Gatsobait wrote:
Roger wrote:
It isn't quite like "more noise or fewer bodies" is it? The artificially lowered speed limits and rigorous enforcement driven by safety and with the global message it is aligned to safety are the body-increasers aren't they?
Point taken mate, but you knew what I meant I hope.

Yup.
Gatsobait wrote:
Roger wrote:
If this is globally applied - as it seems to be at the moment - the body count will go up. If it is in specific built up areas for social reasons, the global message of "keep your eyue on the needle wherever you go" - which IMO is the main problem - will not be an issue, will it?
I think I see what you're saying, but correct me if I'm misreading you here. A reduced limit needs to be sold to drivers who use the road, and they're more likely to go for the noise reduction tack than the "speed kills". Problem is that with the current style of enforcement either will still require a lot of speedo watching. Why I'm having to watch the speedo is less important than the fact that I have to, and what that effect that has on the quality of my driving.
Yes, agreed. However, if enforcement is Specs-based (don't getr me wrong - I HATE those things, but just *if*), needle-gazing would not be needed if one kept it down to there or thereabouts over the distance, Specs systems average out so the odd minor transgression in a mile stretch wouldn't matter a jot.
Gatsobait wrote:
Thinking about it a bit more, I'm also fairly sceptical of the noise reduction thing anyway. If noise was so high on the agenda virtually every traffic calming scheme would be being ripped up as we speak. I haven't listened to the Brunstrom piece yet so I reserve the right to eat my own words here

, but it sounds a little like a new straw to grasp at.
Yes - the two don't go hand in hand somehow. Mind you, I believe the humps and artificial chicanes should all be removed anyway.
Gatsobait wrote:
BTW hi & welcome Madroaduser.
Echo that - welcome to newcomers.