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Crap driver tells Jeremy Vine to “Fuck off”; Geraint Thomas's season over; Demare wins again at Giro; 100 miles at 42.6mph (while drafting); Car tech preventing speeding mandatory in EU from 2022; Muddy Classics; + more

Today's live blog with Alex Bowden (daytime) and Simon MacMichael (evening)...

SUMMARY

No Live Blog item found.

08 October 2020, 20:36
Crap driver tells Jeremy Vine to eff off

BBC Radio and Channel 5 broadcaster Jeremy Vine often posts videos from his commute to Twitter, and here's one from this evening in which a driver who seems to be stuck in her own world tells him to "Fuck off" when he points out that not only did she overtake him at speed, but also ignored pedestrians waiting to go across a zebra crossing.

Your favourite website may be based in Bath ... but we do have a presence in London (well, me) and living not far from Jeremy, I often ride the same roads into the West End and back.

Am I surprised by this kind of entitled driving on George Street in Marylebone, a route I often take in and out of town? Not at all. 

You can imagine some of the muppets in the mentions though ...

 

08 October 2020, 16:11
England's footballers should be good and warm for the Wales match tonight
08 October 2020, 16:08
Not exactly a photo finish for Demare this time around

Demare edged out Peter Sagan by a matter of millimetres on Stage 4.

Today's win was by a healthier margin.

Jaw-droppingly healthy really.

08 October 2020, 15:17
Demare (Eurosport)
Demare dodges the photographers
08 October 2020, 15:11
This is what it takes to finish second in a stage at the Giro
08 October 2020, 14:55
Arnaud Demare wins Stage 6 of Giro d'Italia

Arnaud Demare of Groupama-FDJ has won Stage 6 of the Giro d'Italia in Matera, his second victory in this year's race, and 12th of this strangest of seasons.

The French national champion made it look easy today, unlike his hair's-breadth win in Villafranca Tirreno on Tuesday, distancing his rivals before the line in a tough finale.

Bora-Hansgrohe's Peter Sagan was favourite for the win today but finished eighth and loses the points jersey to Demare. The three-time world champion, riding the Giro for the first time, is also still waiting to become the 99th rider to have won a stage of each of cycling's three Grand Tours.

08 October 2020, 14:30
Thomas's season is over

Confirmation, if it were needed, that Geraint Thomas's season is over following the broken pelvis he sustained in a crash in the neutral zone on Stage 3 of the Giro d'Italia.

Three weeks off the bike.

But at least he's doing off season properly.

08 October 2020, 14:25
Boardman's BBC beef

Chris Boardman has been a bit more specific about his dissatisfaction with that BBC segment on low traffic neighbourhoods. (See yesterday's live blog and also Jon Burke's comments earlier.)

08 October 2020, 13:58
Almost time for The Muddy Classics
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Paris Roubaix recon today. I think there are cobblestones in the mud somewhere?

A post shared by Matt S (@mpshriver) on

Paris-Roubaix is on Sunday October 25.

08 October 2020, 12:53
It's Clear Air Day - time to show your support for bike lanes

Cycling UK is asking you to mark Clean Air Day by expressing your support for cycle lanes.

"Too many journalists looking for a cheap story have taken the complaints of a few and blown them out of proportion," says Cycling UK director, Matt Mallinder.

“It’s time to fight back. We can all play a role. It's not too late. We can turn the tide by simply speaking up and letting our councils know.

"And we can use social media, write to the local paper to tell them we applaud the schemes or leave positive comments on negative online news stories. You can also provide us with evidence of where the schemes are working well and give us the knowledge so we can continue fighting the battle.

“That’s the only way we’re going to get our voices heard above the cacophony of complaints and ensure cyclists and pedestrians get the infrastructure they deserve. And the more people who take the time to contact their councils, the bigger impact it's going to have.”

You can get in touch with Cycling UK here.

And here's a page that'll give you a bit of a steer if you want to tell your local paper why cycle lanes make sense.

08 October 2020, 12:40
Lime hire bike distribution to be carried out by e-cargo bike

Pedal Me are to replace the vans that Lime Bike has been using to redistribute its bikes on the streets.

E-cargo bikes will now be used to pick up/drop off multiple e-bikes at a time.

They'll be swapping batteries in and out as well.

The partnership will negate over 60,0000 motor vehicle miles per year and means Lime’s e-bike service will be fully car-free across London

08 October 2020, 11:28
Video: Drafting at 125mph

Here's Brazilian cyclist Evandro Portela drafting a truck at 125mph.

Full story here.

 

08 October 2020, 11:25
Jon Ornee (Facebook)
This guy did 100 miles at 42.6mph (while drafting)

On Monday, Jon Ornée set what he believes is a world record for fastest 100 miles by bicycle (while drafting).

He rode behind a minivan on a NASCAR racetrack for 100 miles in 2:20:46 at an average speed of 42.6mph.

In 2019, Marcin Bialoblocki rode a 100-mile time trial in 3:13:37. Drafting behind a vehicle is obviously a huge advantage and Ornée is applying for it to be a new category.

Ornée was hit by an SUV while cycling in May last year, a near-death experience he says has changed his life.

“I thought, ‘wouldn’t it be cool if a car and bike teamed up for a change and did something spectacular?’”

Ornée’s dad drove the van and he wore a bluetooth earpiece so that he could chat to him.

“Going around a track while staring at the back of a vehicle is a ton of fun for the first couple laps,” he explained. “Doing it for over two hours is somewhat hypnotic. It was good to be able to chat a bit to keep my mind engaged.”

Ornée said the plan was originally to do 42mph on the straights and 40mph on the turns, “but after a few laps I asked him to hold it steady at 42, which felt comfortable.”

Hydration was one of his main concerns, to the extent that he “definitely over-hydrated the 24 hours before the ride.”

He said reaching down for a water bottle at 43mph felt a little sketchy, so he drank from a bottle mounted between his aerobars using a straw.

08 October 2020, 10:39
Freeman tribunal conjecture

Shane Sutton?

Remember his spectacular appearance last November?

08 October 2020, 09:56
The AA do use bikes sometimes apparently
08 October 2020, 09:42
More on that BBC segment on Low Traffic Neighbourhoods

Chris Boardman called this report "irresponsible" yesterday.

Jon Burke - the Hackney councillor who has received death threats over his support for Low Traffic Neighbourhoods - expands on that.

08 October 2020, 09:06
Met Police speed enforcement (via TfL)
Car tech preventing speeding to be mandatory in the EU from 2022

Mandatory safety features will be introduced in cars to combat speeding in the EU from 2022. The only question is what form they will take.

The BBC reports that the EU is proposing kit that will render the accelerator pedal temporarily unresponsive when the speed limit is reached.

Car makers want a bleeping light on the dashboard.

Oliver Carsten from Leeds University trialled the “Intelligent Speed Assistant” accelerator pedal and said: “It gave us a massive improvement in speed compliance with UK drivers, especially on urban roads.

“We fear that replacing it with a beeping system will just annoy drivers, so they will mute it as soon as they step into the vehicle.”

The issue is being debated today. Whether the system they go for will apply in the UK depends on trade deals and whatnot.

08 October 2020, 08:27
Luca Wackermann (via Vini Zabu-KTM on Twitter)
Luca Wackerman suffered a broken back and nose thanks to the Giro helicopter

Luca Wackermann sustained injuries including a broken back when he crashed at the end of Stage 4 after barriers were blown across the road, apparently due to the downdraft from a helicopter taking aerial shots of the sprint.

Full story here.

 

08 October 2020, 08:18
Dr Richard Freeman (picture credit Team Sky)
Latest from the Dr Richard Freeman medical tribunal

Here's the latest from the medical tribunal of Former British Cycling and Team Sky doctor, Richard Freeman.

Freeman says he destroyed Testogel patches that he ordered to be delivered to the National Cycling Centre in 2011 the same day they were delivered - but hasn't managed to explain why he did so.

He also admitted not being fully familiar with World Anti-doping Code.

Full story here.

 

08 October 2020, 08:13
Today's stage of the Giro d'Italia

Described as "wavy and demanding" in early parts before "a few mild climbs and descents in the closing part lead to punchier bits in the stage finale."

Stage 6

Race situation: Joao Almeida (Deceuninck - Quick Step) leads Pello Bilbao (Bahrain-McLaren) by 43 seconds with Wilco Kelderman (Sunweb) a further five seconds back. There are currently 14 riders within two minutes.

Peter Sagan (Bora-Hansgrohe) leads the points classification, ahead of Arnaud Demare (Groupama-FDJ) and Filippo Ganna (Ineos Grenadiers).

Alex has written for more cricket publications than the rest of the road.cc team combined. Despite the apparent evidence of this picture, he doesn't especially like cake.

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94 comments

Avatar
ktache replied to peted76 | 3 years ago
5 likes

My mother came to visit a few weeks back and part of her journey was on a bit of motorway with enforced average speed limits.  She told me that it was a lovely way to drive, everyone doing exactly the same speed, nobody racing up behind her, most important - no aggression.

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TheBillder replied to ktache | 3 years ago
1 like

She's very lucky then (& not just that she's your mum). My experience of average speed cameras in roadworks is that keeping any sort of distance goes right out of the window, particularly HGVs. If your speedo over reads (as most do) then someone with an accurate one (e.g. in a sat nav) will be right up your arse in case you delay them for a second or two in a 3 hour journey.

They do help reduce accidents according to stats (e.g. A77, A9) but I wish there was some way to enforce safe distances).

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Bungle_52 replied to TheBillder | 3 years ago
4 likes

If someone is "right up your arse" just slow down. They will eventually back off or overtake and you can resume your journey. This is the recommended course of action on a speed awareness course.

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brooksby replied to Bungle_52 | 3 years ago
1 like

Or they'll just try and drive over you because they have a Right To Drive (allegedly...).

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peted76 | 3 years ago
15 likes

That Cllr Jon Burke is a bit of a legend I reckon. He's fully committed to a greener agenda and actually appears to have done something about it!

Well done sir, chapeau!

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Hirsute | 3 years ago
1 like

I did read about some chap in a Merc who passed a golf club entrance and his car then went 10 mph as it picked up the golf club speed sign !

Since people complain that they speed by accident, the pedal thing seems a good idea. Not sure about a GPS tech solution having taking my car back for a product recall for a software update for the accelerator/EMS. I'd need a very high level of confidence that any solution would not cause other equally serious issues.

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OnYerBike | 3 years ago
17 likes

I really don't see why the speed restrictor should allow the driver to override it - why would we deliberately allow people to break the law?

  • Started an overtake and can't complete it? Use the brake pedal, not the accelerate!
  • GPS error has you trundling along at 20 in a 30 zone? Unfortunate but necessary to save lives.
  • Bought a 500hp sports car and can't thrash it around your local area? That was silly wasn't it.

The only reason the car lobby is pushing back on this is that they profit from selling fast, powerful cars in the full knowledge that people will use them to exceed the speed limit. Take away the ability to go faster than other people and people don't have an incentive to buy those cars.

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HoarseMann replied to OnYerBike | 3 years ago
0 likes

OnYerBike wrote:

I really don't see why the speed restrictor should allow the driver to override it - why would we deliberately allow people to break the law?

The technology is not there to enforce the law, it's more of a 'driver aid'. It's not perfect, so on the occasion it gets it wrong, it needs to be easily overridden.

There may be occasions where exceeding the speed limit can be justified. Such as driving someone to hospital in an emergency or to avoid a collision.

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Luca Patrono replied to HoarseMann | 3 years ago
9 likes

I wasn't aware that the law granted provision for those who are not driving EMS vehicles to break the speed limit. As for "avoiding a collision", it seems to me that the effect of governors on reducing the potential for collisions by preventing dangerous driving likely to result in a loss of control would far exceed that of these spurious cases that are cited every time about needing to accelerate to avoid a collision.

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Awavey replied to Luca Patrono | 3 years ago
2 likes

I believe there is a provision for exceptional circumstances you can claim to allow you to break a speed limit,though obviously the clue is the name "exceptional" its not carte blanche to just drive over the speed limit.

But Im not a fan of the idea of limiting vehicles speeding like this as I dont feel the technology in the GPS accuracy and handling is mature enough or safe enough to have that kind of control in a vehicle, hands up who would trust their bike computer to govern the speed of their car ? anyone who has used one has experienced the random crashes, the loss of signal, the inability of it to work out which road you are even on sometimes, those are annoyances riding a bike, they could be lethal in a vehicle.

and it drives a set of behaviours, the like of which we are already seeing as a flaw in the self driving cars,and with lorry drivers currently, drivers pay less attention, concentrate less because they have less to focus on to drive, they just put the foot to the floor let the speed limiter sort things out for them, their mind wanders, maybe they start playing with their mobile phone more, tailgate more because they are all doing the same speed, try those overtakes at 0.1mph faster, all of which when something unexpected they need to react to means their reaction times will be greater. plus there are considerations that its perfectly safe to drive near the speed limit in perfect conditions, but same road with ice, fog, heavy rain ?

ultimately this really isnt a problem needing a tech solution,thats just the polticians/bureaucrats solution to everything more tech, often after theyve been lobbied by tech companies selling such solutions. But we already have the solution, its give more funding to the police to carry out more traffic related crime prevention.

people habitually speed in vehicles not because they arent all driving some modern equivalent of a Knight Industries Two Thousand , its because they know the chance of the being caught doing it, is tiny, and everyday they speed and dont get caught it reinforces that message to them.

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peted76 replied to Awavey | 3 years ago
2 likes

Awavey wrote:

But Im not a fan of the idea of limiting vehicles speeding like this as I dont feel the technology in the GPS accuracy and handling is mature enough or safe enough to have that kind of control in a vehicle, hands up who would trust their bike computer to govern the speed of their car ? anyone who has used one has experienced the random crashes, the loss of signal, the inability of it to work out which road you are even on sometimes, those are annoyances riding a bike, they could be lethal in a vehicle.

and it drives a set of behaviours, the like of which we are already seeing as a flaw in the self driving cars,and with lorry drivers currently, drivers pay less attention, concentrate less because they have less to focus on to drive, they just put the foot to the floor let the speed limiter sort things out for them, their mind wanders, maybe they start playing with their mobile phone more, tailgate more because they are all doing the same speed, try those overtakes at 0.1mph faster, all of which when something unexpected they need to react to means their reaction times will be greater. plus there are considerations that its perfectly safe to drive near the speed limit in perfect conditions, but same road with ice, fog, heavy rain ?

The technology is there and it's robust. For autonomous vehicles it's not quite there as the lack of human interface cannot replicate unexpected occurences. What is being discussed is limiting the speed, which, while it may be a step towards autonomous driving we are not talking about taking car control from a driver, attention would still need to be paid to the road, but in theory you wouldn't need to add in the extra thought process about what speed they were doing, if anything I think that would make people more attentive, rather than less attentive.

You need not 'rely' on GPS to track speed limits, my car 'reads the road signs' and uses GPS alongside it, the speed limit for that road is displayed upon my dashboard, it's quite clever and I often find myself testing it, I reckon it's easily 95% accurate. http://www.kceed.com/speed_limit_information_function_slif_-544.html

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HoarseMann replied to Luca Patrono | 3 years ago
1 like

Luca Patrono wrote:

I wasn't aware that the law granted provision for those who are not driving EMS vehicles to break the speed limit.

The police have discretion on whether to apply the law or not. They may choose not to enforce a speeding offence if there's a justifiable reason.

The technology isn't quite reliable enough yet for it to be used as an enforcement tool. But that doesn't mean there's no benefit in having it as a driver aid.

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OnYerBike replied to HoarseMann | 3 years ago
4 likes

HoarseMann wrote:

The technology is not there to enforce the law, it's more of a 'driver aid'.

Why not use it to enforce the law? If we can prevent people from breaking the law, surely doing so is the right thing to do?

HoarseMann wrote:

It's not perfect, so on the occasion it gets it wrong, it needs to be easily overridden.

If it can be overridden, then I believe in the vast majority of cases that feature will be used to override the device when it is working properly, rather than due to the device being wrong. If the device is wrong and restricts you to slower than the speed limit, you don't "need" to override it; it's just an inconvenience.

HoarseMann wrote:

There may be occasions where exceeding the speed limit can be justified. Such as driving someone to hospital in an emergency or to avoid a collision.

If someone needs to get to hospital in an emergency, phone 999. You should never "need" to break the speed limit to avoid a collision - if you find yourself in that position it's almost certainly because of a preceeding lack of judgement and impatience. Finally, such situations where speeding is "justified" are likely to be exceesingly rare in comparison to the very regular deaths and injuries that are caused by breaking the speed limit.

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HoarseMann replied to OnYerBike | 3 years ago
0 likes

Umm, the initial press report was about a decision whether a beep/flashing light or a pedal feedback was the most appropriate driver warning.

I just wanted to share my personal experience from using both methods. Not have a debate about zero tolerance speeding enforcement!

(I did once phone 999 in an emergency and they had no ambulances available, the dispatcher advised driving the casualty to A&E!)

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OnYerBike replied to HoarseMann | 3 years ago
1 like

I know what the initial press report was about, my comment was that if you're going to introduce tech with this sort of capability why not use it to its full advantage?

There's a big difference between zero tolerance policing and using tech to prevent law breaking in the first place. I'm all for not prosecuting every Tom, Dick and Harry for the slightest misdemeanor, but I question the logic and morals of deliberately undermining technology that could prevent criminality, especially when excess speed is a contributing factor to a huge number of collisions.

It is unfortunate that ambulances aren't always available. Of course there's a legal argument that driving to A&E still doesn't give you an excuse for speeding but I think the stronger argument is still that such incidents - and any benefit from getting to A&E a few minutes sooner - are easily outweighed by the harms from speeding.

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HoarseMann replied to OnYerBike | 3 years ago
1 like

OnYerBike wrote:

I know what the initial press report was about, my comment was that if you're going to introduce tech with this sort of capability why not use it to its full advantage?

My opinion from having experience of driving a new car with traffic sign identification, is the technology is not reliable enough for the driver to relinquish total control of the vehicle's speed (I accept you have a different view, but you did ask the question and I replied).

I would welcome a future where all cars are self-driving, there are zero-road death/injuries and a racetrack is the only place a human can get behind the wheel. I'm sure it will happen, but the steps to get us there will be small and incremental.

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AlsoSomniloquism | 3 years ago
0 likes

As it is the EU rule, I suspect it won't be applied in the UK nowadays. 

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hawkinspeter | 3 years ago
4 likes

It could be fun if they do intorduce 'intelligent' speed restrictors that read the signs. Computer based vision can be quite easily tricked, so locals could have fun with nearby signs.

https://arstechnica.com/cars/2017/09/hacking-street-signs-with-stickers-could-confuse-self-driving-cars/

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visionset | 3 years ago
4 likes

Except it does not limit the speed, merely at best,  puts a blip in the pedal response.  So actually the worst option of all, since it won't deter overtakes, but make them more lethal. 

Been looking forward to this for years, but this is 1st time I've heard it won't actually be a hard limit. What a total, auto car makers arse licking disaster  2

The best system would be one that drained the drivers bank account % of income per mph over limit every second.  That'd sort it out!

Toffee wrote:

 if it's basing speed limits off sign recognition,

Surely it will be going off gps and a resource that has mapped all the roads speed limits, one that may not be complete but quickly will be (dose of optimism here).
 

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Toffee | 3 years ago
0 likes

Not sure how I feel about that speeding tech. For one, if it's basing speed limits off sign recognition, it's going to be massively innacurate. It'd probably be easier to soft limit cars to 78mph or the likes.

There will be positives, for sure, but it'll also lead to a lot of misjudged overtakes, when the car refuses to accelerate.

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Luca Patrono replied to Toffee | 3 years ago
15 likes

Soft limiting cars at the maximum speed permissible on a motorway without prosecution will not prevent people from speeding in residential areas, which is the major problem. Localized speed restriction will also force people to obey 20mph limits, as well as removing the need to trash suspensions with speed humps everywhere.

Breaking the speed limit to overtake is still breaking the law. Speed restrictors are the only way forward, optimally based on GPS data with various fallback measures, as driverless cars will inevitably be. Then in the cases where people speed, analytics can be performed on the car, and if there was interference, a specific charge can be introduced of tampering with the safety features of a motor vehicle, which helps to remove the "But for the Grace of God Go I" mindset from driver-juries, as most people won't tamper with the car.

It's disappointing to see the car lobby trying to push for a useless measure (light + beep) to "warn" people that they're speeding. The kind of people who speed don't give a single damn that they're speeding, and it will be [disabled/ignored/bypassed] as soon as they have the opportunity.

Presumably the car lobby are absolutely terrified that people will no longer buy cars with performance far in excess of what is legal or useful on any UK road if speed restrictors are introduced. I'm sure they'll bring their might to bear and we'll get useless beeping garbage, though!

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kil0ran replied to Luca Patrono | 3 years ago
4 likes

Back in the 80s Japanese sports cars had beeping speed warning chimes above 100kph, they're seriously annoying and one would hope with modern ECUs much harder to disable than they were back then. I had a Japanese import for a while and the first thing I did was pop the instrument cluster out and desolder the chime. On some cars it got progressively faster as speed increased which was surprisingly effective. Personally, I'd like cars to have those "whoop whoop whoop pull up" loops you hear on cockpit voice recorders.

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ktache replied to Luca Patrono | 3 years ago
6 likes

I don't think that the driver should be warned of themselves breaking the speed limit, I think that everyone around them should be warned of the illegal and often dangerous driving.

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HoarseMann replied to Toffee | 3 years ago
1 like

Toffee wrote:

Not sure how I feel about that speeding tech. For one, if it's basing speed limits off sign recognition, it's going to be massively innacurate. It'd probably be easier to soft limit cars to 78mph or the likes.

There will be positives, for sure, but it'll also lead to a lot of misjudged overtakes, when the car refuses to accelerate.

The car I've got at the moment does sign recognition and has a pedal based speed restrictor - but the two are not linked up!

I actually really like driving with the speed restrictor, there's a bit of a flat spot in the accelerator travel as you hit the speed limit, but if you continue to push the pedal down it then overrides it. So no problem with overtakes - if you're flooring it, then the limiter is completely disabled.

For the speed limit recognition, it's generally really good, using a combination of GPS database and image recognition of roadside signs. There are just a couple of junctions, where the speed sign is at an odd angle to the road where it's picked up the wrong limit. But it reverts to the GPS database limit value if you keep the speed (or if linked, the pedal pushed) past the override point for a few seconds.

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kt26 replied to HoarseMann | 3 years ago
2 likes

I too have one of these systems on my car. As you stated you can push through it but the pedal offers resistance so it like pushing a still button, you can't do it subconsciously, and if you do go over it will start beeping at you.

It isn't a full blown automated system, you have to set it, but there is functionality to set it your the recognised speed limit with a double press of a button and a volumn style toggle button that can move the limit up and down. Overall both me and my wife really like it and use it whenever we are driving, it removes the stress of constantly checking the speedo once set and allows you to stay focused on the road. The car is an EV which I'd say these systems are a must, the lack of engine noise does give a distrubed sense of speed, and the response of the vehicle means it doesn't take much to be speeding unintentionally in a 30.

The one limitation I do see with the system is that it can get a bit confused with the road you are on if you have adjacent roads, so being able to manually set it useful for me personally, so there is some developement required until this is ready as a standard system.

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HoarseMann replied to kt26 | 3 years ago
2 likes

Totally agree with you. The only reason to look at the speedo is to make sure you're not over the limit. Having a restrictor means it's one less thing to look at and you can concentrate more on the road ahead.

It won't stop a determined speeder, only those who drift over the limit unintentionally.

It will also help with 20mph limit habit breaking. It's tough to keep at 20mph if you are used to driving down that road when it was a 30. There's a road near me that used to be 60mph, but now has a 40mph limit. It feels so slow, so I find the limiter (or cruise control) helpful in keeping within the limit.

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Captain Badger replied to Toffee | 3 years ago
1 like

I'm undecided too. I certainly think that cars have no need to be capable of going over 70. In addition torque and output could also be limited.

Variable limiters though encourage pedal to the metal, and give an excuse that "the car made me do it" where it is not engaged

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HoarseMann | 3 years ago
7 likes

No contest over the speed restrictor, pedal all the way.

The pedal actually prevents you going over the speed limit, the beeping only warns once you've exceeded it.

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brooksby replied to HoarseMann | 3 years ago
7 likes

Quote:

Oliver Carsten from Leeds University trialled the “Intelligent Speed Assistant” accelerator pedal and said: “It gave us a massive improvement in speed compliance with UK drivers, especially on urban roads.

So the best way of improving compliance with speed limits is to physically stop the drivers being able to break the speed limit?  Who would have thought it!

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TheBillder | 3 years ago
8 likes

Remember everyone: don't feed the gulls on the beach, the pigeons in the park (unless following in the footsteps of Tom Lehrer) or the animals in the zoo (they are not all the gnicest work of gnature, according to Flanders & Swann).

We need a circuit-breaker.

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