RE: Texas to introduce 85mph speed limit
RE: Texas to introduce 85mph speed limit
Tuesday 12th June 2012

Texas to introduce 85mph speed limit

Yee-hah etc, as Lone Star state brings in second-highest limit in the world


Not the subject of an 85 limit. But still a road in Texas
Not the subject of an 85 limit. But still a road in Texas
A new stretch of highway in Texas is to become first US road with an 85mph speed limit, the Texas Department of Transportation has revealed.

The new road - named Texas State Highway 130 and running between San Antonio and Austin, if you were wondering - will be the second-fastest limited road in the world, with only some roads in Poland and Germany that have 140km/h limits (about 86mph) being faster. Of course, there are also the unrestricted sections of Germany's autobahns to consider, but they don't have limits at all...

Drag racing, Texas style
Drag racing, Texas style
Texas has form as the fastest stat, too. It and Utah are the only states with an upper speed limit of 80mph already. Although before the oil crisis-induced 55mph speed limit was brought in across the US in 1974, some roads in Montana and Nevada had no limits at all.

We wonder what the British road safety lobby would make of this, considering how exercised they're getting about a planned trial of 80mph limits on some UK motorways... though no doubt it will be the perfect place to give your Ferd F-Teenthousand a run out...

Author
Discussion

GingerWizard

Original Poster:

4,721 posts

215 months

Tuesday 12th June 2012
quotequote all
That road in the picture is good for about 140mph in my book.....

Dagnut

3,515 posts

210 months

Tuesday 12th June 2012
quotequote all
Depends on what car you're driving...I think it should be weight restricted..

Stopping an F450 from 85mph is completely different proposition from stopping a Z06...and also the obvious impact of failing to stop an F450 @ 84mph compared with a normal saloon car

Yorkshirepud

136 posts

201 months

Tuesday 12th June 2012
quotequote all
Never reaslised that's why the US had a 55mph limit. Why don't they just use more efficient engines like the rest of the world?

MarkoNoTVR

1,139 posts

251 months

Tuesday 12th June 2012
quotequote all
"No replacement for displacement". Part of the American constitution. smile

Not complaining based on a ride in Sagaris with a 7L LS lump in it......I know it feels to be a photon now. smile

cay

362 posts

173 months

Tuesday 12th June 2012
quotequote all
Kind of makes sense.

OK, not Texas but I remember driving through Death Valley, the road was fairly straight, empty and went on for about 400 miles! The limit was 55 IIRC.

I ended up doing around 80-90 just to stay awake, luckily there weren't any troopers hiding out as I probably would have ended up in front of the local judge!

Snowman23

254 posts

222 months

Tuesday 12th June 2012
quotequote all
Realistically, this is the UK motorway 'speed limit', based on my experiences over the years of driving on our lovely motorways anyway

I wonder what the tolerance for speeds above 85 will be in Texas?

MattDell

3,273 posts

172 months

Tuesday 12th June 2012
quotequote all
I've driven once from central Montana to western(ish) Montana. 8 hours of nothingness, you can understand why the speed limits are higher and the enforcement is even less-so.

Oh, and that's right... 8 hours and we didn't even go halfway through the state.

-Matt

nobby c

86 posts

223 months

Tuesday 12th June 2012
quotequote all
Snowman23 said:
Realistically, this is the UK motorway 'speed limit', based on my experiences over the years of driving on our lovely motorways anyway

I wonder what the tolerance for speeds above 85 will be in Texas?
Having driven in Texas many times over the years my guess will be virtually zero,having been pulled over a few years ago for 57 in a 55!

nobby c

86 posts

223 months

Tuesday 12th June 2012
quotequote all
Snowman23 said:
Realistically, this is the UK motorway 'speed limit', based on my experiences over the years of driving on our lovely motorways anyway

I wonder what the tolerance for speeds above 85 will be in Texas?
Having driven in Texas many times over the years my guess will be virtually zero,having been pulled over a few years ago for 57 in a 55!

torque torque

8 posts

179 months

Tuesday 12th June 2012
quotequote all
everything is bigger and better in Texas.. shoot

M400 NBL

3,541 posts

229 months

Tuesday 12th June 2012
quotequote all
I know it's not flat, but the road in the pic is ideal for vmaxing.

As long as the roads are, they aren't wide like motor/freeways, so 85mph is a reasonable speed limit.

Hoofy

78,808 posts

299 months

Tuesday 12th June 2012
quotequote all
GingerWizard said:
That road in the picture is good for about 140mph in my book.....
Until you hit that lump in the distance and go airborne, landing in the hills. Doesn't help that the road veers off to the left after the jump. jester

300bhp/ton

41,030 posts

207 months

Tuesday 12th June 2012
quotequote all
Some places in Montana in 1996 had no daylight speed limit, only a limit at night. Got a picture somewhere of one of the sign posts.

ecs0set

2,489 posts

301 months

Tuesday 12th June 2012
quotequote all
Hoofy said:
Until you hit that lump in the distance and go airborne, landing in the hills. Doesn't help that the road veers off to the left after the jump. jester
Even the little dip 200 feet away would seriously discolour your trousers at 140mph!

Hoofy

78,808 posts

299 months

Tuesday 12th June 2012
quotequote all
ecs0set said:
Even the little dip 200 feet away would seriously discolour your trousers at 140mph!
biggrin Aye. But at least the road continues so you may be fine. If you hit the lump straight on. And your tyres have equal grip. biggrin

300bhp/ton

41,030 posts

207 months

Tuesday 12th June 2012
quotequote all
tut tut tut wink



cough cough


Some seriously quick too.

CraigyMc

17,914 posts

253 months

Tuesday 12th June 2012
quotequote all
300bhp/ton said:
Some places in Montana in 1996 had no daylight speed limit, only a limit at night. Got a picture somewhere of one of the sign posts.
It was a limit based on "reasonable and prudent", whatever that means.
I think in practise it meant 100mph or so in daylight, with good driving conditions.
Looking up the dates it was from 1995-1999. The limit these days is 75mph, whihc sadly was the limit the last time I was in Helena.

C

Bodo

12,425 posts

283 months

Tuesday 12th June 2012
quotequote all
article said:
...will be the second-fastest limited road in the world, with only some roads in Poland and Germany that have 140km/h limits (about 86mph) being faster...
There were discussions in the past to try a 140km/h limit on 42km of autobahn in Niedersachsen; however I've never seen it installed. So no 140 limit in Germany; the highest I've seen is 130.

mgrays

189 posts

207 months

Tuesday 12th June 2012
quotequote all
Some of the existing roads that are 80mph are not that nice (lumpy back road trunk roads between San Antonio and Houston) but then you get back to the freeway (Dual carriageway) and 55mph limit where 85mph needs you to be alert for plod but can be done.. odd times it is both lanes at that speed in places but not very often. Of course it is the freeways that should be 85mph .. but that is not what has had it's limits raised.

Heard many moons ago about "revenue raising forces" where one dog town would have 2-3 squad cars financed by passing out of town traffic i.e. it was their "industry". Never seen or heard anyone back this up though but used to be careful on that count when wandering around.

Sicob

478 posts

245 months

Tuesday 12th June 2012
quotequote all
Never seen anyone drive through a DIY store. Let alone at 85mph. Would make paint selection tricky.