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96mph in a 30 limit & 149mph on a motorway: figures reveal insane speeding on roads of England & Wales

"A limit not a target to beat," says road safety body...

The fastest speeding motorist recorded in England and Wales in the last 12 months was doing over twice the speed limit on the M25 at Swanley, according to figures obtained by the Institute of Advanced Motorists.

More worrying for cyclists were the drivers caught on camera doing twice and in one case three times the limit on A and B roads.

Eighty-five percent of police authorities responded to the IAM’s freedom of information request asking for details of the fastest speeds recorded by cameras between April 2013 and May 2014.

The highest speeds recorded away from motorways and other 70mph limits were:

  • 30mph road: 96mph on the B1288, on Leam Lane, Gateshead
  • 50mph road: 119 mph on the A414 Stanstead Abbotts, Hertfordshire
  • 60mph road: 127mph on the A413 Wendover By-Pass, Wendover

The sentencing guidelines for courts dealing with speeding offences stop well short of the top speeds now being recorded on the roads. The maximum penalty laid down for speeding in a 30mph area is a fine plus six points or a disqualification of 7-56 days for driving between 51 and 60mph. 96mph? It seems not to have occurred to the framers of the guidelines that this was even possible.

Some might say that it’s a failure of road design that drivers can hit three times the limit on a 30mph road. Leam Lane, according to Google Street View, is die-straight with clear sight lines and no traffic calming, even at the entrance to Roman Road Primary School.

IAM chief executive Simon best said: “Speed limits are a limit.  They are not a target to beat. Unfortunately this message has not got through to many motorists and it’s clear that efforts to make speeding as socially unacceptable as drink driving continue to fail.  That’s why we need sustained campaigning by the government, motor industry and charities to keep ramming home the message that excessive speed kills.  Catching speeders at two or even three times the limit also shows the importance of keeping speed cameras at well-known black spots.”

“The current guidelines on sentencing for excessive speeding offences are out of sync with modern roads, modern vehicles and society’s view of the value of lives lost in crashes.  We all share the roads with these speeding drivers and the government must crack down on them with more consistent penalties and tougher measures to break their addiction for speed.”

A detailed breakdown by region is available in the attached Word document.

John has been writing about bikes and cycling for over 30 years since discovering that people were mug enough to pay him for it rather than expecting him to do an honest day's work.

He was heavily involved in the mountain bike boom of the late 1980s as a racer, team manager and race promoter, and that led to writing for Mountain Biking UK magazine shortly after its inception. He got the gig by phoning up the editor and telling him the magazine was rubbish and he could do better. Rather than telling him to get lost, MBUK editor Tym Manley called John’s bluff and the rest is history.

Since then he has worked on MTB Pro magazine and was editor of Maximum Mountain Bike and Australian Mountain Bike magazines, before switching to the web in 2000 to work for CyclingNews.com. Along with road.cc founder Tony Farrelly, John was on the launch team for BikeRadar.com and subsequently became editor in chief of Future Publishing’s group of cycling magazines and websites, including Cycling Plus, MBUK, What Mountain Bike and Procycling.

John has also written for Cyclist magazine, edited the BikeMagic website and was founding editor of TotalWomensCycling.com before handing over to someone far more representative of the site's main audience.

He joined road.cc in 2013. He lives in Cambridge where the lack of hills is more than made up for by the headwinds.

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24 comments

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Simon E | 9 years ago
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Headlines like '96 in a 30' may get lots of attention but let's be honest about this - one dickhead is scary but 1,000 drivers doing 40 in a 30 every single day is IMHO much more of an issue.

It's not the extremes it's the chronic problem. Speeding and inappropriate behaviour, particularly in built-up areas where pedestrians and cyclists are more common creates much greater risk.

Why is it that so many people think that speed limits need not be adhered to because "I'm a good driver", "it's not much faster" or "brakes are much better than 40 years ago"? All are irrelevant.

But nothing will change until more people realise that cars and lorries should not dominate our towns, to the detriment of everyone else. Most streets were not designed to accomodate strings of cars nose-to-tail, but until more people get out of their cars and walk, cycle or take the bus then the spineless politicians, councillors and planning departments will cater for the majority.

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Driver Protest Union | 9 years ago
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All of this is feeding the 'speeding' industry. It's driving too fast at any speed that causes accidents and that is dangerous driving. If too fast happens at all speeds it's clearly not 'speeding' 90 MPH, 30 above the limit isn't speeding it's dangerous driving and the penalties are sufficient for that purpose. Why aren't these people charged with dangerous? Ask the lazy police who make lots of money from speeding.

How does any of this 'speeding' focus for money, instead of dangerous driving help road safety or any road users?

At 60MPH speeding is at 61. At 100+ it has to be something else then. If they kill someone they get charged with death by.............? Not death by speeding. So there's the case that the police are charging the wrong offence. And yes of course they're speeding too just as a murderer has clearly committed assault, ABH and GBH too along the way.

Don't let the 'speeding' industry fool you guys.

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paulfg42 | 9 years ago
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Knowing the area a bit, I'd be surprised if the driver doing 96 owned the car they were driving. Or maybe they were being chased by a police car.  19

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Airzound replied to paulfg42 | 9 years ago
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Or maybe it was a plod car on a bun run?

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WolfieSmith | 9 years ago
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Plenty of roads around us are now 20mph and the irony is that the lower speed limit is often more efficient as you can pull out at T junctions instead of waiting for people going 40mph in a 30mph to sweep by.

Regardless of reports, speed is a factor in the majority of road accidents and the slower we go the less crashes occur and the more efficiently traffic moves as a whole.

I'm all for extra fines and extra points. If you don't like speed cameras or you can't afford to lose your licence as you need it for work there is a solution. Don't speed.

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Yorkshie Whippet | 9 years ago
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Some interesting comments.

What is the point of banning someone? All you need to do is watch any of the Police camera or Interceptor programmes to see a small minority of those driving whilst already banned, without correct license, valid insurance, tax or MOT. Some people will not give a rat's arse about a piece of paper.

Whilst I agree with the sentiment behind allowing people to do 80mph+ on quiet motoways. The reason why this is not done is because what you may call "quiet" could be the police's idea of "moderate". Similary with times, imagine the farce in court where the argument is over was it 10:59 or 11:00 when the car was seen speeding or stopped for speeding. The issue I have with speed on motorway is HGVs, are the speed limits to be raised for these and the risk of 40 odd tons out of control at 60/70 mph? or do we increase the risk of high speed cars hitting slower traffic? Yes I fully accept that modern cars can safely travel at higher speeds however the soft squishy thing doesn't have the capability of forward planning the traffic at 80mph whilst updating facetime or spacebook status, texting the girlfriend and reprogramming the satnav whilst drinking the tall skinky latte mocho woca and fat free doughnut purchased not long since at the last service boutique. Crickey it's difficult enough for some people to understand that an overtake does not last 2 or 3 minutes and several miles. The main problem with speed in any situation is that people do not drive at a speed that they can safely stop in the distance they can see.

Making cars and roads safer is the worse way to go. The safer people feel the more risk they will take. Remove all electronic ABS EPS traction control etc, airbags, crumple zones, safety cages and seat belts. Place a six inch spike in the middle of the steering wheel and tell the driver to hit the wall at 20mph. "(insert four letter word) off" would be a good response.

Naming and shaming is a step forward. Better idea would be bringing back the stocks on a Friday/Saturday night. 10mins of be pissed on, vomitted over and generally humilated I think would be far more effective. Especially the "Oh shit is that the boss heading this way?" But alas Human Rights stops degrading punishment.

Thank you for reading this far, I'm sure that's a few minutes of your life you'll never get back. End of essay.  105

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dannycarr2k | 9 years ago
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I'd suggest we look at this from another view...

20MPH speed zones are obviously indicative of a road being unsuitable for the location. If a school is on a main road, then an alternative entrance to the school should be made giving access via a quieter road; alternatively the road should be re-routed so that traffic can flow.

Furthermore, having traffic move expeditiously is a perfectly reasonable goal, and where a road is required to provide a higher speed link, then it would be acceptable to have decent speed limits, and ADEQUATE segregated cycling lanes. I don't mean the appalling excuse for cycling lanes we currently have whereby you're dodging pedestrians, lamp posts, trees, access points, etc...

I don't feel it serves any of us well to have drivers champing at the bit in a wide, well designed road, limited to 20MPH and spending half their time watching the speedometer. It only serves to increase frustration levels and the transport infrastructure needs radical updating to prevent this. Who here hasn't become frustrated at driving down a road and seeing the speed limit constantly changing from 30MPH, to 20MPH, to 30MPH, to 40MPH, to 30MPH and feeling like they spend more time looking out for speed limit signs than dangers on the road.

There are some extremely dangerous drivers, as highlighted in the article, who should have their driving licence stripped. After a suitable period of being banned from driving, they should be required to retake their licence, including a period of mandatory training prior to sitting the test. Perhaps drivers who have received a ban should have to acquire an advanced driving licence in addition to the standard driving licence before they can resume the privileges of driving.

I'm a cyclist; I train 20 hours a week including a lot of time running; and I have a lot of near misses especially running on quiet back roads where cars maintain the speed limit around blind corners, etc... We need to start teaching drivers to drive according to the conditions.

20MPH zones on arterial routes, in my mind, signifies the route needs changing.

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severs1966 | 9 years ago
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The fine should be (sort of) inversely proportional to the posted limit.
By that, I mean that speeding through low limits like 30 and especially 20 is more dangerous, because those limits are intended specifically to protect pedestrians and tend to be in towns (the places where I am most scared to ride my bike).

I would suggest that someone going 20 over the limit in a 70 is less serious than someone going 10 over the limit in a 20 or 30.

The fine should grow rapidly for repeat offences in low limit areas, because this indicates that the driver has not learned and genuinely does not care about other people's lives.

Points (on licences) for speeding should increase with each unspent speeding offence. So if you get an SP30 and pick up 3 points for speeding in a 30-limit area, then you do it again before the points have been removed from your licence, you should get 4 points for the same offence, then the next time 5, etc.

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oozaveared replied to severs1966 | 9 years ago
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severs1966 wrote:

The fine should be (sort of) inversely proportional to the posted limit.
By that, I mean that speeding through low limits like 30 and especially 20 is more dangerous, because those limits are intended specifically to protect pedestrians and tend to be in towns (the places where I am most scared to ride my bike).

I would suggest that someone going 20 over the limit in a 70 is less serious than someone going 10 over the limit in a 20 or 30.

The fine should grow rapidly for repeat offences in low limit areas, because this indicates that the driver has not learned and genuinely does not care about other people's lives.

Points (on licences) for speeding should increase with each unspent speeding offence. So if you get an SP30 and pick up 3 points for speeding in a 30-limit area, then you do it again before the points have been removed from your licence, you should get 4 points for the same offence, then the next time 5, etc.

Actually fines and points are graduated and the offences are dealt with differently. You get an FPN up to a certain point and then you have to go to court.

ie the police won't issue an FPN below their charging thresholds. There is some good reason for this in that it is just above or could be very temporary and because they would have to argue the toss about angles and calibration in court all the time. So they take the limit they enforce to a point where those defences can't sensibly be deployed. The option for an FPN only goes to the summons point. At that speed you go to court. All those people that claim they were only doing 31mph and got a ticket are basically lying.

Here are the guidelines:

Speed limit: 20 mph
ACPO charging threshold: 24 mph
Summons: 35 mph

Speed limit: 30 mph
ACPO charging threshold: 35 mph
Summons: 50 mph

Speed limit: 40 mph
ACPO charging threshold: 46 mph
Summons: 66 mph

Speed limit: 50 mph
ACPO charging threshold: 57 mph
Summons: 76 mph

Speed limit: 60 mph
ACPO charging threshold: 68 mph
Summons: 86 mph

Speed limit: 70 mph
ACPO charging threshold: 79 mph
Summons: 96 mph

The offence of speeding carries between 3 and six point and graduated fines. But beyond certain speeds the offence can become interpreted as dangerous driving.

Dangerous driving guidelines are these
Statutory Limitations & Maximum Penalty:

On indictment - 2 years imprisonment or a fine or both
Summary conviction - imprisonment not exceeding 6 months, or a fine, or both
Disqualification minimum 12 months
Obligatory endorsement
Mandatory disqualification until passes extended driving test
Sentencing Range: Non custodial options may be considered, coupled with a long period of disqualification, but usually a custodial penalty is appropriate, especially where a number of aggravating factors combine.

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Jimmy Ray Will | 9 years ago
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Against some of the comments posted, I think I may be more indoctrinated in to the cars than I thought.

Yes the cited episodes of speeding are extreme, and yes, more extreme punishments need to be handed down to these willful law breakers... I am on board.

But the whole lynch anyone over the speed limit mantra seems a bit extreme to me. As the comment above so succinctly puts it... does it really matter if someone is doing 80mph on a deserted motorway... 70mph on an empty A road... even 40mph in a 30 zone through out of hours industrial estates for instance?

For me, its important that you don't speed past the school during school hours, you don't hoof it wildly along housing estates... thats what really matters - driving to the limits of the conditions/roads/environment.... the danger as I see it, is that by being too draconian on the application and monitoring of speed limits drivers will resent the limitations and lose respect for the purpose of their application... safety.

A case in point being traffic lights... Where I live, a few years ago traffic lights were used to deter drivers commuting into the city. There were fun policies in place where if there was a fatal accident at any junction, lights would be put in place, no matter how stupid. Now, more than half of all the traffic lights in Devon can be found within Exeters city boundaries.

The end result of this is that you'll see more light jumping in Exeter than anywhere in the UK.

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mrmo replied to Jimmy Ray Will | 9 years ago
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Jimmy Ray Will wrote:

A case in point being traffic lights... Where I live, a few years ago traffic lights were used to deter drivers commuting into the city. There were fun policies in place where if there was a fatal accident at any junction, lights would be put in place, no matter how stupid. Now, more than half of all the traffic lights in Devon can be found within Exeters city boundaries.

If you think about it, it makes sense. A roundabout relies on drivers paying attention as do stop signs and give way signs, a crash indicates that there is a problem with the road design. Install traffic lights, force, in theory, drivers to stop and look. Corrects the road design, deals with any blind spots and the like.

Currently in north Devon and the way some locals use the lanes! you have to wonder why there aren't more accidents!

Also remember D&C police scrapped their traffic unit!

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FluffyKittenofT... replied to Jimmy Ray Will | 9 years ago
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Jimmy Ray Will wrote:

Against some of the comments posted, I think I may be more indoctrinated in to the cars than I thought.

Yes the cited episodes of speeding are extreme, and yes, more extreme punishments need to be handed down to these willful law breakers... I am on board.

But the whole lynch anyone over the speed limit mantra seems a bit extreme to me. As the comment above so succinctly puts it... does it really matter if someone is doing 80mph on a deserted motorway... 70mph on an empty A road... even 40mph in a 30 zone through out of hours industrial estates for instance?

On a motorway, personally I don't much care what you do. But that's just my selfishness as I can't remember the last time I was on a motorway in any kind of vehicle.

But the speeds some motorists think are appropriate for urban roads just astonishes me, and its unfair on pedestrians, yet alone cyclists. 40mph in a 20mph zone, for example (swerving to get through the road cushions without slowing one iota).

And "70mph on a deserted A-road" gets my goat. There's an urban A-road I have to cycle on regularly because there is no other route due to the stupid layout of the side-streets (or I walk on the narrow pavement next to it, which is almost as scary) and what gets me is the darker it gets and the lower the visibility gets the faster drivers go. Their attitude is 'if I can't see it, it isn't there'.

Late in the evening or early hours of the morning they do indeed hit 70mph, they just see an 'empty road' and put their foot down. Tough luck if one is cycling on it or trying to cross it as a pedestrian.

And the results are clear to see - I have seen the aftermath of a good many crashes on that road, and even seen two happen right in front of me (one being a motorcyclist coming off while doing a wheelie).

If its in a city its not 'deserted' even if you think it looks like it.

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nowasps | 9 years ago
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Until we (as a culture) stop fetishising the motor car, nothing will change.

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notfastenough | 9 years ago
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96 in a 70 is quick. 96 in a 30 says you should never have been given a license.

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kamoshika replied to notfastenough | 9 years ago
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notfastenough wrote:

96 in a 70 is quick. 96 in a 30 says you should never have been given a license.

What we need is the sentencing system to have some teeth, so that when someone has so ably demonstrated that they are not a fit person to be in charge of a motor vehicle, it is possible to permanently remove that privilege from them.

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RobD | 9 years ago
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Worryingly, if the driver was caught at 96mph by the camera, what was the speed they were doing before they hit the brakes to try not to be caught?
I think really any road with a school on it should have a 20mph limit and a speed camera, I know people will still speed in 20 zones, but if they started getting stricter with fines, and maybe naming and shaming people caught speeding in local newspapers then it might actually start to make people think a little more and realise the limit's there for a reason.

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bendertherobot replied to RobD | 9 years ago
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RobD wrote:

Worryingly, if the driver was caught at 96mph by the camera, what was the speed they were doing before they hit the brakes to try not to be caught?
I think really any road with a school on it should have a 20mph limit and a speed camera, I know people will still speed in 20 zones, but if they started getting stricter with fines, and maybe naming and shaming people caught speeding in local newspapers then it might actually start to make people think a little more and realise the limit's there for a reason.

Naming and shaming is interesting. Drivers are probably the biggest social class after, well, people! There's a pervading sense of "that could be me" that applies to that class. That seems to me to destigmatise what is, at its heart, a criminal offence. Speeding, and even things like careless and dangerous driving are viewed as quasi civil social offences. For some reason society views the young mother who steals to feed her kids as a criminal. But those blinded by the sun who mow down cyclists to be a bad driver.

That distinguishment must be down to the sheer numbers involved in this social group. Even non drivers know many drivers so they join it by extension.

You're right that it's time to name and shame. Time to properly stigmatise and criminalise poor behaviour on the roads. That means proper fines and proper punishment. Bans should be given out far more regularly.

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BIRMINGHAMisaDUMP replied to RobD | 9 years ago
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I live in a 20MPH zone. Does anyone respect it? No.
I have contacted the local authority and the police on many occasions. Have they done anything?
No

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Wolfshade | 9 years ago
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Please tell me how my helmet (rated upto collisions of 12.1mph) are meant to protect us from people doing these speeds?!

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jacknorell | 9 years ago
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Frankly, I couldn't care less if someone is speeding on a motorway in good weather and little traffic.

However, anyone speeding in a build up area or residential area should have a fine that's 10x higher than now, and if double the speed limit, the car should be impounded and auction off, combined with a very long ban.

If, under those conditions, the driver hurts anyone, they should be charged with dangerous driving (vehicular manslaughter would be good to have) automatically, and the speeding being the qualifying character of the crime as the only required evidence.

But, we'd first need to have some traffic police to actually patrol our roads, and that's not been a priority for at least a decade.

If we all write to our MPs about that... something may eventually change. Whingeing on a cyclist forum isn't going to fix sweet f-all.

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flexcamp replied to jacknorell | 9 years ago
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I'm inclined to agree with you on the motorway speed thing, not that I'm a motorway speeder or anything, but it seem more 'sensible' to be driving at speed on a road designed for speed. However urban speeders should get their arses kicked heavily by the law. current penalties should be at least doubled...

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dafyddp | 9 years ago
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As I've said before, we have to shift social attitude to driving which requires a committed political will backed up with high-profile advertising campaigns (in exactly the same way drink-driving has been tackled).

Secondly, I wonder how many of these drivers were actually motorcyclists? Just like cycling, wanging a bike round fast roads is where the thrill comes (except of course, a cyclist gets their adrenaline rush at 40mph rather than 140mph)

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mattsccm | 9 years ago
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To my mind all speeding fines want at least 2 zeros added to them. And an automatic ban if say a small % over.
Speeding should be treated at least as seriously as drink driving.
No good reason not to.

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mrmo | 9 years ago
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Quote:

A Kent Police spokesman said a man in his 20s appeared at West Kent Magistrates' Court in March and was disqualified from driving for six months. He was also fined £600 and ordered to pay £85 costs and a victim surcharge of £65.

from the BBC,

about sums it up, you can smash the limit and no one really cares.

Or to be really cynical, what would he have got if he had killed someone rather than speed?

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