Abercrombie wrote:
My knowledge of the HC tell me "do not treat speed limits as a target". Yet the examiner's checklist penalises "failure to attempt to reach the maximum speed for the road". So there's a problem here. Should I follow the the law, or some examiner's different opinion?
Both; there is no problem or conflict. The 'maximum speed for the road' need not be the same as the posted 'speed limit' for it.
Abercrombie wrote:
You got it. You practically must drive under the limit, else you'll break the law. And you must drive under the limit given any excuse, like a bit of rain, or when it's dark.
What a stupid way to word it. It is given any
reason, not
excuse. Rain or darkness needn’t be a reason (given how low many limits are already).
Abercrombie wrote:
That's the law, so who was wrong? The law, or the examiner?
Neither, so you obviously haven’t got it.
The Law or the examiner (or their guidance) need not be wrong in this case. The only party who is in the wrong are those who refuse to heed HC 169 when travelling significantly below what would be a nominal speed when there is a queue behind them. If they can't manage it (let alone pull over when appropriate) then they should hand in their licence (they obviously cannot fulfilled the obligations assessed during the driving test); those who can manage it but choose not to should and will be pulled by police for their spiteful/selfish/anti-social behaviour.
This is in the HC, it is tested in the driving test (theory and practical), and people can be pulled for not respecting it. You should have already realised that no amount of strawmanning, misrepresentation, misquoting, selective quoting, lying, or withholding the full set of possible options, is going to give justification people who drive needlessly slowly.