robbert12 wrote:
you lot need to get real! if our roads are so safe that we dont need to do anything about speeding etc how do you account for the massive death and injury toll on our roads every year? perhaps you dont like to think about reality!
If you read the safe speed site a bit more you'll find a bit more information... Firstly read
http://www.safespeed.org.uk/roadsafety.html and you'll find out a bit about what safe speed is about...
After you have read the road safety document you may wish to read the safe speed claims at
http://www.safespeed.org.uk/proposals.html. As far as I know this is what safe speed 'fights' for.
To continue along what safe speed actually fights for (correct me if I'm wrong), we don't condone/encourage law breaking, and therefore 'speeding', but after some research you'll find that speed, as in breaking the law speed, isn't necessarily the major factor in many accidents, but this major factor can be driver error, car maintainance levels, road conditions, weather, etc... Looking at the number of road deaths after speed cameras were wildly introduced, the drop is minimal (I think), and the number of deaths may have actually increased slightly, or stayed the same (again I can't quote statistics).
Speed cameras are useful in some, I repeat, some circumstances, but they cannot be used as a replacement for properly trained police drivers. There are many times when speed cameras are inappropriate, as they cannot take into consideration road conditions, weather, traffic levels... Whereas a police officer can do all these things... To give an example of this... A speed camera is installed on the outskirts of a village in the countryside. A main single carriageway road runs through this village, and the speed limit through the village is 30mph. There is a school on this main road, and local residents have complained enough about wanting a speed camera at this location, so, they get it. Now, this speed camera does not know that 30mph is lethal speed, and when you hit a child at 30mph there is roughly 50:50 chance they will die (remember reading this somewhere I think). So 30mph is lethal speed. Yet, at 3am, when there are absolutely no children around, the camera operates the same way, watching for the same speed of 30mph... In this case it may be safe to do 40 or 50mph, yet you get snapped the same.
That's the case against speed cameras fought, not terribly well, but feel free to add/pick holes...
Something that is left out of our 'basic' driver training is being able to judge what is a safe speed for the conditions. This is something else safe speed feels strongly about. This means that when you are on an ungritted road and there are a few inches of snow lying on the road, even if it's NSL, you don't drive at that speed, that would probably be dangerous. In such circumstances it would be more correct to drive at, say, 20mph. This is sort of brought into the theory test as braking distances, but you need to know that it can take 10 times further, or more, to brake in snow, or 2 times (or slightly more) to stop in rain. This idea isn't drilled into learner drivers enough, and it should be. Another part is the '2 second rule' that learners are taught. This is a good idea, a nice rhyme to say over to yourself, and always good for a quick check if you think you may have strayed slightly close to the car in front...
Sorry, I have rambled slightly, and my post is probably all gobbildygook...
Just edited this to say:
Don't forget, this is just the tip of the iceberg, so to speak, you will get a lot more information by reading the safe speed website, and probably by talking to the more experienced drivers on the forum.