Jobs & Education0 min ago
National Speed Limit -V- 60mph signs
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No best answer has yet been selected by Bonzo 2000. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.There should not be a 60 in a circle - it is very deceptive.
Don't forget, that national speed limit varies for different vehicles. ie on a single 'a' road, national speed limit for cars is 60mph, but for a HGV it would be 40mph. If a 60 in a circle is inidcated, I am not sure that the police could enforce a fine on a 'speeding' hgv.
Or (thinking about it whilst writing) maybe that is why the 60 in a circle has been introduced, to let hgvs go faster where condiotions are suitable.
I may very well be talking nonsense here, but I was always under the impression that the sign we now accept as meaning "national speed limit applies" used to mean "no speed limit applies."
And that when it was decided that this was no longer safe, it was easier to keep the old signs and give them a new meaning than to rip them all down and replace them.
This was something my dad told me when I was wee though so may be rubbish!
There was an occasion some years ago, it may be when petrol was on ration due to the Suez crisis, the government decided to reduce the speed limit. The black bar then denoted a 50mph limit. Again without the cost of having to replace thousands of signs.
There are bits of truth in most of these posted answers.
1. The National speed limit sign means for vehicles with no individual restriction, 60 on single carriageways and 70 on dual carriageways and motorways.
2. The statutory speed limits of less than the maximum anywhere i.e. 70 apply and supercede all others e.g. when it is 30 shown everyone must stick to max of 30.
3. When a stat speed exceeds the max vehicle limit e.g. 50 mph limit on single carriageway still means an HGV is stuck with 40.
4. The black bar on white circle is a sign always used in conjuction with stat limits e.g. 30 limit brought in by 1935 RTAct, but always signified the upper limit and that was indeed limitless untill 70 was introduced.
Basically it matters what road you are on ......Motorway/dual carriageway/single carriageway...then what you are driving car/light goods/ heavy goods/coach and so on and finally accepting that some vehicles are themselves limited to maximum speeds - what the speed limit is applicable to that piece of road.
That is why we are stuck with heavies having to keep to 40mph on a main trunk road even when nat limit applies. Incidentally the single carriageway does not have to be an a road. A nat speed limit on a country lane is 60!