murpho999 wrote: » Heard a story in work about an incident some colleague's family member had and said that the main worry was that he was driving alone on a 'provisional' (now learner) licence. I said he should not be on the road as he's not qualified to drive and everybody disagreed with me and found it fine to drive on a learner licence. This is just so wrong. Shows how the system does not work.
NiallBoo wrote: » So don't go 80, or 50. Happy days. The fact remains that you can't waste effort assigning an individual limit for every little bit of the 100,000km of our road network - 78,000km of which are L roads.
Shenshen wrote: » I'll remember that next time I get shouted down for stating that the speed limit on the vast majority of roads it too high rather than too low. And next time I've got someone sitting in my boot because they feel that if they don't reach the designated limit, people might make assumptions about the size of their genitalia.
ohnonotgmail wrote: » surely that just shows you that people are idiots? no system can fix that.
murpho999 wrote: » Yes, but I was surprised that about 90% of 10 people found it ok. I do wonder how many are out alone on roads driving on learner permits.
NiallBoo wrote: » It would be better to say that you should drive at the (quickest*) speed suitable to the road/vehicle/conditions or to the speed limit - whichever one is slower. Or in other words - the limit should be a target, unless there's a reason it shouldn't. *out of consideration to other road users
AndrewJRenko wrote: » Just to clarify - other road users aren't just inside motor vehicles. There are road users outside road vehicles who you need to consider too. The quickest speed is probably not showing consideration to vulnerable road users.
red ears wrote: » People pulling out in front of you and leaving you to hit the breaks to avoid a crash. They know you have seen them and have plenty of time to slow down but its really annoying all the same.
durtybit wrote: » If you have plenty of time to slow down how does the crash scenario appear? Sound like an issue with merging traffic
red ears wrote: » I've seen it done on to main roads with traffic travelling at 100km. Its dangerous.
durtybit wrote: » Dangerous if you have to swerve to avoid, but it if you have plenty of room slow down to the merging traffic where is the danger?
mikeymouse wrote: » He said 'People pulling out in front of you and leaving you to hit the breaks to avoid a crash ,nothing about merging. if someone causes you to hit the brakes it is dangerous.