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I beg to differ.my point was simply in the real world of single track roads, the fastest car is the slowest car.
I beg to differ.my point was simply in the real world of single track roads, the fastest car is the slowest car.
Really? Limited to 56 you think, daily I see hgv doing more than that.I never said it does, in the motorway scenario an HGV is limited to is it 56mph: so even if a car was capped at 70mph there is plenty to get past it.
my point was simply in the real world of single track roads, the fastest car is the slowest car.
In my example I would be in lane 2 a decent distance back from the lorry and be doing 70, gaining on said lorry with plenty of time to get past and back in again. As I get close to him he accelerates to 70 and despite the assertion that hgv/coaches are limited to 56 I beg to disagree, now I can't get past so have to drop back in with plenty of time left to do so. However drivers on the motorways I use will rarely let you back in, so the solution is to momentarily exceed the speed limit by say 5 or so mph and drop in front of the other vehicle with plenty of distance before the slip road. Speed limiters will make that impossible and dropping back, assuming you don't have someone on your bumper will be all bar impossible on the exceptionally busy motorways down south, it might be a good idea on French empty motorways but in parts of the UK it will be dreadful.I would question why with so little road left before you wished to exit you chose to overtake a lorry doing 60mph instead of staying in lane.
Really? Limited to 56 you think, daily I see hgv doing more than that.
I see a glaring issue here.
We’ve already been told that we won’t have access to Galileo when we brexit. So no problems then.
Perhaps an interesting part will be the use of Galileo or not for the UK. The last I heard the EU were being infantile with regard to sharing it with the UK (despite our considerable investment and input, but I'm sure the anti-UK flock will arrive and defend the EU here). I presume the systems will be able to communicate will both GPS networks, if Galileo does end up fully operational and reliable.
Better idea would be to ban driving in cities period!
I'm glad I don't live in a city but I do occasionally have to go to one and wherever I am I'm often pushing a wheelchair and whilst young and able bodied people might be able to get along without a car it's often very difficult and sometimes pretty much impossible to get by without one. And of course there are many people who can get about without a wheelchair who have pretty limited mobility. For those with limited or indeed no mobility door to door transport is often pretty much the only way they can get out and without it their world gets ever smaller.
The UK seems to be getting ever more anti car and this causes me real problems when I'm trying to get someone in a wheelchair about. There are already places I just can't go to with wheelchair bound anymore and I can only see that increasing and things getting more expensive as we get ever more anti private car.
The Govt could always just ban diesels. Completely. They're already doing ULEZ in London.Not so much anti car matey, more anti pollution.
Cities and town centres are becoming so polluted something has to be done to improve the lives and health of people.
The diesel damage alone is just catastrophic.
I'd have thought buses were perfectly suited to become electric vehicles.Busses don't pollute? Odd how the dirtiest air here is collected on the High Street which is ONLY accessible to busses and pedestrians.
Latest diesels are cleaner than your petrol car.Not so much anti car matey, more anti pollution.
Cities and town centres are becoming so polluted something has to be done to improve the lives and health of people.
The diesel damage alone is just catastrophic.
Yea i was only kidding. I love driving. The independence of it and comfort. My parents use to drive me everywhere in london back in the day. We use to even drive and park up in Oxford circus Central London easily. O the good old days..I'm glad I don't live in a city but I do occasionally have to go to one and wherever I am I'm often pushing a wheelchair and whilst young and able bodied people might be able to get along without a car it's often very difficult and sometimes pretty much impossible to get by without one. And of course there are many people who can get about without a wheelchair who have pretty limited mobility. For those with limited or indeed no mobility door to door transport is often pretty much the only way they can get out and without it their world gets ever smaller.
The UK seems to be getting ever more anti car and this causes me real problems when I'm trying to get someone in a wheelchair about. There are already places I just can't go to with wheelchair bound anymore and I can only see that increasing and things getting more expensive as we get ever more anti private car.
Not so much anti car matey, more anti pollution.
Cities and town centres are becoming so polluted something has to be done to improve the lives and health of people.
The diesel damage alone is just catastrophic.
Hear hear!I'm glad I don't live in a city but I do occasionally have to go to one and wherever I am I'm often pushing a wheelchair and whilst young and able bodied people might be able to get along without a car it's often very difficult and sometimes pretty much impossible to get by without one. And of course there are many people who can get about without a wheelchair who have pretty limited mobility. For those with limited or indeed no mobility door to door transport is often pretty much the only way they can get out and without it their world gets ever smaller.
The UK seems to be getting ever more anti car and this causes me real problems when I'm trying to get someone in a wheelchair about. There are already places I just can't go to with wheelchair bound anymore and I can only see that increasing and things getting more expensive as we get ever more anti private car.
Yea i was only kidding. I love driving. The independence of it and comfort. My parents use to drive me everywhere in london back in the day. We use to even drive and park up in Oxford circus Central London easily. O the good old days..
I hate public transport. I'd rather drive or cycle
One good thing with speed limiter is forcing people to drive at constant speed.
Motorway phantom congestion are usually caused by people changing their speed for no good reason. But in average speed checked 50mph zones, road flow much better because everyone is keeping their eye on the speedo. Artificial limit will make sure no one drives on the motorway at 70-80mph according to their whim.
But other side of the coin is inability to overtake safely. For example someone who unknowingly slowed down to 50mph on single lane road. You try to overtake but the numpty realises his speed drift and speeds up to speed limit. You are then stuck on the wrong side of the road unable to pull back in.
Hear hear!
Pushing a baby buggy on public transport is also less than ideal.
January, we pushed our baby to a hospital appointment in UCLH. No step free tube/train station anywhere near where we live North London. It was pouring down, but had to push back to King's Cross because Euston Square east bound doesn't have step free access.
February was his day surgery. We were told best to not take baby on public transport after operation in-case of vomiting and such. I drove my Leaf EV to a car park JUST outside the congestion zone, 10min away from hospital. It was quicker and much less stress with the buggy.
We'll likely drive to the same car park if we need to go anywhere around that area. Traffic was not as bad as I thought. Despite my diesel will not be exempt, I'm looking forward to ULEZ expanding, because hopefully there'll be even less traffic when I'm driving my EV into central London![]()
Well matey, some of the anti pollution measures have been shown to produce more pollution. Some examples of traffic calming and light phasing for example which don't do a good job of calming or controlling traffic and only succeed in heightening pollution and making driving private cars more problematic in the very areas you're talking about. And then there's more overt anti car measures which seem to serve no environmental purpose what so ever. Light phasing and traffic calming again and seemingly perfectly safe places to park being double yellow lined. I'm all for protecting the environment. No argument there and maybe it's different where you live but in my little world I could show you example after example of measures that serve no discernable purpose other than to make driving and parking private cars much more of a PITA. Even in these days when we're supposed to be more aware of the more special needs of some in our community it does often seem to me that restricting private car use is sometimes the priority.
The Govt could always just ban diesels. Completely. They're already doing ULEZ in London.
I'd have thought buses were perfectly suited to become electric vehicles.
Which shows how little you know about modern internal combustion engines and Euro 6.2 emissions.yes that is right because the same old people keep trying to fit the same square peg into a round hole.
Cars that burn fuel produce pollution, put loads of them in a confined space and you get a pollution hotspot.
You cannot have fuel burning cars in city centres anymore, it is really that simple.
I don't understand..... Mr Bump appears to be suggesting cars burning fuel in city centre is bad because of the tailpipe emissions in a confined area resulting in pollution hotspots. You are suggesting Euro 6.2 emission standard cars used in that way is not bad? because....... there are no tailpipe emissions???Which shows how little you know about modern internal combustion engines and Euro 6.2 emissions.

Fair point, well presentedthat sit in lane 2 with their bumper in line with my rear wheel so I can't pull out to the second lane to overtake a lorry.
The more they flash, the slower I go, and I often have to use my washers too....![]()

We have a limited number around here, as I posted elsewhere,I'd have thought buses were perfectly suited to become electric vehicles.

I don't understand..... Mr Bump appears to be suggesting cars burning fuel in city centre is bad because of the tailpipe emissions in a confined area resulting in pollution hotspots. You are suggesting Euro 6.2 emission standard cars used in that way is not bad? because....... there are no tailpipe emissions???
Your logic is very strange...... because emission standard by definition would mean the car has harmful emission that must be restricted to an agreed standard.
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But in average speed checked 50mph zones, road flow much better because everyone is keeping their eye on the speedo.
Fyprecklessness not only kills but it often kills or injures the innocent bystanders
Other than where there are workmen or narrower lanes due to work being carried out, I have found that the reduced speed limits on motorways just creates congestion.Having lived with the m3 smart motorway roadwork abortion for god knows how many years... Disagree.
We have electric buses around this area, and on the original topic I'm lead to believe that these cars will not be limited to the advertised speed but inform the driver of the setting, so if you wish to go quicker push the throttle and it will exceed the speed limit for that road.
According to DVLA it is actually 60 but most HGV operators limit there vehicles to 56/58 for fuel efficency
https://www.gov.uk/speed-limits
Glad you added that, I was beginning to think my speedo needed checking. Lots of lorries and coaches seem to be doing at least 60 if not more, I know coaches are allowed to do 70 which seems a bit odd.All hgvs are legally limited to 56mph, no exceptions. An operator can limit to lower if they wish for fuel efficiency. However the legal speed limit on motorways for hgvs is actually 60mph.. go figure.
You may find our eastern cousins have found methods to override the limiter and go everywhere at 70mph though.
I'm sure that if he meant to say "recklessness" he'd have said it.
The reason that there are too many vehicles (and too much of countless other problems) is that there are far too many people. Reducing vehicles etc. only addresses (for a short while only) the symptoms of the problem that will eventually consume the planet. Why is over population not being tackled ?
I remember a time when you either needed to save up or get a loan to buy a car. There were fewer cars and fewer new ones than now. I now see a lot more people with a lot more cars, chopping and changing every three years or so. It's more like renting a car than owning one.There are a lot more cars on the road for sure, young people now pretty much all have a PCP car its not unusual now for a lot of families to have 3 or 4 cars.
Does it matter whether a young person has a car on pcp. If they want a car they will have one regardless of whether it is on pcp or not. I know several 20-30yr olds with older 2nd hand cars and a new car on pcp. But regardless of how many cars someone has they can only drive one at a time. We are a 3 car family. But right now only one of them is "on the road" and that is parked at the kerb. The other two are in car parks. So it doesn't really matter how many cars people have.There are a lot more cars on the road for sure, young people now pretty much all have a PCP car its not unusual now for a lot of families to have 3 or 4 cars.
I can remember seeing lots of new cars as a kid in the 60's. Just about everyone in our road had new cars, some changing them more often than others.It's just a guess but in the UK I would probably put cheap access to cars via PCP as the main reason for there being so many vehicles on the road. I'm sure when I was younger it was not a common sight to see a brand new car but now they are everywhere. I suspect used cars may make a major comeback post-2021.
I can remember seeing lots of new cars as a kid in the 60's. Just about everyone in our road had new cars, some changing them more often than others.
Totally agree with thisI'm sure when I was younger it was not a common sight to see a brand new car but now they are everywhere. I suspect used cars may make a major comeback post-2021.
Seriously? how old are you again?I can remember seeing lots of new cars as a kid in the 60's.