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The Pub For General Automotive Related Talk |
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15-12-2009, 06:58 PM | #61 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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16-12-2009, 12:26 AM | #62 | |||
BLUE OVAL INC.
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16-12-2009, 01:33 AM | #63 | ||||||||||
Ich bin ein auslander
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Loving the Endorphine Machine
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As I was the driver to which you refer, I will address this. For as start, I did not drive for 15 hrs straight at that speed, never said I did. Additionally the way it worked out, traveling for 1.5 hrs and then have a break of 30 mins is not that taxing. So to answer your question, yes I was a lot more attentive at the end of the day, maybe not as attentive as in the first hour, but still more than I was on other days when I was traveling at much slower speeds towards the end of the day. I certainly felt better at the end of the day than I did through QLD where my average speed was a lot lower. Like I said, my fatigue that I suffered was much worse in QLD, simple fact. I thought I explained that very clearly but perhaps not. Now of course I can only comment on my experience but there have been other similar posts from people with similar experience so obviously I am not alone. Either that or I am a complete liar and so are others : Now, obviously, I have never said the speed limit should be raised to what it was in 2004 in the NT when I completed that drive. I just used that example to illustrate a point, not as a suggestion of what should be considered a solution. Quote:
I believe the answer is not to lower speed limits to keep the incompetent drivers alive, an incompetent driver can kill people at 50 km/h too. The answer is to improve driver education and skills. The other answer is to improve the licensing system so that drivers prove their competence and knowledge more often. I suggest a system where drivers must sit a road law test and practical test every 5 years. That way we know they have kept abreast of road law changes and maintain skills. Lets be clear here, a car is a lethal weapon with potential to cause harm to others. why is it I hop into my car hoping the people in control of the other weapons on the road know what they are doing and are competent in the safe operation of these vehicles? Any person against the idea of spending a few hours every 5 years to prove your ability, considering they did it once before to get the license, is probably scared they will not pass and should not be driving anyway. Quote:
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By the way, in regards to tyres, this is an extract from the QLD laws on vehicle modifications. Quote:
So I fail to see your point as his illegal tyres would be rejected at his roadworthy inspection as mentioned earlier. Again, why do we have to lower speeds to account for illegal actions such as unroadworthy vehicle, lets get rid of the unroadworthy vehicles. Quote:
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16-12-2009, 10:23 AM | #64 | |||||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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I have always maintained the view that drivers education should be part of our high school curriculum. I know that most people on this forum cannot possibly identify with teens getting a full licence at the age of 16 (including some people from S.A. that had to go through their P's since 1981 before a full licence was earned) but because you are still in learn mode, for me, this is probably the second most significant reason (upon reflection I didn't know it then though) that defined my attitude towards safe driving that at least until now has helped me remain accident free in 30 years. I might add that I went to a high school with an agricultural back round and was driving tractors on the school grounds at the age of 13 after completing a "licence", which was taught as a subject. This is the time of age to fix this not from a cold start at 18 imho. I still think that continuing to lower speed limits in a country the size of Australia is a recipe for disaster for us all. They way I see it, by continuing to lower speed limits they will always be able to budget on increased revenue but more importantly it lets someone of the hook by not having to maintain roads at a suitable standard for higher speeds, because all they need to do is lower speed limits as roads decay instead of maintaining them. Easy, save money on road maintenance and new infrastructure while ever increasing revenue. Win win! The question everybody should be asking is, how low can they really go? |
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16-12-2009, 10:52 AM | #65 | |||
Petro-sexual
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Melbourne
Posts: 4,527
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It was designed for 150km/h at 200m visibility. Dont know how true it is, but it wouldnt surprise me as some of those sections have wide lanes, warnings and huge run off before anything remotely hard to hit. |
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16-12-2009, 11:26 AM | #66 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Apr 2009
Posts: 2,215
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When i have been a passenger in a car.
I have noticed some people can not see jack! young or old, and the main problem is 'they can not judge the speed of a car coming ' either sitting at an intersection or on the open road. That eye test they have when people get a licence is a joke! I remember standing behind a nog that was being tested once. i could read the made in Taiwan with out the light on and what they made him read was 3 lines up from the bottom. |
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16-12-2009, 12:51 PM | #67 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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Posts: 665
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What a magnificent piece of road infrastructure it is today! But is just me or has this road too succumbed to the greed of the Vic Gov revenue raisers by reducing speed limits in many sections of this road now as well? |
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16-12-2009, 12:55 PM | #68 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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How unusual.... When I was at school I was taught that non white races were inferior and were to be treated as such. Ever heard of the "white Australia policy"? Not so popular lately....... Brain washing young people into believing a warped policy is not new; Osama Bin Laden, Pol Pot, Hitler, Lenin, Kings and Pontifs and Emporors. The enforced speed problem is simple and I will attempt to explain it to you. Human beings, like all animals, move with a natural rythm that is the least fatiguing to them. The rythm changes with mood, health, vitalaity and a thousand other influences. Using walking as an example. Sometimes you walk fast other times you daudle about. When you want to walk quickly and forced to move slowly by obsticles you get stressed. When you want to walk slow but are being pushed along by others you get stressed. You do not have a good time and tend to get angry and tired. You will bump into more things, miss destinations and ignore all around you. The same is true for everything including driving. Sometimes you just wander along at 80 other times you feel much better at 100 or 120 or 140 or 160. When you are driving in your "sweet spot" you are paying the most attention and stressing the least. If you are forced to drive at a speed that is not good for you, whether that be higher or lower you get stressed, inattentive and angry. This is the human condition, we are all like it after millions of years of evolution and no amount of wishing and social engineering by do gooder "experts" is going to change it. We live in a faster and faster world were we can process information much more quickly and accurately than our forebears yet there is still the dogma that a "mile a minute" as was set in the early part of the last century is as fast as we can possibly go safely. Do you use SMS instead of write letters? Channel surf on your TV instead of listening to a radio play? Buy your premixed tins and bottles instead of making drinks? Eat at Maccas et al. instead of making your own hamburgers? SMS causes cancer, channel surfing causes epilepsy, premix causes alchoholism, maccas causes obesity. It has to be true, it was on TV and several "experts" have said it is true. |
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16-12-2009, 01:05 PM | #69 | |||
BLUE OVAL INC.
Join Date: Feb 2006
Posts: 8,708
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I have known of plenty of inspections passed when the vehicle is far from road worthy...depends who you know. As for tyres, why quote QLD laws when referring to NSW inspections. A simple check of NSW vehicle mods found this Retreaded tyres NSW legislation requires that all retreaded tyres fitted to vehicles must comply with the provisions of Australian Standard AS 1973 (1976, 1985 or 1993). Tyres retreaded after November 1999 must comply with the provisions of Australian Standard AS 1973 (1993). The standard requires among other things that the identity of the retreader, the words “RETREAD/REMOULD”, “MAX. SPEED/SPEED LIMITED” and the tyres speed limit are permanently and legibly moulded on retreaded passenger car tyres. The retreader identity may be provided either by the name, registered trademark or other means, such as a code number assigned by the Motor Traders Association of NSW. Speed limits for retreaded passenger car tyres are: - 110 km/h for winter tread tyres - 120 km/h for cross ply tyres - 140 km/h for radial ply tyres If tyres fitted do not comply they simply ask for a sticker on the windscreen in the drivers view to warn of the underrated tyres. I guess the QLD laws suited your arguement... |
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16-12-2009, 06:33 PM | #70 | |||
Ich bin ein auslander
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Loving the Endorphine Machine
Posts: 7,453
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Actually yours does too. You are not allowed to fit cross ply tyres to a car that was fitted with radials from factory, not many cars around that had cross ply from factory. So therefore the cars limited to 120 do not really matter, if they are on the road it is up to the operator to keep to the limits of their vehicle. Surely this is acceptable, I hope so because if we have to lower the speed limit to that of the slowest car's capability that may venture out on our roads, what is the top speed of a model T? Radial retreads having to comply with a speed rating can still do 140 so no problems there. It was not a case of QLD law suiting my argument, as I said I assume most state laws are pretty similar, it turns out in this area they are. Believe it or not I do have better things to do than research material for some garbage argument that is going around in circles. It seems that some believe that we must all travel in big plastic bubbles at 40k/h because some out there may not have ever had a license, never service their car or consider the council rubbish tip as the local tyre retailer. Some believe the answer is to improve road conditions, improve vehicle inspection and registration processes and improve driver education and competency maintenance processes. The government believes the first option is better as it is cheaper to erect signs, send out cops to enforce the speed limits and site cameras, plus it brings in revenue, too cool. By the way, I lived in NSW for 6 years, not just a bit of time and I have noticed general car condition in NSW is much better than in QLD where there are no roadworthy inspections as long as you keep the rego current, do not sell the car or attract the attention of the police. But what would I know, I have only lived >5yrs in 3 different states? Now my biggest question, do you really have to attack me again?
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16-12-2009, 07:19 PM | #71 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Apr 2009
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FLAPPIST
I never was taught at school that non white races were inferior and definitely not the etc nonsense of treating any one as such : . But was informed that English culture was was a step in the right direction of a fruitful future. and this was the point of the white Australia policy. Aussies did not want to be dragged back into the dark ages. and that is why they attacked Hitler. And back in them days, all Australian people were considered as being backward and inferior, and living in a backward country. by the Europeans and yanks. all through out history, all country's have pointed out that another country was inferior to there own. Evolution is nonsense. people have not evolved at all in the last 2000 years + that is just another load of brain washing. |
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16-12-2009, 07:32 PM | #72 | ||
Watts a panhard.
Join Date: Jan 2008
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Evolution is both a Fact and a Theory.
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16-12-2009, 07:38 PM | #73 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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Demonstrating how a person who would appear not to have evolved nor comprehended while attending school would reply in a forum is a master stroke. Bravo to you Sir. |
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16-12-2009, 09:20 PM | #74 | |||
Watts a panhard.
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I don't have low self-esteem. I have low esteem for everyone else. |
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16-12-2009, 09:43 PM | #75 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Apr 2009
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So a people evolved from apes. did they.
The TV educated. flappist. so people went out of there way to do wrong and bad things to the abo's. you want to learn the true history boy. not just the ALP nonsence. |
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16-12-2009, 09:52 PM | #76 | |||
Regular Member
Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 50
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So why aren't we travelling at 130 km/h? Because the vast majority of the highways do not meet these standards. The recently completed sections (all NSW based, sorry) such as Albury stage 1 & 2, Coolac (Hume Hwy) Bonville deviation, Karuah to Buladelah (Pacific Hwy) are designed for the higher speeds but because the preceding 200 kms is not, then the RTA has decided that until large stretches of highway are safe for 130 km/h then no section will be sign posted 130 km/h. So in summary yes modern highways are designed for 130 km/h and one day we will travel at these speeds, but only when the vast majority is built to this standard. Disclaimer: This is all NSW (RTA) based but I assume it applies to other states too. Also the vast majority of non-major highways don't comply in any way to Austroads standards, hence the 90 km/h limit is probably ****-covering. |
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16-12-2009, 10:03 PM | #77 | |||
Thailand Specials
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16-12-2009, 10:27 PM | #78 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Apr 2009
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flappist. states that he at school was taught that non white races were inferior and were to be treated as such. RUBBISH!
The white aus policy was not Nazi stuff. ya fools! All countries have through out history have always stated that there country was better then the other! true or false All Aussie people looked up to England for a better way of life and future. fact. |
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16-12-2009, 10:33 PM | #79 | |||
Thailand Specials
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16-12-2009, 10:46 PM | #80 | |||
Regular Member
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Well they should drop road tax and fuel excise at the same time. What are they doing with the cash if they are not fixing the roads..... Instaling more speed cameras. |
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17-12-2009, 02:09 AM | #81 | |||
Ich bin ein auslander
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Loving the Endorphine Machine
Posts: 7,453
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The answer there is nil, let it go.
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17-12-2009, 02:29 AM | #82 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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It's been scientifically proven (by the RTA) that the human brain and adrenaline backs off when cruising at comfortable speeds.
Slower speeds are more dangerous.
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EB II 1992 Fairmont - koni reds, wade 977b, 2.5inch/4480's and much more to come! |
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17-12-2009, 02:41 AM | #83 | ||
Mercury XR6
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Melbourne
Posts: 758
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The best one is Germany. In their freeways (autobahn they call it) there is no speed limit on the very left lane. Mostly you see Lamborghini, Ferrari, Porsche, etc in that lane. My brother is in Germany. I went to visit him couple of years ago and we were on the autobahn and a Porsche which we didn't even see where he came from, went pass us doing about 280 kmh. My brother was doing about 180 kmh. I love the European rules. No one sits at the overtaking lane when he is not overtaking. In Victoria there is a lot of idiots that love to sit on the right lane all the time. I personally think that those people should be shot out:
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17-12-2009, 03:02 PM | #84 | |||
Ute Forum Moderator
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Melb
Posts: 7,227
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gunner I generally agree but have read that they would need to remove all turning/crossing opportunities in the median before they could raise the speed limit. Even in the 'new' sections of the Hume Hwy there are plenty of non-grade-separated intersections. I've also seen quite a few crests through the hills around Yass and some other areas (eg just south of the service/rest area near Seymour) where you would be lucky to be able to see 200m ahead. I'm strongly against lowering the default limit though - I'd imagine unsealed and single-lane bitumen roads will have the lower limit but are quite often perfectly safe for a single car to drive at 100km/h, which is adequate given the traffic levels. I wouldn't be surprised if a lot of smaller two-lane bitumen roads also cop the lower limit, even though plenty of people have to drive significant distances on them on a regular basis. Why should we have such a time-stealing measure imposed - what is the benefit that would be derived? Is there any comparable situation around the world? |
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