply.

      We will be getting that transcript very soon. We will look at it and we will understand how the judge made such catastrophic mistakes. It was a very poor judgement.
      We will be recommending that people do include this adverse judgement in their bundle so that when they go to county court the judge will see both sides and see the arguments against this adverse judgement.
      Also, we will be to demonstrate to the judge that we are fair-minded and that we don't mind bringing everything to the attention of the judge even if it is against our own interests.
      This is good ethical practice.

      It would be very nice if the parcel delivery companies – including EVRi – practised this kind of thing as well.

       

      OT APPROVED, 365MC637, FAROOQ, EVRi, 12.07.23 (BRENT) - J v4.pdf
        • Like
  • Recommended Topics

Doing 60 in a temp 50 on M4


style="text-align: center;">  

Thread Locked

because no one has posted on it for the last 5428 days.

If you need to add something to this thread then

 

Please click the "Report " link

 

at the bottom of one of the posts.

 

If you want to post a new story then

Please

Start your own new thread

That way you will attract more attention to your story and get more visitors and more help 

 

Thanks

Recommended Posts

  • Replies 147
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Top Posters In This Topic

Points on your licence have lost allot of relevance. My family have fun trucks for many years and I too have driven HGV`s for 23 years (with only one conviction but that’s more luck I guess). Not too long ago we wouldn`t touch a driver with more than 3 points and even if they only had 3 points they would have to be a very good driver for us to take them on.

 

 

These days we take on drivers with a max of 9 points and it’s not only us, just look in the job centres, the papers, most if not all say a max of 9 points. The things is, not long back, to get more than 3 points, you had to be a pretty bad driver, now its bloody hard not to get some points if you cover the sort of miles an HGV driver does.

 

There are a few single carriageway roads( A303, A9 to name two ) throughout the UK that the police used to want HGVs to drive at 50mph which is over the limit( 40 mph ) as it helped with traffic flow and stopped car users getting frustrated and trying to overtake when its dangerous. Now with the cameras in place, HGVs stick to 40 mph and there are problems, anyone who has used the A9 knows this.

 

Cameras have their place in really dangerous stretches of roads but the powers to be just use them to make money, so they now popup everywhere, a bit like daffodils on the sides of roads. It’s time we got back to good old policing, a time where a police car would pull alongside me, doing 60 on a dual carriageway (Limit 50 ) and sign me to slow down.

 

 

We now spend far too much time, looking down at our speedos, making sure we are not above the speed limit, instead of looking at the road and that is far far more dangerous than someone slipping slightly above the speed limit.

Edited by cal37
My spelling

If my comments have been helpful please click my scales

Link to post
Share on other sites

Cal37, I have used the A9 hundreds of times over the years and it can be frustrating for other motorists to get stuck behind a HGV doing 40, and yes I have been guilty of doing 50 on there, purely to keep the traffic flowing freely, but I use the laybys to pull over and let queues clear. There are not too many cameras on the stretch between Perth and Inverness, and those that are there dont have weight sensors, so they will be set at 60 (as far as I know, I haven't been up there for a good few months now.)

 

By the way, have you got any jobs going? I need one desperately.:-)

jed

Link to post
Share on other sites

It’s time we got back to good old policing, a time where a police car would pull alongside me, doing 60 on a dual carriageway (Limit 50 ) and sign me to slow down.

 

I don't think anyones budget would allow for that many patrol cars.

Link to post
Share on other sites

Jed indeed there are only 2 cameras the last time i was up there but they also use mobile cameras too.I too have used the laybys to let others past, but as you will know,we wouldn`t get our runs done in our times if we pulled over at ever layby, so, you will always get people trying to overtake when its not safe to do. My point is that cameras do not always help and can at times make problems.

 

Conniff, i`m not saying thats the way to do it but in times past we all respected the police and if one gave you a telling off, you took note of it.Now we all hate the cameras and have lost allot of respect for the powers to be over them.( and all the other ways the powers to be dream up and parting us with our cash )

 

These days its all about targets,paperwork etc and they have no time to police like we'd all like them to do.As TD27 said, we need more police on the roads, not more cameras.

Edited by cal37

If my comments have been helpful please click my scales

Link to post
Share on other sites

I've just come across this thread and it's been a very interesting read. Here's my pinch of salt.

 

I do understand the OP's frustration, given the circumstances, however at the end of the day he has no-one else to blame and he should take the punishment and continue his life. Fair play to him, he did admit it was his responsibility, he made a mistake and hopefully as it's happened now, it should save him money in the future.

 

Yes, there are plenty of speed limits all over the place that are pointlessly slow for the road, also there are those that are dangerously fast - I'm thinking of the A5 through Snowdonia, a very bendy mountain road with hairpin bends and drops of hundreds of metres by the side of the road, but this road has a 60mph limit except through villages, even though in places you can only safely go 25-30 max. But this is all opinion and just because I think it's too fast/slow, doesn't mean it is, I'm not a perfect driver.

 

Yes, it is infuriating that the majority of roadworks you come across are completely unattended by any workers and are sometimes just a line of cones in the road blocking a lane but nothing whatsoever is going on behind the cones. To top it off they have temporary limits to protect their invisible workers.

 

But - and a big but - our opinion of speed limits doesn't matter: they are there and it is our legal requirement to obey them, and if we don't, we can be punished. Everyone knows that and thus there is no excuse for speeding.

 

What miffs me if people who try to wriggle out of a speeding charge with groundless claims that the technology was faulty and other such desperate excuses. Also those who get caught and act as victims. That is intolerable and I have no sympathy for those people.

 

I do have understanding for those who have made a genuine mistake and accept their punishment and move on with their lives. As someone else said, anyone who says they never speeds is a liar. I always stick to the speed limits on principle but sometimes I have caught myself going a bit over due to looking at the road rather than the speedometer, and when I notice this I slow down.

 

Speed cameras: yes, dangers are caused by drivers suddenly braking at the last minute, but it is the drivers who are to blame for this, not the cameras. If the drivers had been obeying the speed limit in the first place they would not need to brake. Also I'm not sure if the revenue argument washes - those who habitually speed know if they didn't speed, no revenue would be made, but the same people continue to speed and voluntarily fund these cameras they claim to disdain so much. They are paying their worst enemies to stay put.

 

Here's my thought on some temporary speed limits: sometimes I feel I am the only person on the whole motorway who is going at the 50 limit while everyone sticks to 70. Thus it is actually me who is the danger.

Edited by Tom87
Link to post
Share on other sites

 

Yes, it is infuriating that the majority of roadworks you come across are completely unattended by any workers and are sometimes just a line of cones in the road blocking a lane but nothing whatsoever is going on behind the cones. To top it off they have temporary limits to protect their invisible workers.

 

Where roadwork signs and speed restiction are left in place when the workman have gone it is to protect the newly laid surface.

 

A lot of damage can be done by an cars driving over fresh tarmac.While the surface is hardening, temporary speed limit signs are left in place because roadworks always involve cones and barriers across the carriageway, something you don't want to meet unexpectedly at 2 a.m in the morning.

Link to post
Share on other sites

I'm thinking of the A5 through Snowdonia, a very bendy mountain road with hairpin bends and drops of hundreds of metres by the side of the road, but this road has a 60mph limit....

 

Can't chavs in their Saxo's and numpties on their chicken chasers be directed there, 'no limit boys, away you go'.

Link to post
Share on other sites

wee splat!!!!

 

no my fav one is this:

Truck Photographs HGV LGV, A9 Berriedale Braes Caithness

 

done this many times on the way to Wick.

 

dx

please don't hit Quote...just type we know what we said earlier..

DCA's view debtors as suckers, marks and mugs

NO DCA has ANY legal powers whatsoever on ANY debt no matter what it's Type

and they

are NOT and can NEVER  be BAILIFFS. even if a debt has been to court..

If everyone stopped blindly paying DCA's Tomorrow, their industry would collapse overnight... 

Link to post
Share on other sites

Yes, it is infuriating that the majority of roadworks you come across are completely unattended by any workers and are sometimes just a line of cones in the road blocking a lane but nothing whatsoever is going on behind the cones. To top it off they have temporary limits to protect their invisible workers.

 

The rationale behind the existence of temporary limits when nobody is apparently working has been explained at least twice previously on this thread

 

 

What miffs me if people who try to wriggle out of a speeding charge with groundless claims that the technology was faulty and other such desperate excuses. Also those who get caught and act as victims. That is intolerable and I have no sympathy for those people.
The prosecuting authorities are also required to comply with the law in bring any prosecution. Ensuring that they do is not simply looking for a 'loophole' or 'technicality'.

 

Speed cameras: yes, dangers are caused by drivers suddenly braking at the last minute, but it is the drivers who are to blame for this, not the cameras. If the drivers had been obeying the speed limit in the first place they would not need to brake.
There is a growing tendency to brake automatically even when travelling under the speed limit. I have, for example, seen this time and time again on the A339 just north of Basingstoke, 2 x Truvelo cameras on either side of a single carriageway with a posted limit of 60 mph. At least 90% of drivers travelling below this limit still brake sharply.

 

Furthermore, you will see drivers braking for the cameras on motorways - regardless of speed - where a SPECS system is operating. By the time you reach the camera, it is too late - they work on average speed since the previous linked camera

 

Also I'm not sure if the revenue argument washes - those who habitually speed know if they didn't speed, no revenue would be made, but the same people continue to speed and voluntarily fund these cameras they claim to disdain so much. They are paying their worst enemies to stay put.
There is another thread running at the moment about someone who passed the same camera twice and is being prosecuted twice - after the event. If the first had been a traffic officer stop, rather than a revenue raising camera, then the second offence would probably not have occurred.

 

Since speed cameras cannot prevent speeding (unlike a Police Officer), then they only exist to penalise those who do speed ie by raising revenue.

Link to post
Share on other sites

I agree TD27,about mindset, but does it go further? There would seem to me, to be two types of mindset when somebody gets caught speeding. One will take it on the chin and say, ok, I got caught, fair cop. And the other one will wriggle like a worm on a hook. Is it something to do with a dislike of authority or control? 'Why should I do 50, when it looks perfectly safe to do 70 or 80?

(I am not one of the latter, I hasten to add.)

 

I have been driving HGV's for nearly 32 years, and am quite proud of the fact that I have got only one speeding conviction in that time. But, sadly, I think that the attitude nowadays is completely different. Points on your licence seem to be some sort of 'Badge of Honour'. I find this a strange way of looking at things, after all, more points on your licence inevitably means more money coming out of your pocket for the fine and increase in insurance premiums etc.

 

Education is, I think the way forward, but do you not think that you are banging your head against a brick wall sometimes TD27?

jed

 

Yep, you definitely have those days. But that comes with the territory really.

 

I'm sure we'll reach the stage soon enough with the current improvements in technology from GPS and number plate reading to a point where speed enforcement will be done essentially via SPECS on a nationwide scale.

 

I still think the investment would be better spent on more officers educating and reducing collisions. Equally society must plays its part in encouraging our younger generation, though not solely them, to take responsibility for their actions, good or bad. I'm far more likely to give a warning to a driver who holds their hands up than someone who plays the grey man at the roadside.

Edited by TD27
could have been misleading
Link to post
Share on other sites

Yes, there are plenty of speed limits all over the place that are pointlessly slow for the road, also there are those that are dangerously fast - I'm thinking of the A5 through Snowdonia, a very bendy mountain road with hairpin bends and drops of hundreds of metres by the side of the road, but this road has a 60mph limit except through villages, even though in places you can only safely go 25-30 max. But this is all opinion and just because I think it's too fast/slow, doesn't mean it is, I'm not a perfect driver.

 

Depends what you think is dangerously fast - if it was truly dangerous people would be flying off every day, but they don't. Most people are actually very good drivers and can judge speed well.

 

The three problems tend to be young male drivers showing off, the inexperienced, those who don't pay attention and certain older drivers.

Yet I wonder why the government concentrate on speed to the detriment of everything else?

 

But - and a big but - our opinion of speed limits doesn't matter: they are there and it is our legal requirement to obey them, and if we don't, we can be punished. Everyone knows that and thus there is no excuse for speeding.

 

Well they do, because most of us don't get punished. Everybody speeds and some speed more than others. There is usually no 'excuse', but that doesn't mean there has to be. You've speeded - life isn't fair - but you'll get in the car the next day and do it all over again. And so what? Chances are you'll never be caught again, or it'll be some years before you do.

 

What miffs me if people who try to wriggle out of a speeding charge with groundless claims that the technology was faulty and other such desperate excuses. Also those who get caught and act as victims. That is intolerable and I have no sympathy for those people.

 

I agree with you about acting like victims, but I have no problems with the attitude of "I got caught, but I don't feel like I've done anything wrong" and said person tries everything to 'wriggle out of it'. It's between you and your conscience - if you feel genuinely guilty and take your punishment meekly, then that's fine. If you don't give a stuff, I'm fine with that.

 

Speed cameras: yes, dangers are caused by drivers suddenly braking at the last minute, but it is the drivers who are to blame for this, not the cameras. If the drivers had been obeying the speed limit in the first place they would not need to brake. Also I'm not sure if the revenue argument washes - those who habitually speed know if they didn't speed, no revenue would be made, but the same people continue to speed and voluntarily fund these cameras they claim to disdain so much. They are paying their worst enemies to stay put.

 

I'm in the third category - I speed, I haven't been caught and I do think cameras are revenue raisers.

 

I recommend a really good book to everybody - it's called 'Scared to Death' by Richard North and Christopher Booker: Scared to Death: From BSE to Global Warming: Why Scares are Costing Us the Earth: Amazon.co.uk: Christopher Booker, Richard North: Books

 

There's a whole chapter on speeding and one thing that springs to mind is the government's claims that cameras reduce deaths. Road X has 3 deaths in year 1, 2 in year 2 and then 10 in year 3. Due to those 10 deaths, a camera is put up and the next year there are 2 deaths.

 

Government claims camera has cut road deaths by 80% yet conveniently forget that there are 1, 2 or 3 deaths every year and that the year with 10 was just an anomaly. The deaths returning to the mean is not a reduction of 80%, but you can see how the government's spin machine deals with these things.

Link to post
Share on other sites

Depends what you think is dangerously fast - if it was truly dangerous people would be flying off every day, but they don't. Most people are actually very good drivers and can judge speed well.

 

The challenge here is that as speed increases peoples judgement of it actually tales off and it can become a bit of a lottery.

 

The three problems tend to be young male drivers showing off, the inexperienced, those who don't pay attention and certain older drivers.

Yet I wonder why the government concentrate on speed to the detriment of everything else?

 

To be fair we don't concentrate on speed to the detriment of everything else. We do focus on speed, and in particular inappropriate speed. Equally however we also focus on some of the groups you mention above. Our priorities are around people using mobile phones, not wearing seatbelts and yes, speed. Within that, of particular interest to us are vulnerable road users who include young drivers and the elderly and motorcyclists among others.

 

 

Well they do, because most of us don't get punished. Everybody speeds and some speed more than others. There is usually no 'excuse', but that doesn't mean there has to be. You've speeded - life isn't fair - but you'll get in the car the next day and do it all over again. And so what? Chances are you'll never be caught again, or it'll be some years before you do.

 

Fair point, the so what is you reduce your reaction time if something unexpected happens. All very well you may say, its your life, your car etc, but if the unexpected happens to you causing you to do something unexpected to someone else and changing their life for ever?? Of course its all what if. But I haven't met someone alive or dead yet in the course of my day at an accident scene or hospital that thought they might be in a collision. It depends on what your definition of being caught is.

 

 

I agree with you about acting like victims, but I have no problems with the attitude of "I got caught, but I don't feel like I've done anything wrong" and said person tries everything to 'wriggle out of it'. It's between you and your conscience - if you feel genuinely guilty and take your punishment meekly, then that's fine. If you don't give a stuff, I'm fine with that.

 

 

 

I'm in the third category - I speed, I haven't been caught and I do think cameras are revenue raisers.

 

I recommend a really good book to everybody - it's called 'Scared to Death' by Richard North and Christopher Booker: Scared to Death: From BSE to Global Warming: Why Scares are Costing Us the Earth: Amazon.co.uk: Christopher Booker, Richard North: Books

 

There's a whole chapter on speeding and one thing that springs to mind is the government's claims that cameras reduce deaths. Road X has 3 deaths in year 1, 2 in year 2 and then 10 in year 3. Due to those 10 deaths, a camera is put up and the next year there are 2 deaths.

 

Government claims camera has cut road deaths by 80% yet conveniently forget that there are 1, 2 or 3 deaths every year and that the year with 10 was just an anomaly. The deaths returning to the mean is not a reduction of 80%, but you can see how the government's spin machine deals with these things.

 

Agree with the stats piece entirely.

Link to post
Share on other sites

To be fair we don't concentrate on speed to the detriment of everything else. We do focus on speed, and in particular inappropriate speed.

 

Fair enough. For example though, is 35mph in a 30 inappropriate speed though? A camera might catch you, but how many people will then spend the entire of their lives driving at 28mph or 29mph in a 30 zone? There is a clash between 'inappropriate speed' and the fixed limit on the road - they are often not compatible. Why are there so many dual carriageways with absurd 30 and 40 limits? I actually failed my first driving test for going 40 along long, straight dual carriageway because no way on earth did I think it could be 30!

 

Fair point, the so what is you reduce your reaction time if something unexpected happens. All very well you may say, its your life, your car etc, but if the unexpected happens to you causing you to do something unexpected to someone else and changing their life for ever?? Of course its all what if. But I haven't met someone alive or dead yet in the course of my day at an accident scene or hospital that thought they might be in a collision. It depends on what your definition of being caught is.

 

Which is why it would be madness to charge about at 50mph in a 30 zone in a built up area. But you're not immune from accidents and killing others from doing 50mph in a 50 zone.

Link to post
Share on other sites

Fair enough. For example though, is 35mph in a 30 inappropriate speed though? A camera might catch you, but how many people will then spend the entire of their lives driving at 28mph or 29mph in a 30 zone? There is a clash between 'inappropriate speed' and the fixed limit on the road - they are often not compatible. Why are there so many dual carriageways with absurd 30 and 40 limits? I actually failed my first driving test for going 40 along long, straight dual carriageway because no way on earth did I think it could be 30!

 

Al I do agree that there are times when 35 in a 30 or faster may be safe. Sadly they are only ever OUR best guess or judgement. Most members of the public are not on the roads, ie the same places 24 hours a day. However, the emergency services do respond 24 hours a day, hence, and I don't know this, you may well find areas where accidents have occured that you / members of the public are unaware of, thus necessitating the speed limit posted. Of course when you then see that limit it seems absurd and an over reaction. To answer your first question, 30 in a 35 may well be an inappropriate speed depending on the cirumstances, everything from time of day, school kids, proximity of elderly residents, riding stables, road conditions, weather, traffic flow etc. We want the government to set limits that are safe 24 hrs, in all conditions based on all driving mindsets and abilities. Yet we measure them based on our driving ability, mindset and time of use of the road and all that goes with it. The most overused phrase in accidents / crash's is 'suddenly'. I'm not trying to lecture here, just indicate the size of the task in doing something which on the face of it appears simple - setting a speed limit.

 

Which is why it would be madness to charge about at 50mph in a 30 zone in a built up area. But you're not immune from accidents and killing others from doing 50mph in a 50 zone.

 

At the same time Al, you also said that you were on piece of dual carriageway that was a 30mph limit, could that have safely taken 50mph?? This is my point - its all subjective.

No we're not immune, but we have to start somewhere and we also have to protect some parts of society from themselves. I'm sure where you live there is a road with a speed limit you feel is appropriate for it. If someone were to drive down there exceeding the speed limit and collide with your loved ones (god forbid) causing serious injury, and their answer was that in their opinion the limit was too low I'm sure you'd expect them to be dealt with by the law. Of course that accident could happen if they were travelling at the speed limit, but the likelyhood is reduced (all things being equal)

Link to post
Share on other sites

Yep, it's all subjective. However, when it comes to roads that have been 60mph since the 1960's and then the council reduces them to 40mph despite there never been any accident problems - that's what I find irritating.

 

Regarding your example, every case is different and excessive speed for the conditions is only the main factor in a small proportion of accidents. Bear in mind the average impact speed in a 30 zone is 11mph because people brake. If they were going 40 in a 30, the impact speed may be 20mph instead of 11. The issue would be if they hit someone at 40, and then I'd be surprised if drink or drugs weren't involved.

Link to post
Share on other sites

Agreed, speed is the MAIN factor in a minority of accidents. However, it is A factor in all accidents (sorry, collisions...). The speed of the vehicle at the time of impact dictates the seriousness of the damage and injuries caused to the vehicle/people. Even if the main factor is drink, mobile phone, lack of control, bad observation, etc., speed is still a factor in the collision - the faster you are going, the worse the damage/injuries.

 

There are too many people who use the "but speed is only the main factor in a small proporition of accidents" excuse to justify them going inappropriately fast...I say inappropriate because of course a large amount of accidents happen below the speed limit but still when the vehicle has been going too fast for the conditions. I lay part of the blame on the DSA on this mentality of having to go at the maximum posted limit, because on the driving test you have to go at the very maximum limit if possible, otherwise you are failed for failure to make adequate progress. This part of the test encourages impatient and dangerous driving as it implies to impressionable young/new drivers that they must drive at the absolute limit. Yes of course you shouldn't drive at 40 on a clear, straight 60 road, but there is nothing wrong with going at 57 or something.

 

Basically what I meant to say is people use this "main factor in very few accidents" mantra to make themselves feel justified/less guilty about speeding even though they know deep down that what they are doing is wrong and potentially dangerous, which I find a bit cowardly to be honest.

 

As well as because it's illegal, I prefer not to speed as it makes my life easier and saves me from losing sleep over "I wonder if I got caught by that camera I saw today", etc.

Link to post
Share on other sites

factor may be over egging it. it is an element in all RTAs - unless someone knows of an RTA where two stationary objects collided. relative velocity plus much other stuff factors into the 'damage'. though results at higher speeds will be more dramatic aren't most RTAs relatively low speed affairs ?

Link to post
Share on other sites

I recommend a really good book to everybody - it's called 'Scared to Death' by Richard North and Christopher Booker: Scared to Death: From BSE to Global Warming: Why Scares are Costing Us the Earth: Amazon.co.uk: Christopher Booker, Richard North: Books

 

There's a whole chapter on speeding and one thing that springs to mind is the government's claims that cameras reduce deaths. Road X has 3 deaths in year 1, 2 in year 2 and then 10 in year 3. Due to those 10 deaths, a camera is put up and the next year there are 2 deaths.

 

Government claims camera has cut road deaths by 80% yet conveniently forget that there are 1, 2 or 3 deaths every year and that the year with 10 was just an anomaly. The deaths returning to the mean is not a reduction of 80%, but you can see how the government's spin machine deals with these things.

 

The work of the late Paul Smith (Welcome to Safe Speed) demonstrated the very same thing - it's a mathematical concept known as regression to the mean.

 

Incidentally it is worth going to the safespeed site and having a look as it covers a lot of the points covered in the thread about the wrongs of speed camera's and the false assumptions being made.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

This does not constitute legal advice and is not represented as a substitute for legal advice from an appropriately qualified person or firm.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

 

Link to post
Share on other sites

I lay part of the blame on the DSA on this mentality of having to go at the maximum posted limit, because on the driving test you have to go at the very maximum limit if possible, otherwise you are failed for failure to make adequate progress. This part of the test encourages impatient and dangerous driving as it implies to impressionable young/new drivers that they must drive at the absolute limit. Yes of course you shouldn't drive at 40 on a clear, straight 60 road, but there is nothing wrong with going at 57 or something.

 

I've never heard that acusation laid at the door of the DSA before!

 

Saying they want you to go at "the very maximum limit" is a bit overstating it really. The phrase I use, and I'm sure many instructors use, is "to be going at a speed towards the speed limit if safe". "If safe" is very important in that sentence and you should also notice I imply not quite up to the limit, i.e. at around 57, 58 on a 60 road just as you suggested. This allows for a "little bit of creep" on the speed, for example if the road starts to go slightly downhill, without the pupil picking up a speeding fault.

Link to post
Share on other sites

  • Recently Browsing   0 Caggers

    • No registered users viewing this page.

  • Have we helped you ...?


×
×
  • Create New...