mpaton2004 wrote:
I still don't get the point of this!

It's my fault for posting a few hints rather than explaining the whole thing.
A constant cry from the 'speed kills' advocates is that higher speeds give you less time to react. That claim runs counter to my own real world experience and I've been wondering why.
In the real world I definitely feel that I have more time to react to a hazard, (say) on a motorway compared to (say) around town.
I've noticed that if we set speed according to the Safe Speed recommended
conservative version of the safe speed rule, we do indeed have more 'time in reserve' at higher speeds.
The Safe Speed recommended rule is: "Always ensure that you can stop
comfortably, on your own side of the road within the distance that you know to be clear."
It's that word 'comfortably' that helps. It means we're not setting speed based on a full emergency stop, but instead setting speed based on comfortable braking effort. This brings comfortable driving and of course also provides a substantial margin for error because we always have the option of full emergency braking.
The new information is the realisation that such an approach to speed setting inherently provides a margin for error that INCREASES with speed. However counter-intuitive this may seem, it is actually correct.
Now the only assumption required is that real world drivers set conservative safe speeds. I'm perfectly satisfied that they do because we see an awful lot of modest braking in a day's driving and usually we see no emergency braking at all. Almost every time drivers stop for traffic, or traffic lights or brake for a bend or a roundabout they do so with only modest braking effort. They MUST be setting conservative safe speeds for known hazards or they simply could not do this at all. But it's normal. It's routine. It's everywhere.
So there you have it. If we set a conservative safe speed according to the conditions and the hazard environment, greater speed means MORE time to react and MORE margin for error.