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 Post subject: safe driving and the law
PostPosted: Fri Apr 15, 2005 05:56 
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Has anyone lived or worked in Germany in recent years, and travelled extensively on their motorways? I lived and worked there in 1996-97, have been a frequent visitor since, then and have driven tens of thousands of km on the motorways there.

At quiet times, and in parts of the country that are not heavily populated, motorway speeds of 180-190kph are very common, and completely safe and OK. The absence of any speed limit makes for very relaxing driving which tends to sharpen up focus and concentration. You also get to where you are going in half the time, so arrive more refreshed.

Back in the UK, with its ridiculously low 70mph motorway speed limit and the heavy enforcement culture, I think that stress levels imposed on drivers are consequently are much higher. I would be interested to know if comparable accident statistics are available for these two regimes with very different road safety cultures.

I have to say that in two years of driving all over Germany on the autobahns I only ever saw evidence of two accidents, and both these coincidentally involved 42-ton trucks with large trailers. I found my normal comfortable travelling speed to be around 180kph (about 115mph), but often travelled as a passenger with other drivers who drove much faster than this. They all had 20+ years of accident-free driving at these speeds, so the phrase 'speed kills' is self-evidently stupid and meaningless.

Anyone got any experience of driving there, or other jurisdictions with no speed limits in force?

Any thoughts on this?

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PostPosted: Fri Apr 15, 2005 06:15 
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Rioman wrote:
I would be interested to know if comparable accident statistics are available for these two regimes with very different road safety cultures.


See:
http://www.safespeed.org.uk/germany.html
and
http://www.safespeed.org.uk/international3.html

You hit one of my favourite nails on the head when you said: "safety culture". See:
http://www.safespeed.org.uk/roadsafety.html

And finally... :welcome:

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PostPosted: Fri Apr 15, 2005 08:08 
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I have only ever driven in Germany on two occasions, once in mid 1980's and once in the late 80's.

I have to say that of all the countries I drove in (Holland, Germany, Switzerland, France, Italy and England) the Germans were by far the most courteous drivers and had the best lane discipline. :bighand:

I was also fortunate enough to be driving high powered cars, the first time a new 535 BMW and the second time a new M3 BMW. I achieved short bursts of 240kph in the 535 and sustained runs between 220 and 250 in the M3. :love: :love:

I always reduced my speed when approaching more than one car in the right lane in case one pulled out. In the week of driving I never had anything like a 'moment' as no-one ever seemed to pull out, even in reasonably heavy traffic, if they could see a car approaching in the left lane. :clap:

I always drove with my headlights on and I also kept a sharp eye in the mirror for any traffic moving faster than I was. :shock: It was truly the most wonderful driving experience I have ever had. :love:

For about 20 minutes on one section I was driving at an almost constant 250kph with another BMW and watching the cars clear away ahead was amazing.

Speed is purely relative to the situation. I would never even have considered driving at those speeds when I was in the UK as it would have been entirely inappropriate but in Germany it just seemed right.

In Australia the road discipline is absolutely atrocious and the courtesy almost non-existent. In Victoria you get booked for doing 4kph (2.5mph) over any speed limit including motorways which have a limit of 110kph (almost 70mph) and you would lose your licence for driving more than 25kph (16mph) over any limit or exceeding 125kph (78mph) anywhere in the state. :hissyfit: :censored: :banghead:

If you enjoy driving do not come to Victoria, there is nowhere other than a race track that you can even consider driving at a reasonable pace.

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PostPosted: Fri Apr 15, 2005 09:17 
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M3RBMW wrote:
If you enjoy driving do not come to Victoria, there is nowhere other than a race track that you can even consider driving at a reasonable pace.


Hm.. that sounds like the place for me! What is the cost of living like in Victoria?

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PostPosted: Fri Apr 15, 2005 09:27 
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basingwerk wrote:
M3RBMW wrote:
If you enjoy driving do not come to Victoria, there is nowhere other than a race track that you can even consider driving at a reasonable pace.


Hm.. that sounds like the place for me! What is the cost of living like in Victoria?


I'm sure that you would:

Quote:
In Australia the road discipline is absolutely atrocious and the courtesy almost non-existent.


Do you want help packing? :) It appears that this is a fast-track to what the UK is turning into, and it sounds awful to me. Give me courtesy, road dicipline and the ability to control my own actions everytime.


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PostPosted: Fri Apr 15, 2005 09:29 
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basingwerk wrote:
M3RBMW wrote:
If you enjoy driving do not come to Victoria, there is nowhere other than a race track that you can even consider driving at a reasonable pace.


Hm.. that sounds like the place for me! What is the cost of living like in Victoria?

I don't know, but I'm sure we could have a whip round... :wink:

(Only joking - we love you really BW)

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PostPosted: Fri Apr 15, 2005 09:33 
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Rioman wrote:
Has anyone lived or worked in Germany in recent years, and travelled extensively on their motorways? I lived and worked there in 1996-97, have been a frequent visitor since, then and have driven tens of thousands of km on the motorways there.


I lived in Munich for 8 years up to 1994. As I am sure you are aware, Germany has less yobbos than we do. Germans in general are law abiding, regular people, much more so than Brits, anyway. There is less chaos there – things work. They are much more able to get with the programme (which has its downsides as well).

I don't think we can introduce their system here because many brits don't have the mental discipline to measure up to it. It would be instant carnage as yobbos race up down at murderous speeds in 200 horsepower cars! I'm not saying it would never be possible to sort out the British, but it is going to take a long time and a lot of ASBOs!

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PostPosted: Fri Apr 15, 2005 10:31 
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JT wrote:
basingwerk wrote:
M3RBMW wrote:
If you enjoy driving do not come to Victoria, there is nowhere other than a race track that you can even consider driving at a reasonable pace.


Hm.. that sounds like the place for me! What is the cost of living like in Victoria?

I don't know, but I'm sure we could have a whip round... :wink:

(Only joking - we love you really BW)


The world wide web has reached Australia now, so I'd still be able to chat to my 'fast-lane' pals.

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 Post subject: safe driving & the law
PostPosted: Fri Apr 15, 2005 10:38 
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So it's not about speed, it's about attitude, alertness and driver education. Does the Germans' experience illustrate that travelling speed, as an isolated value, really is irrelevant to accident causation? If this is so, why do other jurisdictions seem to ignore all the real causes of accidents and and police only the irrelevant factor of speed? What kind of stupidity is this?

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PostPosted: Fri Apr 15, 2005 10:49 
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basingwerk wrote:
I don't think we can introduce their system here because many brits don't have the mental discipline to measure up to it.


So the solution is to support the current policy then (which you do, BW)?? Dumb it all down to the level of the cheapest, lowest common denominator rather than invest in raising the bar.

Sometimes you contradict yourself so....


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PostPosted: Fri Apr 15, 2005 10:53 
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kendalian wrote:
Ian, thank you for taking the time to share your experiences with us.

The M6/A74 details are certainly an eye-opener...

The HGV's, presumably, were speed-limited, so could not exceed "the speed limit"?

One was the double fatal on 22/12 on A74 which closed the road for over 24 hours. Weather conditions were bad with high winds.
One where an HGV ran into the back of a slow moving crane. I'll leave any assumptions to yourself as I don't know whether the inquest has been completed on that one

Quote:
The car which left the carriageway - doubt the outcome would have been any different whether the vehicle speed was 70 mph or 79 mph... :wink:

Hard to say, speed would be a factor. but if it was due to falling asleep, the driver has little control over his a) collision speed, and b) his own injury avoidance strategy.

Tired drivers are not generally driving at speeds much in excess of 70 mph in any case.

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3 pedestrians killed - they were acting illegally. Trespass on the railway is a criminal offence; we wouldnt blame a train driver for killing a pedestrian, so why should vehicle drivers be harassed?


These pedestrians were acting illegally. These are the news reports.

One
Two
Three.

We knew about two of the three pre-collision and were trying to do something before tragedy struck.

Quote:
Challenge to JJ (or is it Callaghan today?) - in light of IanH's comments, please provide CSCP's response to why YOU choose to prosecute drivers travelling at 79 mph on the M6, when other law enforcement agencies do not.

There were a few more fatalities the previous year which followed a more traditional pattern. I have no figures for them or causation stats - sorry. I'd imagine the reduction of collisions from 2003 to 2004 would be seen as justification.

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 Post subject: Speed in Urban Zones
PostPosted: Fri Apr 15, 2005 10:58 
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EtoileBrilliant wrote:
The alternative is having zebra and pedestrian crossings at every road junction. Sweden, did this 4 years ago, with zebra crossings as close as 10m to each other. Whilst the initial results were poor (drivers weren't used to giving way to pedestrians), they have improved considerably and have in fact been augmented by a 30km/h limit in Stockholm - yes 30 km/h that's 18 mph to you and me.

These are the road conditions you're going to have to contend with if you're really serious about road safety - sign here


SafeSpeed wrote:
Rubbish. It hasn't worked in Sweden, and it won't work anywhere except perhaps in certain special zones. Care and responsibility by road users counts for a great deal - speed limits count for very little, and can be distracting.


Paul,

You had me fooled. For one moment, I had mistakenly believed that the main thrust of this site/debate was motorway speeds were inappropriately low. Now I realise I was wrong, you actually believe that "drivers should be able to pick their speed in all conditions" - presumably including urban environments (a subject close to my heart).

Rather than take note of the speed limits put in place by traffic planners, your suggestion is to let your team of superdrivers take matters into their own hand - tell me if I wrong in my supposition?

I'll grant you this, your members have a lot of spunk. What could possess them to think that their knowledge of local conditions allow them to be better positioned to judge a "safe speed" than a traffic planner who has probably taken into account local influences such as accident blackspots, imperfect camber, concealed entrances, etc.

Furthermore, not withstanding the ability of your super-drivers to observe, assimilate and compute the optimum driving speed (this should be made a lot easier by the fact that they no longer have that tiresome impediment of actually looking at the speedo that is positioned right in their field of vision), they're going to have to do this right through the British Isles like a SATNAV.

The other thing that troubles me about this breed of superdrivers who have been specially trained to judge the best speed limit, is the poor souls like me who take comfort from the fact that somebody more experienced than me has suggested/imposed a maximum driving speed.
Are we going to be kept off the road, perhaps you have a eugenics programme planned, or some type of profiling algorithm whereby the members of SafeSpeed sit outside BMW dealers "taking out" potential customers - what's left for us?

Actually, before I forget, I'm going to start a new topic where I can pin my colours to the mast for all to see. It's going be called "The Food Chain - Where I Rank Road Users" - I urge you all to contribute.

PS: Ian, thanks for the lengthy reply. I'll give it the attention it deserves when I have time later today/weekend.

PPS: You're a little premature in rushing to judgement on whether the 30 km/h works in Stockholm. Its only been in place for 45 days.


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PostPosted: Fri Apr 15, 2005 11:10 
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Rioman wrote:
So it's not about speed, it's about attitude, alertness and driver education. Does the Germans' experience illustrate that travelling speed, as an isolated value, really is irrelevant to accident causation? If this is so, why do other jurisdictions seem to ignore all the real causes of accidents and and police only the irrelevant factor of speed? What kind of stupidity is this?


The kind that allows politicians to pretend that they are doing something about the "dreadfull situation", while avoiding the unpleasent costs of looking for real solutions, such as 10,000 additional fully trained traffic police and proper road improvements such as by-passes that would remove much of the conflicts between motor vehicles and other groups. The fact that they have a self funding mechanism for doing it is a great bonus, and if a little "spin" (this is New Labour Spin, i.e. total fabrication) is necessary, well it worked before and will work again.

There is a book called Wizards First Rule, which is a fantasy fiction and probably not to everybodies taste, but underlying it is some basics about human nature. The First Rule demonstates how to do "magic" just using words:

Quote:
"People are stupied; given proper motivation, almost anyone will believe anything. Because people are stupied, they will believe a lie because they want to believe its true, or because they are afraid it might be true.

People's heads are full of knowledge, facts, and beliefs, and most of it is false, yet they think it all true. People are stupied; they can only rarely tell the difference between a lie and the truth, and yet they are confident they can, and so are all the more easier to fool"


Ther plural is important - people collectively are stupid, individuals might not be, but that doesn't matter. "Speed Kills" has been rammed down our throats since Labour came into power, and it doesn't matter that it isn't true; anti-motoring groups want it to be true (it does sound plausible doesn't it?), others fear it to be true, and the Government have been able to use it as a justification for stopping dead all planned road improvements thus avoiding awkward conflict with roads protestors, and saving a significant amount of money at the same time....


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PostPosted: Fri Apr 15, 2005 11:31 
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I'd be happy to admit it if it were true. It isn't true. I don't need to falsify anything to win this argument - the facts speak for themselves and every new bit of data or science is confirming our position
.

Paul,

Sincerely, I'm sorry to trouble you further but I forget to ask you this in my earlier email. As you know I'm new to the site and not able to navigate so easily. Perhaps to better my understanding you could point me to these new piece of data - a link maybe.

What also would be useful, would be a link to something illustrating your progress, maybe a letter of support from an MP (Tory?) or a Motoring Group, or perhaps evidence that road regulators are embracing this new science.

I'm sure its out there on the site somewhere, I just can't be bothered to trawl through it.

Many Thanks

EB


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PostPosted: Fri Apr 15, 2005 11:54 
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EtoileBrilliant wrote:
Quote:
I'd be happy to admit it if it were true. It isn't true. I don't need to falsify anything to win this argument - the facts speak for themselves and every new bit of data or science is confirming our position
.

Paul,

Sincerely, I'm sorry to trouble you further but I forget to ask you this in my earlier email. As you know I'm new to the site and not able to navigate so easily. Perhaps to better my understanding you could point me to these new piece of data - a link maybe.

What also would be useful, would be a link to something illustrating your progress, maybe a letter of support from an MP (Tory?) or a Motoring Group, or perhaps evidence that road regulators are embracing this new science.

I'm sure its out there on the site somewhere, I just can't be bothered to trawl through it.

Many Thanks

EB


Just to let you know where I'm coming from,

I don't see this as new science.

Simply the analysis and evaluation of old science.

The recognition of what was right wrt road safety.

And the recognition that things have recently gone a bit wrong.

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PostPosted: Fri Apr 15, 2005 12:01 
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r11co wrote:
basingwerk wrote:
I don't think we can introduce their system here because many brits don't have the mental discipline to measure up to it.
So the solution is to support the current policy then (which you do, BW)?? Dumb it all down to the level of the cheapest, lowest common denominator rather than invest in raising the bar. Sometimes you contradict yourself so....


No question that you are right in the perfect world. I quite like the aspirational aspect - you just want to improve communications and everything will be OK. We should invest in raising the bar in the UK, standards have slipped. The trouble is getting everybody on the same page. In the real world, we need simple messages, like ‘obey the highway code or we will ban you’, and good people need to actually do it.

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PostPosted: Fri Apr 15, 2005 12:26 
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2003's M6/A74 stats were subject to some heated discussion on the CSCP forum :roll:

From memory (I stand to be corrected) the SG made a big issue of 2004's fatals being much reduced from 2003's. 2003's total, was I think, 15. It took much probing to get to the real truth ie this was by far the worst year in the last 10. (I think the next worst was 7 or 8)

Shame the forum isnt viewable as this topic is worth revisting :wink:

So no suprise at all that 2004 was a big reduction on 2003.

But CSCP started up on 1/4/03; they operated on the M6/A74 corridor for 8 out of those 12 months - clearly it didnt work... :o

Steve to quote, said CSCP sought "special permission" to operate on the M6. Was that "special permission's" real reason to enable CSCP to maximise its income :?: :?:

So come on JJ (or whoever's turn it is today on his profile) tell us why they are targeting any driver at 79mph+ when Ian isnt, using his experience and discretion where appropriate.


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 Post subject: Re: Speed in Urban Zones
PostPosted: Fri Apr 15, 2005 12:36 
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EtoileBrilliant wrote:
You had me fooled. For one moment, I had mistakenly believed that the main thrust of this site/debate was motorway speeds were inappropriately low. Now I realise I was wrong, you actually believe that "drivers should be able to pick their speed in all conditions" - presumably including urban environments (a subject close to my heart).

Rather than take note of the speed limits put in place by traffic planners, your suggestion is to let your team of superdrivers take matters into their own hand - tell me if I wrong in my supposition?


Road safety entirely depends on drivers seeing hazards and adjusting speed to suit. This process does not involve the speedometer.

EtoileBrilliant wrote:
I'll grant you this, your members have a lot of spunk. What could possess them to think that their knowledge of local conditions allow them to be better positioned to judge a "safe speed" than a traffic planner who has probably taken into account local influences such as accident blackspots, imperfect camber, concealed entrances, etc.


The traffic planner does not know the weather conditions, daylight or darkness, type of vehicle, behaviour of other road users, condition of the road surface and a thousand other things that drivers must account for.

We're not talking about 'superdrivers'. We're talking about making a good system better by small nudges.

Driver's speed choice according the the conditions is an irreplaceable fundamental component of road safety.

And that's the last reply you'll get from me UNLESS you deal with the central points of my replies.

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PostPosted: Fri Apr 15, 2005 12:37 
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And just to show what good enforcing a motorway limit does:

85th percentile speeds for the M6 sites are as follows:
Tebay, 91 mph
Brunthwaite, 88 mph
Capplerigg, 83 mph
Cowperthwaite, 87 mph

The average speeds for the M6 sites are as follows:
Tebay, 79 (80) mph
Brunthwaite, 81 (79) mph
Capplerigg, 75 (82) mph
Cowperthwaite, 80 (78) mph

2003 speeds are in brackets.

So well done CSCP for slowing everyone down. Not.

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PostPosted: Fri Apr 15, 2005 12:42 
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Quote:
And that's the last reply you'll get from me UNLESS you deal with the central points of my replies


Help me Paul, list the outstanding points for me as they've been lost in this quagmire of discussion.

Then I'll get back to you.

Thanks for your patience.

:D


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