Ethan
Money List Winner
I do believe i have address the slow driver issue and have also said yes they do cause accidents themselves
I also dont believe i have suggested that people pootle along at 50 mph or 30mph on a motorway because that itself causes problems - also people doing 50mph in the middle of the road
Same with people doing 30mph on a 60mph road will cause problems and tailbacks
i would also ask how many tailbacks you see in housing estates because someone is driving too slow -
If someone is driving at the speed limit and causing a tailback then who is causing the problem ? The guy sticking to the limit - or the people behind him dying to get past because they want not need to get somewhere quicker.
You also get the moron who whilst you are driving at the speed limit is right up your backside , you also get the moron who isnt happy with someone doing the speed limit he must overtake where there is danger
People dont need to go above the speed limit - unless you can tell me a good enough reason why you "need" to go above the speed limit.
My witnessing my friends daughter being killed tuned me into a more aware drive i believe and made me want to ensure i was as safe as i could possibly be on the road - when i drive through residential areas im quite happy to drive a little bit slower to ensure that if a child did run out then i give them the best chance possible to survive if i didnt react in time or they were too close. I would rather get home safe with no incidents than get home a couple mins early but put people at extra risk.
I dont pootle along a roads at 30 mph when the limit is 60 , i dont hog the middle lane driving at 50 mph on a motorway nor do i do any other acts that i think might put myself and other drivers at risk.
People will never be able to cover every single possible event that "could" but when it comes to our safety then i believe there our people out there far more qualified than us who come up with there desicions on road safety.
But i will ask the question again - is there ever any occasion when anyone bar emergency services "needs" to break the speed limit set out by our governing laws.
Wrong question, though.
The right question is what speed best balances road and pedestrian safety versus actually allowing the world to turn? The answer is not that 29 is good and 31 is bad, but that there are speeds which are appropriate to road conditions, weather etc. On a quiet dry motorway on a clear Tuesday in summer, that might be 85. On a dark, busy wet evening in winter, it might be 45.
As for the issue about housing estates, the same general rule applies - there is a speed which is appropriate given the conditions. There are also residential roads not in estates, roads in urban areas with shops where there are pedestrians, etc etc, and a whole range of scenarios.
The point about the need to observe or not speed limits is an arbitrary and specious one.