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Topic: Getting flashed at in France
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Don't forget to leave a review of the French and other European campsites you have visited!
06/7/2007 at 12:02pm
Location: North Yorks Outfit: Terrano & Knaus Sudwind
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Great thread people.
I am particularly interested in the comment on Trucks governed to 56mph overtaking each other, especially on dual carriageways.
I do 40,000 miles a year and see this all the time lorrys side by side for mile after mile with a huge tailback behind and drivers undertaking to the front of the Q.
My question is would it really make a huge difference to the journey time for the lorry being overtaken to just lift of the gas for a second and allow the overtake to happen.
I am sure a lot of the foriegn trucks are not governed or if they are its to 80mph!
Come on truckies you know it makes sense!
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06/7/2007 at 12:35pm
Location: None Entered Outfit: Swift Challenger Sport 524 VW Carave
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I think there are three reasons why the lory driver being overtaken will not "lift his foot off the gas" to allow the other driver back in.
1. If he is climbing a gradient, he may not be able to regain his speed, thus ending up going more slowly until the road levels out. If he owns the lorry, this could mean an increase in fuel costs.
2. He may feel that, as another driver has decided to overtake him, then it is that driver's responsibility to make sure he has the power to do so.
3. If he is travelling at the maximum permitted speed for his lorry, and the overtaker is in the same position, why should that overtaker be where he is in the first place?
Obviously, the best decision would be to let the overtaker back in, for the sake of road safety. But when the question of who is right and who is wrong enters the equation, the otherwise most intelligent of people do not always act logically. That is the price we pay for being human.
Bertie.
------------- The 2 Tops
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Don't forget to leave a review of the French and other European campsites you have visited!
Don't forget to leave a review of the French and other European campsites you have visited!
06/7/2007 at 5:49pm
Location: Outfit:
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Quote: Originally posted by The 2 Tops on 06/7/2007
Sorry to disagree, Surfer01, but speed does sometimes kill. We all know that the police drive very fast through traffic, blues and twos shrieking out a warning. And the police will claim to be fully trained to make this safe.
BUT, suppose the police car developed a sudden steering fault, or suffered something as basic as a tyre blowout. Do not try to kid me that the driver would then have full control of the vehicle. It may be fitted with Tyron bands to allow it to run flat, but the steering geometry would not respond in the same way as with a correctly inflated tyre.
It's all very well to train on skid pans, but trying to regain control with other vehicles and people in close proximity is quite another matter. And there is one thing that nobody can train to overcome; the laws of physics.
Bertie.
Bertie, a police car is maintained virtually on a daily basis not once a year. As for tyre blow outs because tyres are checked prior to leaving the depot and probably two or three times a day depending on the number of shifts work a blowout is highly unlikely but not impossible. Basically you are ageeing with me that speed does not kill, but it is the person behind the wheel that kills. A train travels at 100mph, so does it speed kill? I think not. You have your opinion and I respect that but I have mine and stick with it and drive with consideration for other road users.
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06/7/2007 at 7:42pm
Location: None Entered Outfit: Swift Challenger Sport 524 VW Carave
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But we do read of occasional incidents where a speeding police car has hit a person or other vehicle, without the police car having a fault, and sometimes with tragic results. Inability to avoid the accident has been down to the speed of the police car.
At the regulation speed, the police driver could have possibly stopped in time, or the third party have had time to move out of the way. So no matter how you look at it, the only error in the equation is speed.
I have been personally involved in a near accident, which was down to two police cars racing each other. Hearing the sirens, and seeing blue lights in my mirror, I pulled to a stop, and the vehicle in front did the same. We were on a fork in the road. One police car went left between me and the vehicle in front, whilst the other went left across the front of that vehicle. After the manoeuvre the police cars were side by side, and almost touched.
Had an accident resulted, I would have given a statement on oath against those two drivers. I often wonder what would have happened if the vehicle in front had stopped that little bit quicker, or a bit later. One police car would have had nowhere to go.
And their speed left no margin for error. Their escape was down to luck, not skill.
Bertie.
------------- The 2 Tops
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Don't forget to leave a review of the French and other European campsites you have visited!
07/7/2007 at 8:42am
Location: None Entered Outfit: Swift Challenger Sport 524 VW Carave
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Quote: Originally posted by Surfer01 on 06/7/2007
Again speed does not kill ,but then this thread has nothing to do with police cars and their level of expertise when driving, it was started about drivers flashing their lights!
Why, then, does the Ministry of Transport have roadside signs saying "speed kills, kill your speed"? And the police are not exempt; their drivers are road users just like any othe motorist. What about the TV ad? The reversed footage of the child representing an accident victim and "if you hit me at 40 mph, I die. If you hit me at 30 mph, I will live"
And if speed does not kill, why are drivers prosecuted for exceeding the speed limit, rather than exceeding their level of expertise?
Yes, the thread started about drivers flashing their lights, which was linked to speed cameras, which was linked to speeding.
Bertie.
------------- The 2 Tops
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