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PostPosted: Thu May 06, 2010 11:08 
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LingsCars wrote:
You (in general, plural) also ignore common sense facts. Like (for instance) the person with the Range Rover ignoring the fact that their Sprinter could probably be carrying 2 tonnes of unsecured load in the back which, when shifted by inertia can easily compromise the safety and stability of the van. This is unlikely to occur with cars. Ignore that their tyres are of a construction biased towards durability, not grip and performance. If you put those Sprinter tyres on a Range Rover, it would have far inferior controllability. Ignore the fact that therefore the brakes are less efficient. Ignore the fact that the van is more affected by wind and weather.


But Ling, how can this be true?! If you look in the Highway Code, produced by the "thinking people in office" :wink: you will see that there is no difference in stopping distance at a given speed for a car, truck or van!

LingsCars wrote:
Yet, we see vans being driven aggressively every day, by largely untrained drivers (untrained in how to cope with extreme situations), in a rush, under pressure of work.

Yes, I see it too. Tailgating, in particular, is a big problem. So remind me, how would limiting them to 75 help in the overwhelming majority of cases?

LingsCars wrote:
Vans are far more likely to be overloaded than cars. Probably more likely to be less well maintained, too, as the wear and tear on them is greater. In most cases lower speed limits on normal roads are ignored by van drivers and are not really enforced as it's difficult for the police to do that.

All these claims are pure supposition on your part. They are opinion, not fact. I happen to hold the OPPOSITE opinion. If you are willing to disclose the reasons that give rise to your opinion, I will happily do so too. As it stands, you opinion is worth no more than anyone else's on these boards.

LingsCars wrote:
Really, the biggest thing is the grief and distress caused by death and injury. Yet that is put to one side so you can "prove" your holier-than-thou attitudes to your (plural) superior driving skills can overcome the basic fact that a van travelling at 50mph is easier to control in extremis than one travelling at 60mph. Of course! If *YOU* were driving with your fantastic skills, the van would be safe at 100mph, with a tonne of load 0.5m away from the back of the driver's head. No way *YOU* would lose control, eh?
I say, a general reduction in speed is a GOOD thing, does not affect anyone's life in real terms (except perhaps saves it) and there is no God-given right to travel at ANY speed.


No, you're wrong. I don't think you will find a SINGLE PERSON on these boards that WANTS more "grief and distress caused by death and injury", Feel free to conduct a poll if you don't believe me. The difference is that you appear to believe that reducing speeds will achieve this, and the majority on here believe that it won't. The "thinking people in office" have been reucing sped limits and increasing the enforcement of those limits for 10 years now - with very little to show for it. (You have to remember that the KSI figures have been falling since the Second World War and they have not showed any improvement in the rate at which they have ben falling over the time that speed has been the main focus of the government's policies - in fact, they've got worse). Clearly, I have some, limited, sympathy for your over-simplistic "slow them down then everything will be OK" views, but not until you limit every vehicle to a speed below which it would be incapable of causing death or serious injury. As that's rather les than walking pace, for most vehicles, it's pretty obvious to see that it's not a policy worth pursuing.

LingsCars wrote:
You can tell what the general population thinks of your one-trick agenda by listening to see if road safety (and more specifically, criticism of the UK speed control measures) has been an issue in the General Election. It has not. Which means that normal people are generally satisfied with the direction it is taking - a steady but relentless clamping down on the "freedom" do do what you want and the move towards a much more controlled environment....

Really?
People wholeheartedly support these policies?
Perhaps you'd like to read the comments on here:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... l#comments
and have a quick count of those in favour and those against. :lol:

LingsCars wrote:
Apart from anything else, a reduction in speed can give a far NICER journey as the stress level is clicked down a few notches. You can see this on stretches of Motorway where average speed cameras are in operation. People stop competing, drive slower and it becomes more relaxing and less stressful. True, lower speeds also mean less pollution (or CO2) and less fuel consumption, less road wear, and less wear on vehicles and tyres, as well as less ambulances.

On CO2 and fuel, I am forced to agree. It is generally true that CO2 and fuel consumption improve with reduced speed. If you'd just admited this in the first place, rather than claiming great safety benefits, we wouldn't be having this argument. As for stress levels, and the assertion that people "stop competing", well, that's just your opinion. Having seen speed-limited heavy goods vehicles jockying for position on mile after mile of motorway, I'd say your opinion was completely wrong, but hey, that's just MY opinion! Incidentally, I take it that all the vehicles you sell are fitted with speed limiters? If not, why not? If what you say about the general population is true, you would be much more successful and people would flock to your car lot in their thousands, looking for an altogether more stress-free motoring experience! I've often wondered why more manufacturers don't offer it as an option. I'm sure they'd sell lots more cars! :roll: Obviously, they wouldn't sell any to the "loony one-trick issue fringe" that is Safespeed, but as you've said, that's such a tiny minority that they'd not notice the loss amongst all those lovely EXTRA sales that they'll be making to the overwhelming majority of "normal pepole"!
LingsCars wrote:
In addition, you are a bunch of middle-class, male, anglo-saxon white, educated people (with a few caravan-dwelling ex-hippies thrown in) - a very narrow band of brothers whose lives are dominated by their rant against the state on this single issue. I wonder why little support from other parts of the community, women, students, immigrants etc?

Well, thanks for saying I'm "educated" at least! Oddly enough, last time I looked, this site was RUN by a woman!
LingsCars wrote:
... About time people in "SS" (achtung!) smelt the coffee. You need to accept you have comprehensively lost your battle.
Ling

Ironically (in view of your comments on the Safespeed logo!) that's pretty much exactly what Dr. Goebbels used to say in WW II :lol:


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PostPosted: Thu May 06, 2010 13:31 
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Now I know what the ignore posters list is for. :)

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PostPosted: Thu May 06, 2010 13:37 
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LingsCars wrote:
Your point above is why SS people need to look in the mirror. If 99% of the population is told "can you slow down a bit", they understand exactly what "a bit" relates to.

Oh really? what exactly do you think "a bit" relates to?
What if you had already slowed a bit – would you slow a bit more?

LingsCars wrote:
But SS-ers don't. You want it defined, perhaps to decimal points?

Nice implied strawman!
We already have it defined in an acceptable manner. The question isn’t how, but how much - it always was!



LingsCars wrote:
I think it's clear from reading the above stuff that one of the biggest problems facing this organisation is the disparity of views.

So folks as yourself make dissenting posts on the forum, thus invalidating the thrust of the campaign? That doesn’t really work does it!

LingsCars wrote:
You (in general, plural) also ignore common sense facts.

You seemed to have ignored the common sense fact of fatigue. There are others, such as respect for law, or frustration.

LingsCars wrote:
I say, a general reduction in speed is a GOOD thing, does not affect anyone's life in real terms (except perhaps saves it) and there is no God-given right to travel at ANY speed.

No one is asking for such a thing. This campaign calls for speed limits, and enforcement of them where exceeding them poses danger.
Does fatigue not affect people’s lives?

So reducing the speed limit (even though most call for higher) wouldn’t add to the frustration you were talking about?

LingsCars wrote:
Why don't you listen to the (silent) majority? Is that an oxymoron? Whatever...

The majority are asking for limits higher than 70. It seems to be that it is you who isn’t listening.
:: 71% think the speed limit should be 80mph or higher on motorways.

Again: so do any of the vehicles you lease have such 75mph limiters? What do you think Mole? :lol:

LingsCars wrote:
Apart from anything else, a reduction in speed can give a far NICER journey as the stress level is clicked down a few notches. You can see this on stretches of Motorway where average speed cameras are in operation. People stop competing, drive slower and it becomes more relaxing and less stressful.

Where have you been driving? Apart from the bunching at the cameras, folks are constantly watching their speedo to ensure they don’t, at any point, exceed a needlessly low limit, especially outside of peak times where such roads are far safer, safer than most NSLs with higher limits.
If such limits were fair, and didn’t go on for miles and miles and miles, then it probably wouldn’t have been stressful in the first place.

LingsCars wrote:
True, lower speeds also mean less pollution (or CO2) and less fuel consumption,

Exactly how much less? Is this really significant?

LingsCars wrote:
In addition, you are a bunch of middle-class, male, anglo-saxon white, educated people

This could be applied in reverse, but doing so obviously risks claims of minority discrimination – and I think you know that.
Please stop baiting.

LingsCars wrote:
Because they all see your cause as a tiny side-issue that (in general) they disagree with. There are far more important issues in life to funnel your energy into. About time people in "SS" (achtung!) smelt the coffee. You need to accept you have comprehensively lost your battle.

How much more effort will you spend on what you obviously firmly believe is a lost cause? :scratchchin:

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PostPosted: Thu May 06, 2010 14:49 
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...and yet, when you look at the way enforcement is going, my view prevails!

Amazing that in practice, it's my view (in general) that gets enacted, not SafeSpeed's views.

Again, if you all just slow down a bit, your journeys will be less stressful, there will be less fatigue and you will arrive happier and safer. And if anything drastic does happen on your journey, you will have more time to react to it and avoid a collision or crash (probably involving another party).

Simples :)

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PostPosted: Thu May 06, 2010 15:41 
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LingsCars wrote:
...and yet, when you look at the way enforcement is going, my view prevails!

Not In Swindon, and more councils may yet follow…

LingsCars wrote:
Amazing that in practice, it's my view (in general) that gets enacted, not SafeSpeed's views.]

Yes, on the back of false claims, claims such as RTTM, long-term trends, or 'bias on selection'. Not nearly as "simples" as some like to make out!

LingsCars wrote:
Again, if you all just slow down a bit, your journeys will be less stressful,

Does needless frustration reduce stress?!?
Again - what exactly is "a bit"?

LingsCars wrote:
there will be less fatigue

When in less stimulating conditions - for even longer durations? Can you reconcile that one?

Again, again: so do any of the vehicles you lease have such 75mph limiters?

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PostPosted: Thu May 06, 2010 16:32 
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LingsCars wrote:
And I told you all this years ago, but an organisation that uses "SS" as it's logo will not win hearts and minds.

You just won't listen. "SS" means... what? Oh, yes, I hear jackboots approaching.

I know you have it in a road sign, but honestly - you use red and black which are all the colours of the Nazi and right wing symbols the world over.

You just won't listen to me, eh? You just don't see it, do you?

==

Talking about the logo, not for a minute suggesting anyone has these tendencies. But, it is as crazy as calling an organisation KKK.

There is a world of difference in the Nazi SS logo, and the SafeSpeed logo, which is in the style and universal colours deployed in road signs all over the world.

One could poke fun at the choice of LING if one was so minded, it being a particularly ugly fish - not the sort of image one should like to be associated with ones business - but very few people would be so shallow!
Image

Speaking of childish pursuits, and shamelessly off topic... which was how we arrived here in this thread...
Image

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PostPosted: Thu May 06, 2010 18:13 
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LingsCars wrote:
I think it's clear from reading the above stuff that one of the biggest problems facing this organisation is the disparity of views.


There wouldn't be much point having a discussion forum if the opposite were true, would there?


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PostPosted: Thu May 06, 2010 18:27 
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Johnnytheboy wrote:
LingsCars wrote:
I think it's clear from reading the above stuff that one of the biggest problems facing this organisation is the disparity of views.


There wouldn't be much point having a discussion forum if the opposite were true, would there?


No, what I mean is that Safe Speed has so many different opinions that it is hard to simplify the arguments you make.

Like "reduce speed" or "speed kills". Short, snappy (and true).

What can SS (achtung!) say? "empower speed to the driver" or "liberalise speeding rules" or "free choice on speed" or "intelligent speed", none of which make good sense.

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PostPosted: Thu May 06, 2010 18:32 
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Mole: "But Ling, how can this be true?! If you look in the Highway Code, produced by the "thinking people in office" :wink: you will see that there is no difference in stopping distance at a given speed for a car, truck or van!"

==

hahaha, what anal arguments you make. Do you want a different stopping distance for each different car/van/truck? Probably, in many cases, the highway code stopping distances are accurate - not for you sharp-shooters of course - but for ordinary drivers tuning their radio, sipping their coke or picking their nose or chatting, drivers who have no experience of a flat-out stop since their driving test.

What do you want, the shortest time the Stig can manage on a hi-grip surface in a Porsche 911?

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Last edited by LingsCars on Thu May 06, 2010 18:38, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Thu May 06, 2010 18:37 
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Ernst: "There is a world of difference in the Nazi SS logo, and the SafeSpeed logo, which is in the style and universal colours deployed in road signs all over the world."

===

Of course there is a massive difference, I agree. Your logo looks nothing like the swastika of course. I would never suggest anyone has any association or similar feelings, of course. I don't mean THAT. It is just that it says "SS" (achtung!) and the colours are the same. Ask most people in the street what "SS" (achtung!) means and they will indicate Adolf's elite troops.

As for the letters S - S , well, that's like having a name that contracts to KKK or to IRA or HIV (or even benign meanings like SOS or PIN or USSR) - I mean, you just wouldn't do it would you? WHY? Because the meaning of the letters already exists. So why do you allow "SS" (achtung!) when the stormtrooper meaning is so vivid? Then, you use the same colour scheme as the Swastika used. Seems crazy to me.

You must see I have a point. Who can swallow that word association? You lot are so used to it, you just don't see it.

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PostPosted: Thu May 06, 2010 19:32 
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LingsCars wrote:
hahaha, what anal arguments you make. Do you want a different stopping distance for each different car/van/truck? Probably, in many cases, the highway code stopping distances are accurate - not for you sharp-shooters of course - but for ordinary drivers tuning their radio, sipping their coke or picking their nose or chatting, drivers who have no experience of a flat-out stop since their driving test.

You lease newish cars. Are you aware they now have something called "brake assist"!

LingsCars wrote:
What do you want, the shortest time the Stig can manage on a hi-grip surface in a Porsche 911?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Straw_man



LingsCars wrote:
Johnnytheboy wrote:
LingsCars wrote:
I think it's clear from reading the above stuff that one of the biggest problems facing this organisation is the disparity of views.


There wouldn't be much point having a discussion forum if the opposite were true, would there?


No, what I mean is that Safe Speed has so many different opinions that it is hard to simplify the arguments you make.

Errmmm... "this organisation" ... "has so many different opinions" :???:
Please can you explain how?

LingsCars wrote:
What can SS (achtung!) say? "empower speed to the driver" or "liberalise speeding rules" or "free choice on speed" or "intelligent speed", none of which make good sense.

...just as well this campaign doesn't call for those (I did say that earlier didn't I :roll: )

On the campaign index page:
"you can't measure safe driving in miles per hour"

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PostPosted: Thu May 06, 2010 19:53 
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LingsCars wrote:
It is just that it says "SS" (achtung!) and the colours are the same. Ask most people in the street what "SS" (achtung!) means and they will indicate Adolf's elite troops.

As for the letters S - S , well, that's like having a name that contracts to KKK or to IRA or HIV (or even benign meanings like SOS or PIN or USSR) - I mean, you just wouldn't do it would you? WHY? Because the meaning of the letters already exists. So why do you allow "SS" (achtung!) when the stormtrooper meaning is so vivid? Then, you use the same colour scheme as the Swastika used. Seems crazy to me.

The reasoning is quite simple. It's the same scheme as used on speed limit signs, such as :30:
I think it fair to say that speed limits signs having the same scheme aren't an indication of the governments links to it too.

Also, it is a bit tricky to get the full name of the campaign into the roundel where small logos are used.
However, you'll be pleased to know there is already work ongoing to make the meaning of the logo clearer; the end result should allay all your fears.

There is no legitimate/sincere need for you to continue highlighting this, so I will thank you in advance for closing it.

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PostPosted: Thu May 06, 2010 20:25 
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Steve wrote:

On the campaign index page:
"you can't measure safe driving in miles per hour"



Which is the point that those that keep on raising the SS connection fail ( or is ir a case of them not wanting to see-as in "there's none as blind as those who won't see") that Paul was using the ss( safe speed) as letters are used in algebra - to depict symbolically that "YOU CANNOT PUT A NUMBER ON A SAFE SPEED"

But all too often we see those who cannot see this ,or form any decent argument to it come up with the reasoning put forward by Ling .

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PostPosted: Thu May 06, 2010 22:27 
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LingsCars wrote:
Mole: "But Ling, how can this be true?! If you look in the Highway Code, produced by the "thinking people in office" :wink: you will see that there is no difference in stopping distance at a given speed for a car, truck or van!"

==

hahaha, what anal arguments you make. Do you want a different stopping distance for each different car/van/truck? Probably, in many cases, the highway code stopping distances are accurate - not for you sharp-shooters of course - but for ordinary drivers tuning their radio, sipping their coke or picking their nose or chatting, drivers who have no experience of a flat-out stop since their driving test.

What do you want, the shortest time the Stig can manage on a hi-grip surface in a Porsche 911?


Well, I was just about to give up, as you didn't seem to be willing (or able) to answer any of them! Still, I guess this is a start...

So, Do I want a different stopping distance for every vehicle?

No - it was YOU who pointed out that they would be different when you said:
LingsCars wrote:
Like (for instance) the person with the Range Rover ignoring the fact that their Sprinter could probably be carrying 2 tonnes of unsecured load in the back which, when shifted by inertia can easily compromise the safety and stability of the van. This is unlikely to occur with cars. Ignore that their tyres are of a construction biased towards durability, not grip and performance. If you put those Sprinter tyres on a Range Rover, it would have far inferior controllability. Ignore the fact that therefore the brakes are less efficient. Ignore the fact that the van is more affected by wind and weather.
! Now if that's not anal, I'm not sure what is!

I was touched (and not a little amused!) by your blind faith in the "thinking people in office", and wondered how someone who (quite rightly) understood how different vehicles with different dynamic characteristics would stop differently, could, at the same time, put such faith in the pap fed to us by the "thinking people in office" when these are the same people that produce the dumbed-down, irrelevant and out-dated figures we see in the Highway Code!

But since you asked if I wanted a different stopping distance for every vehicle, the answer is "no", I'm quite happy to take the figures in the Highway code as a VERY rough "worst case" for a fairly heavy vehicle from about 30 years ago. As I don't drive one of those, they are of little interest to me. What IS of interest to me, is the distance in which I can stop at any given point in time in the vehicle I'm driving. As that varies constantly with more factors than I can be bothered to list, there seems little point in getting hung-up on some out-of-date generic figures in the Highway Code.


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PostPosted: Thu May 06, 2010 22:39 
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LingsCars wrote:
...Like "reduce speed" or "speed kills". Short, snappy (and true).

What can SS (achtung!) say? "empower speed to the driver" or "liberalise speeding rules" or "free choice on speed" or "intelligent speed", none of which make good sense.


Well, actually, I think pretty much the reverse is true! "Speed kills" will not make good sense to anyone who has just got off a plane having done 500 miles an hour and found that they're still alive, or, a train that has done 200...

...and so on - you get the picture?

Whereas "Intelligent speed" is very close to what I feel is appropriate (but not quite). The "correct" speed at which to travel is the speed that allows you to make progress without endangering anyone. That varies with so many factors, that it's just about impossible to put a number on it, (hence the slogan on the front page, which I think very neatly encapsulates the problem). Do you believe, Ling, that the speed limit (as dictated by the "thinking people in power") is a safe speed to travel at?


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PostPosted: Thu May 06, 2010 23:24 
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Quote:
What can SS (achtung!) say? "empower speed to the driver" or "liberalise speeding rules" or "free choice on speed" or "intelligent speed", none of which make good sense.


None of this would make any sense at all to the inexperienced or easily led amatuer driver...but then what else could we expect?

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PostPosted: Thu May 06, 2010 23:33 
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Ling, speed limits should be exactly that ...A LIMIT...which is the maximum safe speed for that stretch of road, it's not a target to achieve or a safe speed to maintain constantly...the clue is in the name...LIMIT.
At the moment speed "limits" seem to be set, whereby they can be achieved by people just who have just passed their test, whilst tuning their ipods and texting their mates and eating a kebab at the same time...they are not really limits which sensible , experienced, SAFE, drivers can maintain comfortably and whilst they may be great for the minority , lesser experienced driver to cruise at and feel comfortable at, they aren't really LIMITS are they?

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My views do not represent Safespeed but those of a driver who has driven for 39 yrs, in all conditions, at all times of the day & night on every type of road and covered well over a million miles, so knows a bit about what makes for safety on the road,what is really dangerous and needs to be observed when driving and quite frankly, the speedo is way down on my list of things to observe to negotiate Britain's roads safely, but I don't expect some fool who sits behind a desk all day to appreciate that.


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PostPosted: Fri May 07, 2010 07:44 
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I've read all the above, but I am still unclear what workable, easy to understand solution Safe Speed would replace the current rules with (even less clear how you would simply express it).

The current rules are simple, clear and work well.

As every driver has different abilities (as well as the vehicles being very different, and as well as the conditions of the road and traffic and other variables), I fail to see what simple, easy to understand solution would be used - if SS (achtung!) had a free hand.

Imagine the slate was completely clean, and you could offer a brand new system of traffic (mainly speed) management: what would it be?

Amaze me.

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PostPosted: Fri May 07, 2010 08:20 
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Well a start would be turning the clock back about 15-20 years when we had sensible limits, less speed traps and the safest roads in Europe (unlike now).

This piece that I borrowed off one of Claire's earlier post, sums it up nicely as far as speed limits and the dangers imposed, as far as I'm concerned....read it and learn, Ling.

Quote....
DfT wrote:
ANNEX E TO DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORT CIRCULAR ROADS 1/80

THE EFFECT OF ALTERING LEVELS OF SPEED LIMITS: SUMMARY OF EXPERIENCE
1. It is a common but mistaken belief that drivers allow themselves a set margin over the prevailing speed limit, and that if a limit is raised by 10 mph, they will travel 10 mph faster. In fact, an increase in an unrealistic speed limit rarely brings an increase in traffic speeds. (“Unrealistic” is here used to mean “substantially below the 85 percentile speed”). It is much more likely that there will be no change, or even a fall. It seems that drivers relieved of the frustrations of too low a limit rarely abuse the higher one. Indeed it is not unusual for the accident rate to fall when a poorly-observed limit is raised. This may mean that reduced frustration leads to changes in driving behaviour conducive to accident reduction.
2. The evidence for asserting that speeds and accidents do not increase in proportion to an increase in speed limit comes from studies made before and after unrealistic local limits have been raised. Some of the main evidence is summarised in paragraphs 3-9 below.
3. In 1960, a Departmental Road Safety Committee reporting on the results of the experimental introduction of 40 mph speed limits in the London area concluded that the raising of the limit had resulted in no appreciable change in speeds, while the accident rate remained substantially the same. The committee considered that the higher limit had achieved its purpose of removing unjustifiably low speed limits, and encouraging a proper standard of enforcement.
4. A before and after study carried out at 20 locations through Kent, where the limit had been raised from 30 mph to 40 mph, showed a fall in speed, or no change, in 80% of the measurements taken, and a small increase in the others. The total number of accidents fell by almost 20%.
5. In 1973 the Metropolitan Police produced the results of a study on six sections of trunk road where - in accordance with the Department’s criteria - speed limits had been raised from 40 to 50 mph, or from 30 mph to 40 mph. At four locations the 85 percentile went up by less than 2 mph and at two locations it went down. Allowing for a general decrease in accidents, the reduction in the number of accidents at these places was 15%.
6. When the speed limit in Park Lane, London W1, was increased from 30 mph to 40 mph in 1970, the 85 percentile speed fell from 43.6 mph (measured in 1970) to 39.2 mph (measured in 1974).
7. In 1974, the Midland Road Safety Unit reported the results of a study of a large number of speed limit changes from 30 mph to 40 mph. Their conclusion that there had been no significant increase in either speeds or accidents was in line with the conclusions from a similar exercise for cases in other parts of the country carried out within the Department.
8. The Department has recently conducted a survey of the effects of changing the levels of speed limits in various parts of the country. The results indicate that raising speed limits has little effect either on the speeds of vehicles or the rates of accidents.

9. The following examples of local speed limit changes from 30 mph to 40 mph illustrate this point.
85%ILE SPEED ACCIDENT RATE
COUNTY ROAD BEFORE AFTER BEFORE AFTER
Cheshire A41 44 43 1.06 0.6
Lancashire B5253 43 37 0.78 0.85
West Yorkshire A58 40/43 47/52 1.45 0.65
Warwickshire A34 42/42 40/42 0.5 0.65
Warwickshire B4453 42/44 43/43 3.2 1
(40/42 41/41)
Surrey (47/40 45/37)

The table above shows that, in the one instance in which speeds rose, the accident rate went down.

10. With the removal of the energy conservation speed limits in June 1977, the national speed limit went up from 50 to 60 mph on single carriageway roads and from 60 to 70 mph on dual carriageway roads. This afforded an ideal opportunity to judge if traffic responds to national speed limit changes in the same way as it does to local changes. A survey of speeds at 49 points throughout the country made in July 1977, compared with a similar survey in July 1976, showed that for cars and motorcycles with a headway of at least 5 seconds there was no change in the mean speed on single carriageway roads and a 1 mph on single carriageway roads and 2 mph on dual carriageway roads (sic). An analysis of national accident rates in the months following the changes shows no evidence that raising the limits caused any increase in the number of accidents.

_________________
My views do not represent Safespeed but those of a driver who has driven for 39 yrs, in all conditions, at all times of the day & night on every type of road and covered well over a million miles, so knows a bit about what makes for safety on the road,what is really dangerous and needs to be observed when driving and quite frankly, the speedo is way down on my list of things to observe to negotiate Britain's roads safely, but I don't expect some fool who sits behind a desk all day to appreciate that.


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PostPosted: Fri May 07, 2010 10:18 
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Well, thanks, graball...

But a 33 year old survey when people used to drive without seatbelts and all the safety measures in today's cars, in what look to me like a range of noisy and old fashioned cars cannot be relied on.

I did a quick Google on those energy saving speed limits (due to oil crisis? - I was 3 years old to put it in context) and it seems they were largely ignored at the time (probably due to lack of enforcement ironically). I would guess that speeds in an old type Escort Mk2 were really lower than a modern Focus. The old 1.1 engine would have been revving away in 4th gear for a start, a Focus barely doing 2000 revs at 50/60 mph.

However, my point is that how can Safe Speed snappily summarise what it wants, compared to the snappily summarised "Think!" campaigns, "speed kills" etc.

It seems you have a difficult message to get across that cannot be made in a couple of syllables.

Frankly, no one will be interested in all that detail you post, they want a quick rational answer - and saying "speed kills" gives them exactly that (putting aside whether it is correct or incorrect for a minute).

You must not take offence, but... the type of people you tend to be... you are consumed with logic, detail and evidence, facts and information and a comprehensive argument. However, the general public (and vote winning politicians) and the police trying to enforce policy do not want all that. They want a simple answer that can be explained in two or three syllables. "Speed kills" certainly does that, you must admit.

I think the above (apart from the SS contraction) is the greatest flaw in your campaign. Really, SS (achtung!) need to address this. To put it less politely - you need to make it less anal and detailed and simplify it massively.

_________________
I am Ling!
Visit www.LINGsCARS.com
I am car sales whirlwind. I like speed cameras.
Rent new car from me, save £££s.


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