ChatterBank1 min ago
Speed limit
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.When the 70mph speed limit was introduced cars were far less safe; people didn't wear seat belts, tyres, brakes, crumple zones, were worse than modern cars. They didn't have ABS, no airbags, no laminated windscreens, no padded steering wheels etc. The list goes on.
In my opinion if 70mph was safe enough for a 1960s car then 80mph is safe enough for a modern car. If you compare the two then it is safer to have an accident at 80mph than it was to have an accident at 40mph back in the 60s.
I say increase it for motorways (some countries have faster limits, some lower).
Ggggrrrr - there are umpteen things l'd like to see monitored on the motorways & doing 80 mph isn't one of them!
It's the drivers who come speeding up behind you, flashing their lights for you to move over - when they can clearly see that you are already in the process of overtaking someone else in the overtaking lane & already doing doing 70mph. Morons!
I think I'm right in saying that the cause of most accidents on the motorway is a loss of concentration. That coupled with tailgating is a recipe for disaster.
Personally, on motorways I'd like to see the limit abolished completely: I think people are by and large very sensible when it comes to speed and regulate themselves dependent upon the level of traffic, conditions etc... I had occassion recently where I was on the M26 at 1am on my bike coming back from a trip to France - it was a beautifully bright night, the road was bone dry and it was deserted, and at one point hit 140: I am confident in my abilities on a bike so wasn't overly taking a risk, and I know there will be people out there saying i was irresponsible, but where is the harm when the conditions are good.
At the very least I'd like to see the limit increased to 100mph - as someone has already said, comparing today's cars with those in the 60s is like comparing apples with oranges - the 70 limit is an anachronism.
Also, I've heard (not sure how true this is mind) that generally the police ignore you at anything up to 90 on motorways.
As someone who has witnessed an horrific high speed crash on a motorway involving at least eight cars and where many died, I would disagree with nearly all of the above.
At a higher speed (even only 10mph faster) you have less time to think, less time to react and your reactions have to be far more proficient than what you would expect to avoid potentially fatal accidents in a manner which is safe to both you and other road users.
There is no way you could possible enforce a distance rule on drivers and the idea of distance cameras is totally impractical. People tailgate because there is a massive misconception that if you are going somewhere you have to get there as quickly as possible (a bi-product of today's lifestyles unfortunately) and because they are arrogant enough to think that they are a better driver and could stop in time if need be.
If people ignore the speed limits now they will ignore them if you raise them to 80mph so then what are you going to do? Raise it to 90 because nobody keeps to it anyway? Then what 100? 110? Completely illogical reason. If you raise the limit you will also be forcing people to drive faster than they may want to or may feel comfortable doing due to people trying to drive to the speed limits and not wanting to aggravate all the speed freaks that only care about themselves (these are the ones that normally cause the accidents and then disappear into the distance before you know it.
The argument about cars being safer these days is extremely valid for say, town centre or low limit roads but in a high speed crash over 70mph the majority of people would still die, think about it.
What really gets me is the number of 20mph zones that are springing up, usually along with road humps and chicanes.......does this really contribute to safety or does it only cause more frustration? I have a mate with a motorhome who has vowed never again to use our local signposted tourist route because of so called safety measures and potential damage to his vehicle.