anton wrote:
Look at the video again. The asterisk appears just before the cross hairs hit the wing mirror of another car the width of the beam is about right for that to happen.
I don't see anything wrong with that, the measurement will have completed by then (or some of timings of the latter pulses were rightly rejected).
The width of the beam at 190m should be about 60cm, about the width of the plate on the car.
anton wrote:
Does the defendants car look like its going 20mph faster than everyone else? no.
Even if it was going at the same speed, it still proves my point, that the bounce off other cars is irrelevant. It's very unlikely he'll be going any slower.
Odin wrote:
Frame by frame replay shows that the speed reading is acheived when the silver car pulls across the laser cross hairs, so the speed reading is the speed plus the distance between the 2 cars.
Sorry no! I know exactly what these things actually do and I can tell you they don't work like that, trust me - I've actually tried it! Samples timings outside of the expected 40cm window are rejected; in this case that jump is many, many meters. More than 5 rejections will void the speed measurement. Even if the mirror did get in the way, the measurement will fail due to the colossal change of reflection coefficient.
Odin wrote:
The silver car is clearly going faster than the subject car
I can't see how you can conclude that. The silver car being in the same axis of sight as the red one, in a closer lane, means it will pan across the video much quicker, even when both are going at equal speeds. Your latest post below is invalid for the same reason.
Odin wrote:
Well put it another way, the video clearly shows that there is never a clean line of sight to the car.
There is a clean line of sight to the reg plate for the 0.33 seconds needed to acquire the speed (ignoring the fact the gun can reject some samples).
Odin wrote:
It is proven that the car is not capable of the speed claimed
Strictly speaking, it is proven that the car cannot have achieved that speed
during the time of the test (just like the disclaimer on an MOT certificate). You should realise that other external influences can factor in here.
Odin wrote:
bear in mind that actual speed of 98 would require a speedo reading of around 110 - 115 depending on tyre inflation speedo magnet wear etc.
As irrelevant as this is: No-one can ever assume speedo overread. I recently drove an old car where the speedo greatly underread (displayed 25 at a true GPS confirmed 30).