ElandGone wrote:
SafeSpeed wrote:
Since the purpose of the ACPO guidelines is to cover 'measurement uncertainties' we have absolutely no idea.
We may have thousands who were travelling at 71mph true, but were recorded as travelling at 79mph and prosecuted.
Clearly anyone prosecuted at 71mph (recorded) could turn up in court and claim that there was no proof of any offence because legal speeds were within the range of measurement errors. This is why the ACPO guidelines exist, but they cut both ways.
Perhaps I worded my question incorrectly?
Maybe...
" but you don't HEAR OF many (if any) convictions for travelling at that speed do you?" is better?
Not really better, no.
Measurement is a branch of science or engineering in its own right. The following errors apply to all measurement instruments:
- 'Calibration' or 'function' errors in zero, scale
and linearity
- measurement errors in noise and quantisation
In the case of Police speed measuring equipment there are also:
- 'noise' errors within the equipment
- operator errors (for example moving a gun at 0.5mph while making the measurement will add or subtract 0.5mph)
- cosine error
And all of the above applies when the instrument is working
perfectly.
So when the gun says, say, 79mph, we are only able to prove in court that the vehicle was travelling between, say 70mph and 88mph true speed.
But if the gun says 71mph we can only prove in court that the speed was between, say, 62mph and 80mph true speed. i.e. we can't prove that there was any offence. THAT's why you don't hear of 71mph prosecutions... THAT's why ACPO issued guidelines.