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13-02-2011, 03:08 PM | #61 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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I subscribe to the theory that better quality vehicles and higher standards of driver training and education is the #1 method of reducing road fatalities and injuries. The law of physics says that travelling at 0km/h guarantees absolutely that no fatalities can occur from vehicle collisions. Based on that why not ban motor vehicles to cull the road toll? There is plenty of evidence to support both increasing speed limits and decreasing speed limits can save lives. There's lies, damn lies and statistics.
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13-02-2011, 03:16 PM | #62 | ||||
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Yeah, but how extensive are they. In post number 50, you quoted research to back up one of your points. It was a study that looked at 320 Queenslanders. Now no offense to Queenslanders, but the driving habits of 320 of them is hardly a fair sampling of a nation of over 20 million people.
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13-02-2011, 03:17 PM | #63 | |||
FG XR6 Ute & Sedan
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Please point me to any research or hard evidence that increasing speed limits saves lives. BTW I am open minded and ready to be proved wrong but I haven't so far been able to find anything that supports that assertion myself. It would certainly be interesting but if true likely a special case with exceptional circumstances (e.g .ambulances using dedicated emergency lanes).
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13-02-2011, 03:56 PM | #64 | |||
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Google or Wiki is your friend if you want to find the links for the data.
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13-02-2011, 04:04 PM | #65 | |||
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2ndly our licencing system , and foreigners are a complete disgrace on the road , with only employed tax payers being penalised or punished ,. i better chill and make this my last post in this thread . |
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13-02-2011, 04:30 PM | #66 | |||
moderator ford coupe club
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my wife had less than 5 hours experience in the philippines, but had held her license for over 3 years. while she did get lessons (and she was more mature than a standard learner), she was on a full license with probably 20-30 hours experience of driving anywhere in the world and when you consider the driving standards in some countries, that is simply too big a risk. having driven overseas i understand why some immigrants drive too fast or too slow with nothing much in between. their roads and ours are so different yet our governments choose to blame speed and not their policies - i guess speedsters will not get the public sympathy when they complain of discrimination though |
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13-02-2011, 04:44 PM | #67 | |||
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great post mate . on the other hand though , i want to be able to drive , in other countries if i go there , so it is a hard one . once you immigrate though , you should atleast be made to go to driving school , i dont know where that leaves tourists though . at the end of the day though we are all stuck with extra dangers on our roads from this . |
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13-02-2011, 05:00 PM | #68 | |||
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(i believe) my international driving permit for the philippines was only for 3 months. how someone can get a driving permit for any longer is beyond me. if you are in any country for longer you should have to pass some type of test - surely you have to prove that you can drive before they let you drive for more than 3 months when you do get your learners here, they take your international license off you, obviously so if your australian one is cancelled, you cannot rely on your first one. surely though in todays age, they can let you keep your original one with a hole in the corner so the general public and the police know it is not valid and then, if you go back home steps can be taken to renew it there i realise this is slightly off topic, but to me it has some relevance to road safety, which the thread is loosely based on |
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13-02-2011, 05:56 PM | #69 | ||||||
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13-02-2011, 06:24 PM | #70 | ||
FG XR6 Ute & Sedan
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This could go on forever and doubt we will never agree or persuade each other.
I think the fact is we would all like to go faster and be able to use more of our car's potential but economic, demographic and geographic circumstances unique to Australia make this a dream. We simply own too many cars per head, we are too spread out and we don't have the population that can support a car industry that can supply cheap cars. Therefore, we will tend to have cars with a older average age (generally less safe in terms of collision outcomes, braking distance, stability control etc.) and roads that are not (or are less) safe for very high speeds. The km of road per head make its uneconomical to built lots of km of road safe to drive at very high speed and we all cannot afford to buy several new cars every few years.
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13-02-2011, 06:51 PM | #71 | |||
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Typically where the limit was raised, all it did was legalise what was already happening there as the lower limits were not being policed or observed. What also happens in one of those cases, ie Utah, was that the legalisation of the higher limit meant that more people were travelling at closer to the same speed, as previously there were some adhering to the limit of 55mph and those doing excess of 70mph on the same road. As most of you have researched, the lower the speed differential between vehicles, the less chance of incident and in the state of Utah there was insignificant change in the accident rate due to this. I Hopefully most people will not see that as a justification for higher speeds, just "same" speeds. |
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13-02-2011, 06:56 PM | #72 | |||
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in that case, speed cameras are not for safety are they, because by raising the limit and even then putting a camera with a 10% tolerance to catch the hoons, the roads would be much safer but then there would be less revenue back in the mid 90's both my father and step mum got pinged by the same camera - both 15 kph over the limit and 15 minutes apart in peak hour traffic. going by the same speed theory, everyone on that road was being safe, yet they all got pinged - safety or revenue Last edited by gtxb67; 13-02-2011 at 07:04 PM. |
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13-02-2011, 07:33 PM | #73 | |||
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Just want to clarify something, I don't think that speed limits should be increased, nor do I have a problem with them being policed and enforced, so long as that policing/enforcing is fair and in line with the risk increase that offenders pose.
How to do this, don't know. Just know that the current system of a single pronged speed kills message with a zero tolerance enforcement approach causes a divisiveness between even sensible conscientious motorists and the road safety front. Silly thing is I don't think anyone here is anti-safety. I'm going to risk trying an analogy here, although I've got a crap record of making them work so don't take it too literally. It's a bit like the medical profession and antibiotics. For years after the advent of cheap antibiotics, doctors prescribed them immediately for any simple ailment without bothering to get to the root cause of people's illness and seeing if it was really the best solution. Figured no real down side as side-effects minimal, and in most cases made people better. Problem was over-prescription started making the bacterial strains they were designed to fight stronger and some became super-bugs, immune to conventional anti-biotic treatment. Buy misusing and abusing an incredible medical breakthrough, they severely reduced its effectiveness and almost made it useless. I think governments are doing the same with speed cameras. It's an attractive and easy "cure-all" because it also brings in a bucket load of money when used with a zero tolerance mentality. They've started ignoring all the other cures because they require more work and effort, and as a result they are making Joe Public immune to the Road Safety message (which they have effectively made a purely "speed kills" message).
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13-02-2011, 08:19 PM | #74 | |||
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13-02-2011, 08:33 PM | #75 | ||
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i do not have a problem with any of the road rules we have - except maybe speed cameras should have a 10% tolerance with slightly less of them and i do not like red light/speed cameras together
however i do believe in telling both sides of the story and the government in its wisdom only seems to tell us the side they want us to hear. the fact is they are for revenue. if they were for safety, the proceeds would be put back into road safety but of course they are not. they are budgeted for in the general budget but as always we are told lie after lie |
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13-02-2011, 09:31 PM | #76 | |||
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yes, the roads are safer when the speed differential is low and the actual speed at which cars are travelling at is reduced. How low we make that limit is a compromise between safety, function and convenience. The present limits have been arrived at through a long process of trial and error (up to the 1970s) and beyond that by , research investigation and design. Despite the rumblings of many here, I dont think that the recommendations for the present limits were ever arrived at with making revenue for state governments in mind. There will be no doubt people who will continue to cite stats "proving" that increasing speed makes the roads safer and those quoting those stats will be shown to be "cherry picking" the data to suit their beliefs, and it could continue for ever, Ill say goodnight on this one. |
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13-02-2011, 10:28 PM | #77 | |||
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i have stated already that there is nothing wrong with our speed limits. going by your lack of disagreement with raising a speed limit in the us by 15 mph, mine was an example of how the "safety" of the same speed could be achieved with only a 10 kph increase. if a 15 mph increase made a road safer, then sure a 10 kph increase could too, couldn't it. it was not a suggestion, just an example but 300 kph: now that is just going too far either way, i do not have $15,000,000 to do a study on it, so my theory will always be wrong - the government wins again |
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