weepej wrote:
DieselMoment wrote:
People still do 40 though. And why not - it's perfectly safe.
Until you have a crash.
There's nothing inherently safe about going 40mph, or 30mph for that matter.
I think you're wrong. I drove at speeds much higher than 40 yesterday, and it didn't cause me to crash.
But last year, I did indeed have a collision with a pedestrian which could have resulted in serious injury - to me - and I was only doing 12-15mph at the time. I was on my bicycle in Rose Kiln Lane, Reading - a well known retail park area. I was riding along a shared pavement/cycleway with nothing else in sight. Suddenly, a pedestrian bloke of about 35 ran out from the side having come out of a tyre/exhaust fitting place, and stopped right in front of me, facing away from me. I've no idea why he did this. I called out, hoping he'd jump out of the way, because for me to have swerved to avoid would have caused me to come off the bike. He turned but just panicked - stood there going "oh, oh, oh!". It was impossible to avoid the collision that followed, and I was thrown off and cartwheeled around to the right, landing on my right side. As I was about to land, I was convinced I was about to break my right arm, which would have been some considerable nuisance.
The cause of this crash was not speed, but like so many others was caused by human error, in this case by a pedestrian who ran out because (as he later explained) he didn't expect to have a bike bearing down on him. I pointed out the signs indicating that we were on a shared pavement/cycleway, but he had no answer to that.
The sooner people realise that it's NOT always the motorists' fault, and that pedestrians and all other road uses have their part to play in familiarising themselves with the hazards they're likely to face and the precautions that they must take, the sooner we might start to see the fall in casualties that the govt claims is already happening.