Roger wrote:
blackdouglas wrote:
SafeSpeed wrote:
Some countries (excluding the UK) allow a cosine error correction to be programmed into the equipment. If the correction is 'overdone' then it can work against the motorist.

How does the device work out the angle involved?
It doesn't. Someone programmes it in having done some dead reckoning and then a calculator does the division by the cosine of the angle.
What angle?
I think I might be confused here. I can see this working with fixed installations, but not with laser devices which must be tracked with the target to avoid slip. Therefore the angle is continulally varying and as such programming one angle in would be meaningless. This is (or was) a thread about laser devices.
None of the laser devices I have used have any mechanism for programming anything into them whilst being operated.
If true it's a totally bonkers idea for lasers. At most reasonable operating distances, the cosine of the angle involved means that any effect is negligible (less than one tenth of a mile per hour).
Some of the LTI 20.20s I've come across allow you to change the near and far thresholds, which means that to all intents and purposes, any real error can be prevented.
For fixed installations I can see it working a bit better - but why bother with the complexity when normally you don't prosecute until speed is some way above the limit (5-10mph). Such a tolerance pretty much eliminates the need for any cosine correction.
Without cosine correction, any error is in favour of the driver - so why complicate the matter with something than can give rise to legal complication?
Can you give any details of what devices allow this? I'd be interested to look into how they work and learn a little.
Thanks.