Bill M
Self Funded Retiree
- Joined
- 4 January 2008
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Fines for 4km/h over limit
EXCLUSIVE
THE Roads and Traffic Authority is considering plans to reduce the amount of leeway given to speeding motorists to as low as 4 km/h, according to senior police.
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Driving fines are expected to rise by $137 million in the next year, partially because of mobile speed cameras, the state budget reported.
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One senior Sydney policeman told The Sun-Herald, on condition of anonymity, that a 4 km/h tolerance was so small that a new set of tyres or the width of a speedometer needle could land motorists on the wrong side of the law. He said some radars had an error margin of plus or minus 3 km/h, while most police allowed a margin of 8 or 9 km/h at 60 km/h.
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"The width of some needles is equivalent to 3 km/h," the policeman said. "Then you have things like parallax error [when an instrument's read-out differs depending on the angle at which it's viewed].
"It's all about the ability of the punter to drive their car and to be able to clearly and precisely read their instrument. I'm an advocate for road safety but I'm also very wary of applying a standard to the general motorist that they can't possibly comply with."
I drive the F3 from the Central Coast to Sydney most days of the week and I reckon it's about time some of these cameras have come into use. I stick to the speed limit of 110 kms per hour all the time and on each trip I do I must have hundreds of cars pass me at 120 to 140 kms per hour. They put everybodys life in danger and when accidents do happen it is usually catastrophic. Tailgating, no indicating is common practice. The quicker we get these speeding morons off the road the better.
. I stick to the speed limit of 110 kms per hour all the time and on each trip .[/B]
IMO NSW Govt rips enough hidden fees through sneaky taxes or fines out of us. NSW Labor needs to be lined up against the wall and shot. I'm sick of their dodgy governing and total mismanagement of the taxpayers money. Tearing more money out of people just hammers another nail in the coffin.
Queensland Parliament E-Petitions.
Queensland residents draw to the attention of the House the Government's proposal to double the cost of Queensland Drivers Licences to more than $150, making Queensland licences the most expensive in the Nation. These changes, along with hikes in vehicle registration costs, the new State fuel tax, and above CPI increases for tolls make Queensland the most expensive State in Australia to be a motorist.
Your petitioners, therefore, request the House to oppose this massive increase in Queensland Drivers Licence charges.
I saw that program too, quite interesting. They pointed out that our younger drivers were driving much older and unsafer cars than their German peers. Also in Germany the parents are not allowed to teach their kids. The kids had to be professionally trained and in their tests had to demonstrate stopping a vehicle at speeds of 200 kph.I would have to totally disagree on that.
There was a story on this on the "Sunday Night" on Channel 7 show a few months ago. Very good article about young drivers. I did a google search but couldn't find it. Maybe you should also have a look at it.
I was worried about this so tested my speedo against the GPS unit. I was out by 6 kph and now adjust my speed accordingly and stick to my 110 kph.Are you sure you're not the guy doing 80 in a 110 zone!
I don't trade, I invest and receive passive income, retired already.You probably trade like you drive; Passive and weak!
We may not care if they kill themselves. Unfortunately they will kill and/or maim many innocent road users in the process.Why worry about the hoons driving like crazy, let em keep going until they kill themselves, it's called natural selection where the stupid and dangerous are wiped out to greater benefit of humanity.
We may not care if they kill themselves. Unfortunately they will kill and/or maim many innocent road users in the process.
Learner drivers can speed up to five times and still pass test
* July 12, 2010 11:00PM
LEARNER drivers will be allowed to speed up to five times during their driving test and still pass under a new testing regime in Queensland.
Speeding was the leading cause of death on Queensland roads in the past year but it will continue to be permitted during the practical tests following a state government review of the assessment process.
The new criteria, coming into effect next Monday, means drivers can travel at up to 5km/h over the limit on five occasions during the 30-minute test.
At present they are allowed to exceed the limit by up to 9 per cent three times during a test, before failing.
The Queensland driver test also allows examinees to stall six times before failing, steer with one hand on six occasions and fail to indicate six times. Drivers can also fail to start the engine five times and pass.
With comments like that, you could find yourself hosting a certain well known motoring program...Don't get me started on caravans. They should all be black with silver rails down the side, then they really would resemble hearses, which would be appropriate.
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