doctorchris
Established member
I agree with Ugly Duckling's views on driving at 70mph on the motorway and his analysis of the problems caused by driving at higher speeds.
My Panda 4x4 is not fast and gets very thirsty on fuel at over 70mph.
I try to use the inside lane as much as possible, it is easy to get into the middle lane to overtake if you use anticipation and give the cars doing 80+ in that lane time and space to move over to the outer lane. At 70mph you rarely need to use the outer lane, therefore the 80+ driver is hardly ever held up.
The inside lane is often relatively empty and you can leave a good gap between yourself and the vehicle in front.
The outer lane is the dangerous place to be. A mix of drivers who all want to exceed the speed limit but all by varying amounts. Hence a lot of high speed tailgating and quite large variations in speed in the lane as cars trying to get into the lane from the middle lane to overtake have to squeeze into small gaps producing a braking effect that can have a knock on effect for hundreds of yards back in the queue.
This is why the 70mph driver often finds that he catches up with the 80+ drivers.
These days I've adopted a policy of adhering to all speed limits as much as is humanly possible. One reason is that I have no idea on unknown roads where the cameras are and on known roads where the mobile camera will be. In addition, if you speed then what do accept as your norm. 80, 90, 100mph where the limit is 70mph? Finally, in the relatively heavy traffic conditions on our motorways, I find little difference in journey times whether you do 70 or 80 mph.
I was speaking to my brother last night, someone who I've always known to have fast vehicles and to use that speed. Surprisingly, he now sticks carefully to speed limits. Maybe it's because he has reached 47 (years, not mph). I think it also has a lot to do with the fact that his big fast car is hitting him in the pocket with fuel costs.
Finally, I do feel that, apart from quiet motorways with no cameras and few patrol cars, eg the M74 on the 3 lane section starting at Gretna, more and more people are adhering to speed limits and I'm sure it is down to avoiding speeding convictions and fuel cost.
My Panda 4x4 is not fast and gets very thirsty on fuel at over 70mph.
I try to use the inside lane as much as possible, it is easy to get into the middle lane to overtake if you use anticipation and give the cars doing 80+ in that lane time and space to move over to the outer lane. At 70mph you rarely need to use the outer lane, therefore the 80+ driver is hardly ever held up.
The inside lane is often relatively empty and you can leave a good gap between yourself and the vehicle in front.
The outer lane is the dangerous place to be. A mix of drivers who all want to exceed the speed limit but all by varying amounts. Hence a lot of high speed tailgating and quite large variations in speed in the lane as cars trying to get into the lane from the middle lane to overtake have to squeeze into small gaps producing a braking effect that can have a knock on effect for hundreds of yards back in the queue.
This is why the 70mph driver often finds that he catches up with the 80+ drivers.
These days I've adopted a policy of adhering to all speed limits as much as is humanly possible. One reason is that I have no idea on unknown roads where the cameras are and on known roads where the mobile camera will be. In addition, if you speed then what do accept as your norm. 80, 90, 100mph where the limit is 70mph? Finally, in the relatively heavy traffic conditions on our motorways, I find little difference in journey times whether you do 70 or 80 mph.
I was speaking to my brother last night, someone who I've always known to have fast vehicles and to use that speed. Surprisingly, he now sticks carefully to speed limits. Maybe it's because he has reached 47 (years, not mph). I think it also has a lot to do with the fact that his big fast car is hitting him in the pocket with fuel costs.
Finally, I do feel that, apart from quiet motorways with no cameras and few patrol cars, eg the M74 on the 3 lane section starting at Gretna, more and more people are adhering to speed limits and I'm sure it is down to avoiding speeding convictions and fuel cost.