Rise in Speeding Fines Linked to More Drivers Law Breaking
Discussion
https://www.bbc.co.uk/articles/cm25ggyn3mxo
And the top three roads for speeding are:
When and Where Are Drivers Speeding Most?
Government data indicates that speeding is most common during night‑time hours, between 6pm and 5am, when roads are quieter and speeds tend to rise.
Vehicle‑tracking firm Quartix identified several hotspots earlier this year:
M77 Scotland: 52% of traffic exceeded the 70mph limit
B2087 East Sussex - Flimwell to Ticehurst: 41% of vehicles exceeded the posted limit
Warwickshire : Has the highest offence rate, one recorded offence for every 4.58 vehicles
Doesn't say why drivers may break the speed limit, perhaps that's an answer to a question that isn't wanted?
And the top three roads for speeding are:
When and Where Are Drivers Speeding Most?
Government data indicates that speeding is most common during night‑time hours, between 6pm and 5am, when roads are quieter and speeds tend to rise.
Vehicle‑tracking firm Quartix identified several hotspots earlier this year:
M77 Scotland: 52% of traffic exceeded the 70mph limit
B2087 East Sussex - Flimwell to Ticehurst: 41% of vehicles exceeded the posted limit
Warwickshire : Has the highest offence rate, one recorded offence for every 4.58 vehicles
Doesn't say why drivers may break the speed limit, perhaps that's an answer to a question that isn't wanted?
BlueJazz said:
When and Where Are Drivers Speeding Most?
Government data indicates that speeding is most common during night?time hours, between 6pm and 5am, when roads are quieter and speeds tend to rise.
... and it's more likely that signs will be missed in the dark. And drivers need to concentrate more on observation than limit observance. With quieter roads comes a lower perceived risk.Government data indicates that speeding is most common during night?time hours, between 6pm and 5am, when roads are quieter and speeds tend to rise.
It may be that speeding is not more prevalent, but that avoiding detection is more difficult and prosecution is easier (e.g. cameras work 24/7).
BlueJazz said:
https://www.bbc.co.uk/articles/cm25ggyn3mxo
And the top three roads for speeding are:
When and Where Are Drivers Speeding Most?
Government data indicates that speeding is most common during night?time hours, between 6pm and 5am, when roads are quieter and speeds tend to rise.
Vehicle?tracking firm Quartix identified several hotspots earlier this year:
M77 Scotland: 52% of traffic exceeded the 70mph limit
B2087 East Sussex - Flimwell to Ticehurst: 41% of vehicles exceeded the posted limit
Warwickshire : Has the highest offence rate, one recorded offence for every 4.58 vehicles
Doesn't say why drivers may break the speed limit, perhaps that's an answer to a question that isn't wanted?
The big surprise there is that it’s the 70mph section, not the section with lower speed limits, which basically encompasses the whole road inside the Glasgow boundary. And the top three roads for speeding are:
When and Where Are Drivers Speeding Most?
Government data indicates that speeding is most common during night?time hours, between 6pm and 5am, when roads are quieter and speeds tend to rise.
Vehicle?tracking firm Quartix identified several hotspots earlier this year:
M77 Scotland: 52% of traffic exceeded the 70mph limit
B2087 East Sussex - Flimwell to Ticehurst: 41% of vehicles exceeded the posted limit
Warwickshire : Has the highest offence rate, one recorded offence for every 4.58 vehicles
Doesn't say why drivers may break the speed limit, perhaps that's an answer to a question that isn't wanted?
BlueJazz said:
Warwickshire : Has the highest offence rate, one recorded offence for every 4.58 vehicles
Doesn't say why drivers may break the speed limit, perhaps that's an answer to a question that isn't wanted?
IIRC Warwickshire changed almost _all_ their NSL's to 50's (as well as downgrading a number of other limits) some (many!) years back. So maybe this is the consequence. Doesn't say why drivers may break the speed limit, perhaps that's an answer to a question that isn't wanted?
I know I've lost respect for speed limits being set appropriately, that doesn't mean I don't follow them but I zero faith that there is a good reason behind them.
Fastdruid said:
BlueJazz said:
Warwickshire : Has the highest offence rate, one recorded offence for every 4.58 vehicles
Doesn't say why drivers may break the speed limit, perhaps that's an answer to a question that isn't wanted?
IIRC Warwickshire changed almost _all_ their NSL's to 50's (as well as downgrading a number of other limits) some (many!) years back. So maybe this is the consequence. Doesn't say why drivers may break the speed limit, perhaps that's an answer to a question that isn't wanted?
I know I've lost respect for speed limits being set appropriately, that doesn't mean I don't follow them but I zero faith that there is a good reason behind them.
Terminator X said:
All limits seem 10mph too slow to me other than say 20 past a school which is fine. All praise to Waze.
TX.
I live in a residential street where the speed limit is 30mph and that clearly isnt a safe or reasonable speed for people to drive. It's narrow and there are parked cars on both sides. 2 parked cars have been written off in the last 18 months. We are nowhere near a school. TX.
Randy Winkman said:
Terminator X said:
All limits seem 10mph too slow to me other than say 20 past a school which is fine. All praise to Waze.
TX.
I live in a residential street where the speed limit is 30mph and that clearly isnt a safe or reasonable speed for people to drive. It's narrow and there are parked cars on both sides. 2 parked cars have been written off in the last 18 months. We are nowhere near a school. TX.
TX.
alangla said:
The big surprise there is that it s the 70mph section, not the section with lower speed limits, which basically encompasses the whole road inside the Glasgow boundary.
The 70 section has average speed cams, the section inside Glasgow doesn't. Almost nobody sticks to the 50 limit.Can't remember the last time I saw a camera van on the Glasgow part of the A77.
In fact aside from the fixed cameras speed enforcement is noticeably light around Glasgow. I drive throughout greater Glasgow and Inverclyde for my job and camera vans or police speed traps are like hens teeth.
Perhaps a consequence of the cutting of traffic police numbers?
Edit, actually reading the article... " Vehicle‑tracking firm Quartix identified several hotspots earlier this year:
M77 Scotland: 52% of traffic exceeded the 70mph limit"
So not speed cams - tracking. I would suggest most of that 52% is people fractionally over at 71 or 72. Any time I have driven the A77 south of Glasgow everyone sits around a true 70mph. There is only a tiny fraction more than a few mph over the limit. So technically speeding but not with any link to speeding fines as the headine suggests.
Edited by irc on Wednesday 22 April 00:37
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