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Re: Gatso camera case
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There is little evidence that these cameras actually reduce accidents, they are milch cows for the authorities. |
Re: Gatso camera case
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When you are driving you have to read the road and anticipate what could happen. A 30 mph area does not mean that you HAVE to drive at 30 mph or even faster if you think you are the perfect driver who is never going to have an accident or get caught speeding. It means that you are in an area where accidents are more likely to happen and you should be prepared by keeping your speed below the limit. But the point that some of us are trying to make is that accidents DO happen and the faster you are travelling, the more serious the consequences. A couple of questions for you. 1 Do you deliberately break the speed limit? 2 If you do, why? |
Re: Gatso camera case
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1. Yes 2. Because the limit is plain stupid. |
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It's a fact that the safest form of traffic is that which has a relative speed of zero. Overtaking when safe on a single carrigeway when there's some dolt who doesn't know what a white disc with a black diaginal line means and insists on doing 40mph (and normally speeds up to 45mph when they hit a 40zone! Or you get someone who sticks at 50mph no matter what the speed limit is, so they're not going slow for safety's sake!) I'd rather get past them as quickly as possible, even if that means going over 60mph for a few seconds |
Re: Gatso camera case
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Would you still break speed limits if the penalty was more severe, say a months ban for every MPH above the limit? I would say that most people break the speed limit because the chances of getting caught are slim and the penalty if they do get caught is no deterrent. That is why they are against Gatsos because it increases the chance of them getting caught. That plus the feeling that accidents will never happen to them. |
Re: Gatso camera case
I'm a firm believer that, on certain roads and at certains times of the day/night, there should be a minimum speed limit and that the maximum speed limits should be increased.
For example, motorways/dual-carriageways. Why should I be restricted to 70Mph at 2 O'clock in the morning on a long straight bit of road when there's nobod else about? Similarly, single carriage-way bypasses. Where I live there are a number of long, open roads. Well-lit and clear of all pedestrians etc. Why should I, in the wee hours of the morning, be forced to sit behind some muppet who doesn't want to travel above 30Mph in a National Speed Limit zone? I can't overtake because the lines down the middle are solid, I can't go any faster because the guy in front says that I can't. |
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If the lines down the centre are solid then there is a reason for them being so. Have a guess what that reason may be. Again, why is the driver doing 30 mph a muppet? There may be a valid reason for him doing that speed. |
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Rather than pootle past someone, I'll get past them asap thank you very much! |
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Re: Gatso camera case
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If a vehicle is suffering a mechanical problem that is preventing it performing normally, then they should not be on the road even if it happens during a journey. Quote:
Remember the massive pile up in Wales due to fog? Most of the cars involved were not breaking the speed limit, however they were driving dangerously by travelling at the speed they were, and as such tens of people lost their lives, again showing that driving well under the speed limit can be as fatal as driving over it. |
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Some problems enable you to drive slowly and safely to your destination or to a garage. Imagine you are disabled and your mobile can't pick up a signal on a deserted out of the way road. What do you do, drive slowly to somewhere you can get help or just sit and wait maybe in a freezing cold car for hours. Quote:
As for the Wales pileup, would you think the casualties would be the same or greater if the traffic had been going 10 mph faster? |
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Second point, is actually wrong to say. Different cars, different drivers, different conditions... all have an impact on stopping distances. You might as well say "that car would have stopped from 30 mph in a much shorter distance if it had ABS brakes. The driver is to blame because he chose a cheaper option on his car". As has been pointed out, why always assume it's the driver's fault? Last point - very poor. I think it is safe to say that nobody on this board would want anyone to die. But to then heap the blame on just one factor is grossly unfair. How about, for example: HERE LIES THE BODY OF X. HE GOT DRUNK AND WALKED IN FRONT OF A NON-SPEEDING CAR. HOWEVER IF THAT DRIVER HAD BEEN TRAVELLING AT 1MPH LESS HE MIGHT ONLY HAVE MAIMED OR CRIPPLED POOR X". The facts are that speeding is always pointed at. There are no GATSOs that I know of which can detect a drunk driver, which is far more dangerous in my opinion that having an extra stopping distance of a few feet. However there is a much smaller effort put in by the police to snare drink drivers than there is to catch speeding motorists. Incidentally, drink driving is (I believe) impossible to defend, unlike speeding. By the way, as opposed to justifying NOT using the Durham example, can you tell me why Durham IS such a comparitively safer place to drive? Perhaps if you look at the positives that Durham can teach, as opposed to pooh-pooh-ing something that puts a spanner in the works of your argument, then you may broaden your views on this subject? |
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The higher the speed, the more likely that death or injury will occur (your point). Death and injury can occur at the current speed limits too (my first point). If speed limits were LOWERED then death or injury would be LESS likely to occur (continuing my first point). You argument would suggest that the government, or whoever sets speed limits, cannot care enough about reducing death or injury on the road, if they allow speed limits to remain as they are, instead of reducing them to a much lower level (I am hoping for a response to this point, but not getting one). Put quite succinctly, the argument that speed limits etc are there to save lives is not accepted on my part. If that were the case, then it isn't working well enough. The reduction of speed limits would suggest that saving lives is higher on the agenda. Let me just say however, that I certainly do not want speed limits reduced, but I think a complete review of speed limits should take place. Some should be lowered, some should be raised. |
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