SPEED LIMIT

(Redirected from Speeding)
:''For a discussion of the maximum speed possible in the universe, see speed of light and special relativity.''
A road 'speed limit' is the maximum speed allowed by law for road vehicles. Speed limits are commonly set and enforced by the legislative bodies of nations or provincial governments, such as countries within the world.
In addition to setting a maximum speed limit, most governments also enforce speed limits which are relative to the driving conditions experienced; that is, drivers should adjust their maximum speed when driving in fog, heavy rain, or other similar conditions. For example, the California Civil Code 22350 states that "No person shall drive a vehicle upon a highway at a speed greater than is reasonable... and in no event at a speed which endangers the safety of persons or property." This "basic rule", or similar legal language, applies even where no maximum speed limit is in place (such as formerly in the U.S. state of Montana). Some roads also have "minimum speed limits", where slow speeds are considered to impede traffic flow or be dangerous.
The first speed limit was the limit introduced by the Locomotive Act of 1861 (or "Red Flag Act") in the United Kingdom (automobiles were in those days termed “light locomotives”). In 1865, the revised Locomotive Act reduced the speed limit to in the country and in towns. The 1865 Act required a man with a red flag or lantern to walk ahead of each vehicle, enforce a walking pace, and warn horse riders and horse drawn traffic of the approach of a self-propelled machine. The replacement of the "Red Flag Act" by the Locomotive Act of 1896, and the increase of the speed limit to has been commemorated each year since 1927 by the London to Brighton Veteran Car Run.
Nepal, the Isle of Man and the Indian states of Uttar Pradesh and Kerala are the only places in the world that do not have a general speed limit. In Germany, some (but not all) sections of the autobahn (motorway) network also remain free from speed limits. Not including public roads which do not have a legal speed limit, the highest speed limit in the world is 160 km/h (99 mph), which has been experimentally applied on selected test stretches in Austria and the United Arab Emirates.[1]

Contents
Factors in setting speed limits
Design speed
Definition
Limitations
85th percentile rule
Signage
Speed limits in specific countries
Europe
France
Germany
Ireland
Italy
Netherlands
Norway
Sweden
Finland
Switzerland
United Kingdom
North America
United States
Canada
Asia
China
Hong Kong
India
Indonesia
Japan
Malaysia
Philippines
Singapore
Taiwan
Oceania
Australia
New Zealand
Africa
Namibia
South Africa
Enforcement
Enforcement tolerance
Safety and efficacy
Essential physics
Speed limits, actual speeds, and aggregate safety
Speed and crash factors
Variable speed limits
Opposition
Roads without speed limits
See also
References
External links

Factors in setting speed limits


Traffic engineers observe that the majority of drivers drive in a safe and reasonable manner, as demonstrated by consistently favorable driving records. A report from the British Columbia Ministry of Transportation includes in its summary the finding that the incidence of crashes depends more on variations in speed between vehicles than on absolute speed, and that the likelihood of a crash happening is significantly higher if vehicles are traveling at speeds slower ''or'' faster than the mean speed of traffic.[2]
Speed limits are set based on many factors, such as road features, crash records, legal statutes, administrative judgment, engineering judgment and political dictate. Two common measures for setting speed limits are the design speed of the road and the 85th percentile of travel speeds (See Design Speed, Operating Speed, and Posted Speed Practices).
Fuel efficiency also affects the choice of speed limits. United States at one time had attempted a maximum speed limit of 55 mph to reduce fuel consumption (See National Maximum Speed Law).
It is also estimated that speed limits can be used to reduce emissions and pollution, and some areas have reduced speed limits for improving the air quality (See Environmental Speed Limits).
Design speed

Definition

In the United States the design speed is officially defined as "a selected speed used to determine the various geometric design features of the roadway", according to the 2001 American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials highway design manual, commonly referred to as the "Green Book." Previous versions of the Green Book referred to design speed as the "maximum safe speed that can be maintained over a specific section of highway when conditions are so favorable that the design features of the highway govern"; however the 2001 edition removed the term "safe" in order to avoid the implication that speeds greater than the design speed were necessarily "unsafe."
Limitations

Safe operating speeds can exceed the design speed. Example reasons include:
#A design speed is not a representative speed of an entire roadway. Rather, the road's design speed is limited by its most restrictive feature, such as a curve, bottleneck, or hill.
#Actual roadway design may exceed the design specifications.
#Current parameters for determining the design speed assumes the capacity of outdated automotive technology.
#The stated design speed for a given road is usually not changed. Therefore, the design speed on older roads, which were calculated with older methodologies, may not factor in improved automotive technology which can maintain designed safety at higher travel speeds.
In commonly accepted engineering practice, design speed is considered a "first guess" at an appropriate speed limit.
85th percentile rule

In the United States, traffic engineers may rely on the 85th percentile rule[3] to establish speed limits. The speed limit should be set to the speed that separates the bottom 85% of vehicle speeds from the top 15%. The 85th percentile is slightly greater than a speed that is one standard deviation above the mean of a normal distribution.
The theory is that traffic laws that reflect the behavior of the majority of motorists may have better compliance than laws that arbitrarily criminalize the majority of motorists and encourage violations. The latter kinds of laws lack public support and often fail to bring about desirable changes in driving behavior. An example is the federally-mandated 55 mph (90 km/h) speed limit that was removed in part because of notoriously low compliance.
Most U.S. jurisdictions report using the 85th percentile speed as the basis for their speed limits, so the 85th-percentile speed and speed limits should be closely matched. However, a review of available speed studies demonstrates that the posted speed limit is almost always set well below the 85th-percentile speed by as much as 8 to 12 mph (see p.88) (13 to 19 km/h). Some reasons for this include:

★ Political or bureaucratic resistance to higher limits.

★ Statutes that restrict jurisdictions from posting limits higher than an arbitrary number.

Signage


:''For more information about traffic signs in general, see Traffic sign.''
Speed limit sign common to much of Europe, showing a 60 km/h (60 mph in the UK) restriction


The start of a speed limit is usually marked with a speed limit traffic sign. Speed limit signs can appear near borders and road intersections, and in some cases speed limit reminder signs appear at regular intervals. In the European Union, large signposts showing the national speed limits of the respective country are usually erected immediately after border crossings, with a repeater sign some 200 to 500 metres (about 650 to 1,650 ft) after the first sign. The same practice is followed in several U.S. states.
Occasionally, different units of speed measurement are used on each side of a border. For example, Northern Ireland (part of the UK) uses miles per hour (mph) for speed limits and miles for distance, whereas the Republic of Ireland uses kilometres per hour (km/h) for speed limits and kilometres for distance. The UK and the United States are the only major nations still using the customary (imperial) units system.
The U.S. has shown no intention to convert to SI units, and reverted to imperial units in states that had both imperial and SI systems such as California and Arizona. However, Ohio, South Dakota, Rhode Island, and Vermont (especially near the Canadian border) still have some SI distances and speeds on their exit distance and speed limit signs (such as / 110 km/h, or 3 miles / 5 km to next exit). When entering Canada, signs are posted reminding drivers to use metric signage. Conversely upon entering the US from Canada (at least in Vermont), drivers are shown a 100 km/h speed limit sign. All exit distance signs on Interstates in New Hampshire are marked with the distance in miles followed by the distance in kilometres shown in parentheses. Houston, Texas has some signs in both imperial and SI units near its airports and downtown. Delaware Route 1 and Interstate 19 have exits numbered by kilometer - I-19 also has kilometer posts.
Design of speed limit signage varies between countries. In the European Union, the red circle is most common, while in North America, signs are usually rectangular. Australian speed limit signs are a combination, with a red circle inside a rectangular sign. Sometimes, speed limits are also painted on the road surface as a reminder.
The design of minimum speed signage also varies between countries. Most countries use blue circles based on obligatory signs. A Japanese minimum speed sign has the same design as a maximum speed sign but with a horizontal line below the number.



Speed limits in specific countries


The following table shows the respective speed limits (excepting the local 30 km/h or lower limits in many countries) in km/h (except mph which is posted in the United Kingdom and the United States with those numbers in parentheses):
Country Within Towns Automobiles & Motorcycles Trucks or Automobiles with Trailer
Outside built-up areas'/'Expressways Motorways Outside built-up areas'/'Expressways Motorways
Argentina 40-60 80-110 100-130 80 80
Australia 50-6015 100-11015 100-13015 100 100
Austria 50 100 13014 1004 1005
Belgium 50 90 120 60-90 90
Brazil 40-60 70-90 100-110 80 (90 for buses)
Bulgaria 50 90 (
motorcycles
80)
130 (
motorcycles
100)
90 130
Canada 50 80-110 100-11016 80-100 100-110
Croatia 50 90-110 130 80 80
Cyprus 50 80 100 80 100
Czech Republic 50 90-130 130 80 80
Denmark 50 80 110-130 80 80
Estonia 50 90-110 90 90
Finland 40-50 80-1006 1206 80 80
France 50 90-110 130 90-110 130
Germany 50 100 no speed limit1 80 80-1007
Greece 50 90 (
motorcycles
70)
130 (
motorcycles
90)
80 80
Hong Kong 50 50-70 70-110 50 70
Hungary 50 90-110 130 70 80
India 50-60 90-100 100 40-50 50-60
Iceland12 50 90 90 80 80
Ireland 50 80-10011 120 80-100 80
Israel 50 100 110 80 90
Italy 50 90-110² 130 ³ 70 80
Japan 40-60 50-60 70-100 50-60 80
Liechtenstein 50 80 80
Lithuania 50 70-90 110-130 70-80-90 90
Luxembourg 50 90 130 90 90
Malaysia 40-60 70-9018 110 70-80 80-90
Malta 50 80 60
Mexico 30-70 80-11017 100-110 95
Netherlands 50 80-100 80-120 80 80
New Zealand 50 100 100 90 90
Norway 50 80 90-1009 80 80
Philippines 80 80-120 80-120
Poland 50/6013 90-11013 130 70 80
Portugal 50 90-100 120 70-80 100
Romania 50 90-100 130 80 100
Russia 60 90-110 110 70-90 90
Serbia 60 80-100 120
Singapore 50 80-90 90 60 60
Slovakia 6018 90-130 130 80 80
Slovenia 50 90-100 130 80 80
South Africa 60 80-100 120 100 100
Spain 50 90-100 120 70-80 80
Sweden 50 70-110 110-120 80 80
Switzerland 50 80-100 120 80 80
Taiwan 40-60 50-80 100-110 60-80 80-90
Turkey 50 90 (
motorcycles
70)
120 (
motorcycles
80)
80 90
United Kingdom10 50 (30 mph) 95-110 (60-70 mph) 110 (70 mph) 80-95 (50-60 mph) 95 (60 mph)
United States10 40-70 (25-45 mph) 90-120 (55-75 mph) 90-130 (55-80 mph)19 Restrictions only in some states, typically 5-15 mph lower.20


Motor routes: roads with two or more lanes (dual carriageway), a median, and a minimum speed of 60 km/h.

''Remarks'':

1 130 km/h is the ''recommended'' maximum speed on motorways, as indicated by a blue sign. Many sections of the German motorway network are now covered by speed limits, usually ranging from 80 to 130 km/h (140 km/h as speed limit is being tested in Lower Saxony -some politicians are against it, because 140 km/h is over the ''recommended'' maximum speed, depending on local conditions (i.e., frequent traffic, terrain, etc.). It is usual for drivers involved in crashes who were exceeding the 'recommended' speed limit to be held to be at least partly at fault, regardless of the circumstances of the crash, and insurance companies have the right to withhold payment.

² On expressway where is indicated.

³ Two and three-lane expressways: 130 km/h; since 2003 on some three-lane expressway a 150 km/h limit was introduced, but is not operative).

4 Cars with heavy trailer: 80 km/h; lorries with heavy trailer: 70 km/h.

5 Cars with heavy trailer: 100 km/h; lorries with heavy trailer: 80 km/h.

6 During winter, when conditions are often bad, all Finnish motorways have a speed limit of 100 km/h or less. Also most roads with 100 km/h speed limit in summer have 80 km/h limit during winter.

7 Additional trailer checkup (TÜV) and special speed plaque required on vehicle.

9 A provisional increase of the speed limit on motorways from 90 to 100 km/h was made permanent when the number of accidents decreased.

10 Signs are posted in mph, a situation unlikely to change in the near future.

11 100 km/h is default limit on all National Routes regardless of design standard when local limits do not apply; regional and minor routes have an 80 km/h limit. All limits are signposted either way.

12 Iceland does not have expressways/motorways in the traditional sense. There is only one such road, with three and four lanes and no traffic lights. It is within city limits, and the maximum speed is 80 km/h.

13 60 km/h in built-up areas between 11 pm and 5 am. Out of built-up areas between 90 and 110 km/h depending on how many lanes the road has, whether it is single or dual carriageway, and whether it is signed an expressway or not.

14 A provisional increase to 160 km/h was in place on a 12 km stretch on the A10 in May and June 2006.

15 Built up area speed limit of 50 km/h in all states and territories except for the Northern Territory, where it remains at 60 km/h. Western Australia and the Northern Territory have a rural limit of 110 km/h. The Northern Territory has zoned some rural highways at 130 km/h. See Speed limits in Australia for details.

16 Speed limit is 110 km/h in several provinces, 100 km/h in others.

17 Some 2 lane Federal highways are posted at 110 km/h provided they have a paved shoulder.

18 The speed limit on Malaysian federal and state roads has been reduced to 80 km/h during festive seasons, starting from the 2006 Hari Raya Aidilfitri.

19 The state of Hawaii posts a speed limit on many Interstate highways.

20 Some states require vehicles towing trailers to follow the posted truck speed limit.
Europe

In some countries in Europe, traffic calming is gradually becoming a regular part of urban traffic management, after a long evolution of opinions and attitudes towards car use and vulnerable road users. From 1980 regulations for 30 km/h zones were enacted and have been widely applied. New urban policies have been defined with a view to encouraging a switch from car use to public transport and non-motorised modes (cycling, walking), with the additional condition of lower speeds to improve safety of vulnerable road users, for example national policies such as "Sustainable Safety" in the Netherlands or "Vision Zero" in Sweden.
France

On French autoroutes there is a variable speed limit: in dry weather, 130 km/h (80 mph); when raining, 110 km/h (68 mph). In 2005, a governmental report advised lowering the higher speed to 115 km/h (71 mph) in order to save fuel and reduce accident risks, but this proposal was badly received. Since 2002, the French government has installed a number of automatic radar guns on autoroutes, routes nationales, and other major thoroughfares. These are in addition to radar manned by the French National Police and the Gendarmerie. The French authorities have credited this increase in traffic enforcement with a 21% drop in road fatalities from 2002 to 2003.
Germany

German ''autobahns'' are famous for having no universal motorway speed limit, although about 30 % of them have posted speed limits[4] and about 10 % are equipped with motorway control systems that can show variable speed limits.[5] There is no national speed limit, either, for cars on marked "Schnellstraßen" (Express-roads) with a central reservation or a minimum of two marked lanes per direction. On such roads, as well as motorways, a recommended speed limit (''Richtgeschwindigkeit'') of 130 km/h (80 mph) applies. While driving at higher speeds is not punishable, the increased risk induced by higher speeds (''erhöhte Betriebsgefahr'') may result in partial liability for damages. Moreover, the law forbids to travel at speeds that would prolong the vehicle's minimum halting distance beyond the driver's line of sight.[6] On all German roads, there are speed limits for trucks, buses, cars towing trailers, and small motorised vehicles (Mopeds, etc.).
The introduction of a national speed limit for motorways and similar roads has been on the agenda of various political and environmentalist groups for decades, but at present, there are still no definite plans on behalf of the federal government regarding the matter. The ''Umweltbundesamt (Federal Environmental Agency)'' repeated its recommendation of such regulation in early 2007, but the current Merkel administration sees no need for it. Legally, however, state and even local authorities have the power to enact speed limits. A statewide binding speed limit of 130 km/h, for example, was established in Rhineland-Palatinate over a decade ago, whereas the district of Cologne has posted a speed limit on the heavily frequented Cologne Beltway.
On rural roads that are neither motorways nor roads as described above, there is a national speed limit of 100 km/h (60 mph). Lower speed limits apply to lorries, some buses, and cars towing trailers.
There is a general speed limit within city limits of 50 km/h (30 mph) but residential areas usually have a lower posted speed limit of 30 km/h (20 mph). On arterial roads, the speed limit may be raised to 60 or 70 km/h (37 to 43 mph). Motorways crossing citys count as normal Autobahns and can be used for travel within larger citys in many cases.
Ireland

Main articles: Road speed limits in the Republic of Ireland

In the Republic of Ireland, since 2004, the speed limit of motorways has been 120 km/h.[7] Dual carriageways generally have a limit of 100 km/h, but under local by-laws, stretches of dual carriageway described as ''High Quality Dual Carriageway'' can also have a speed limit of 120 km/h.[8]
Other National primary and national secondary roads have a speed limit of 100 km/h,[9] while regional roads have a limit of 80 km/h.[10] Again, this 80 km/h can be increased due to local by-laws. [11] The limit on built-up areas is generally 50 km/h,[12] but may be increased to 60 km/h or, rarely, reduced to 30 km/h. The conversion of limits to km/h from mph was effected by the 2004 Road Traffic Act.[13] The conversion of speed limit signposts to km/h occurred on 19 January 2005.
Italy

Italian autostrade have a 130 km/h speed limit (80 mph), with 110 km/h (70 mph) limits on curvy roads and in rainy conditions. A 150 km/h (95 mph) limit straighter roads with at least three lanes per direction is allowed by regulations but has not yet been implemented. When there is rain, the speed limit goes down to 110 km/h on all autostrade.
Netherlands

The speed limit of motorways (snelwegen) is 120 km/h (75 mph). Regional roads have a limit of 80 km/h (50 mph) and 100 km/h (63 mph) on express ways (autowegen). The limit in built-up areas is 50 km/h (31 mph), but also 70 km/h (44 mph) and 30 km/h (19 mph).
Since May 2002, the Netherlands has been experimenting with 80 km/h (50 mph) zones on motorways crossing suburban areas. The first zone to be implemented was on the A13, connecting Rotterdam to the Hague, at the Rotterdam suburb of Overschie. This was generally accepted as a success, so in 2005, the experiment was expanded, with four new zones in Rotterdam, the Hague, Utrecht and Amsterdam. DCMR report (Dutch). The new zones have had mixed results, causing great controversy and calls for the removal of them.
Norway

Norway has two general speed limits, 50 km/h in dense populated areas, and 80 km/h in sparsely populated areas. On some of the best motorways around the capital, Oslo, the limit is 100 km/h.
Sweden

Sweden has the official limits 50 km/h in built-up areas, 70 km/h outside and 110 km/h on motorways. On the motorways with highest standard 120 km/h can be used. Usually main roads have 90 km/h outside built-up areas, and often 110 km/h in northern Sweden. Main roads in built-up areas separated from pedestrians usually have 70 km/h. Outside schools and hospitals the limit is often 30 km/h.
From about 2000 signs have been introduced showing start and end of built-up area. They mean 50 and 70 if there is no number sign. Before that all speed limits were signposted with the round speed limit sign with a number.
From about 1990 to 1995, Sweden lowered the limit in the large city provinces from 110 km/h (70 mph) to 90 km/h (55 mph), which was the lowest in Europe at the time, citing environmental reasons. The term "large city province" was defined as a province including one of the three large cities with suburbs. That meant that the west coast motorway E6 had a 90 km/h (55 mph) limit on its (then) about 250 km of motorway, but some ordinary roads in less densely populated provinces had a 110 km/h (70 mph) limit. This reduced limit was later removed because it was neither popular nor well obeyed.
Finland


★ Motorways 120 km/h (in winter or bad weather, as well as on motorways close to urban areas, 100 km/h).

★ Main provincial roads (paved) 100 km/h or 80 km/h (on locations or on winter lower).

★ Rural roads 80 km/h (paved or gravel) unless otherwise indicated.

★ Within a built-up area 50 km/h unless otherwise indicated.
Switzerland

Swiss motorways are limited to 120 km/h (75 mph). Semi-motorways, known as "motor roads", ''Autostrassen'' or ''[semi-autoroutes]'' generally have a limit of 100 km/h (60 mph).
United Kingdom

UK speed limit upon entry to village, Fivemiletown in Northern Ireland (30 mph)

From 1930 to 1965, most roads outside urban areas, including motorways, did not have a speed limit. However, in December 1965, after a series of multiple crashes on motorways, mainly in fog, an experimental speed limit of 70 mph (112 km/h) was introduced for motorways and all other unrestricted roads,[14] and made permanent in 1967 for motorways and dual carriageways with a central reservation (with the limit dropped to for other unrestricted roads). It was reduced to 50 mph (80 km/h) in response to the 1973 oil crisis, and restored to 70 mph (112 km/h) in 1974. The Association of British Drivers has called for the limit to be increased. The opposition Conservative Party is proposing to raise the limit to 80 mph (130 km/h) where appropriate.
North America

Speed Limit sign on a rural stretch of Interstate highway in mph/western Texas. It is the highest posted speed limit in the U.S.

United States

American speed limit signs usually read "SPEED LIMIT XX", such as "SPEED LIMIT 50" for 50 mph (80 km/h). A minimum speed sign reads "MINIMUM SPEED XX", such as "MINIMUM SPEED 45" for 45 mph (70 km/h). Speed limits on United States roads are usually:

★ 25–30 mph (40–48 km/h) on residential streets

★ 35–45 mph (56–72 km/h) on urban arterial roads

★ 50–65 mph (80–105 km/h) on major highways inside cities

★ 45–70 mph (72–105 km/h) on rural two-lane roads

★ 55–70 mph (88–112 km/h) on rural expressways

★ 65–80 mph (105–129 km/h) on rural Interstate highways
Speed policy is determined by each state; many state laws include reasonable and prudent clauses that give law enforcement officials authority to ticket motorists for speeding even though they were traveling below the speed limit when certain conditions are present.
A grass roots effort is underway to document all speed limit signs in the USA ([2])
Canada

Since 1977, Canadian speed limits have been in km/h - they were previously in mph. A sign reads "MAXIMUM XX", such as "MAXIMUM 80" for 80 km/h. A minimum speed sign reads "XX MINIMUM", such as "60 MINIMUM" for 60 km/h. Typical speed limits are:

★ 30–50 km/h (20–30 mph) within school and playground zones

★ 40–50 km/h (25–30 mph) on residential streets within cities and towns

★ 60–70 km/h (35–45 mph) on major arterial roads in urban and suburban areas

★ 80–90 km/h (50–55 mph) on highways outside cities and towns and urban expressways

★ 90–110 km/h (55–70 mph) on freeways and rural expressways
Note that where more than one limit is given per road, it usually indicates a difference between provinces; however, within provinces, different roads of the same classification have different speed limits. For example, in Alberta and Nova Scotia some freeways have a limit of 100 km/h, while others have a speed limit of 110 km/h (70 mph). In Ontario, all freeways have a maximum speed limit of 100 km/h unless there is a lower posted limit, although they generally operate at much higher speeds with very little enforcement. Speed limits are generally lower in Ontario and Quebec on comparable roads than in other Canadian provinces, except perhaps British Columbia. Examples of this disparity include rural two-lane highways in Ontario which have a standard speed limit of 80 km/h, while comparable roads in other provinces have standard speed limits of 90–100 km/h. In rural western Ontario, however, some two-lane roads have speed limits of 90 km/h.
In British Columbia, a review of speed limits conducted in 2002 and 2003 for the Ministry of Transportation found that posted limits on investigated roads were unrealistically low for 1309 km and unrealistically high for 208 km. The reports recommended to increase speed limits for multi-lane limited-access highways constructed to high design standards from 110 km/h to 120 km/h.[15] As described in that report, the Ministry is currently using ''"...Technical Circular T-10/00 [...] to assess speed limits. The practice considers the 85th percentile speed, road geometry, roadside development, and crash history."''
In most Canadian provinces, as in most other locales, speed violation fines are double (or more) in construction zones, although in Ontario this only applies if workers are present in the construction zone.
Asia

China

Previously, all expressways in the People's Republic of China were limited to 110 km/h (68 mph). With the passage of the PRC's first road-related law, the Road Traffic Safety Law of the People's Republic of China, the speed limit was raised to 120 km/h (75 mph) from May 1, 2004; however, the updating of signs will take some time.
Semi-expressways and city express routes (called ''kuàisù gōnglù'' () in Chinese, meaning "high speed public road") generally have lower speed limits of 100 km/h (62 mph): in some cases the speed limit may be lower.
On China National Highways (which are ''not'' expressways), a common speed limit is 80 km/h (50 mph). In some localities, speed limits may drop to 40 km/h (25 mph).
Few people drive according to the speed limits, and on most roads, enforcement cameras are non-existent. Where an enforcement camera does exist, it is marked "speeding detection camera" ().
On some designated "fast through routes" in cities, speed limits are up to 80 km/h (50 mph). Otherwise, speed limits are 70 km/h (44 mph) on roads with two uninterrupted yellow lines and 60 km/h (37 mph) or 50 km/h (30 mph) otherwise. Signage in towns and on expressways is often present.
Minimum speed limits on expressways vary. A general minimum speed limit of 60 km/h (37 mph) is in force at all times (although traffic jams thwart it).
Hong Kong

Many expressways in Hong Kong are limited to 80 km/h. Some expressways with heavy traffic are limited to 70 km/h, such as Island Eastern Corridor and East Kowloon Corridor. Tolo Highway and West Kowloon Highway have a 100 km/h limit, and North Lantau Highway limited at 110 km/h, the highest speed limit in Hong Kong.
India

Speed limits in India vary by state and vehicle type. Motorcycles are limited to 50 km/h on all roads, while trucks and buses are restricted to 65 km/h. The limits on cars range from 80 km/h in Maharashtra, 50-60 km/h in New Delhi, and none at all in Uttar Pradesh. Nationwide laws have been proposed to set a 100 km/h speed limit for cars and to increase to the limit of motorcycles to 65 km/h.http://in.rediff.com/money/2007/mar/29speed.htm
It is common to see speeds of 100-120 km/h on expressways, of which there are very few in India, the most notable being the Mumbai-Pune Expressway. Motorcycles are not allowed to use expressways. The speed limit on the Mumbai-Pune Expressway is 80 km/h, but on other ones the limit is 120 km/h. Bangalore's Airport expressway, opening in 2008, will have a design speed of 180 km/h.http://www.skyscrapercity.com/showpost.php?p=12270655&postcount=21
Speed limit enforcement has historically been lax on expressways. However, highway police now use automated instruments which capture the speed and mail the fine to the car's owner. Failure to pay may result in doubling of the fine, cancellation of the driving license, and even arrest.
Police are now also using wireless PDAs to identify a driver's or vehicle's history, allowing the officer to take appropriate action.
Recently, the Indian government has proposed to introduce national speed limit caps of 50 km/h on all roads except for expressways, which will be capped at 80 km/h. This is despite the fact that Indian expressways generally have exits that are spaced as far as possible from each other. [3]
Indonesia

Indonesia employs a maximum and minimum speed limit. The general maximum speed limit on tollways and highways are 80-100 km/h. On all other roads, it is 40-60 km/h. Minimum speed limit is 20 km/h lower than the posted maximum.
However, enforcement of speed limit is rare and drivers often follow "reasonable and prudent" speed limit guidelines.
Japan

The general limit is 60 km/h except for divided national highways where the limit is 100 km/h. Urban areas are usually zoned at 40 km/h.
Limits in Japan are different from most countries by:

★ having no separate urban limit, with urban limits being set by zoning rather than statute.

emergency vehicles are not exempt but have a higher speed limit.

★ there are many lower limits set for vehicle classes other than ordinary cars and motorcycles.

★ power output of Japanese domestic cars was governed by a gentlemen's agreement stating that the maximum power output would be 280 PS (276 bhp / 206 kW). This is no longer in place and cars with stated power outputs of more than 280 PS are available.
Malaysia

Malaysian National Speed Limit signboard.

The speed limit in Malaysia is 110 km/h on closed toll expressways. Speed limit on federal, state and municipal roads is between 50 km/h and 90 km/h depending on geographical factors along the road. The default speed limit is 90 km/h and it is reduced to 60 km/h in urban areas.
Several years ago, a proposal to increase the speed limit on Malaysian expressways to 140 km/h was made but was finally rejected in 2005 by Minister of Works, Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu, stating that most drivers often drive 10 to 30 km/h faster than the stated speed limit on the expressways.
Starting from the 2006 Hari Raya Aidilfitri festive season, a new lower speed limit for festive seasons of 80 km/h has been implemented on federal and state roads as a preventive measure to reduce accidents during festive seasons.
Philippines

Philippine expressway speed limits are based on the US Interstate Highway standards. The general speed limit in the Philippines is 60 km/h as its minimum and 100 km/h is maximum, although 120 km/h is still allowed.
Singapore

The speed limit of Singapore highways/expressways is 90 km/h.
Taiwan

The Act Governing the Punishment of Violation of Road traffic Regulations () is the basic law. The Road Traffic Security Rules () are the basic administrative regulations. When no other limits are posted, the default speed limits are:

★ 15 km/h when approaching a railroad crossing

★ 40 km/h on roads without lane markings or on slow lanes () separated by single solid white lines from nearby fast lanes ()

★ 50 km/h on other roads and lanes
Speed limits on freeways are posted by signs, generally 100 km/h. Limited segments are posted at 90, 80, or 70 km/h. Most segments of the National Highway No. 3 are now posted at 110 km/h, the highest speed limit in Taiwan. A truck with a gross weight of 20 tonnes or more is limited to 90 km/h. Except on approaches to toll stations and work areas, minimum speeds are usually posted at 60 km/h.
Oceania

Australia

Australian speed limit sign

Australian states and territories use a combination of default speed limits and speed zones. The default limits apply in the absence of a speed zone and are:

★ within built-up areas, 50 km/h. (60 km/h in the Northern Territory)

★ outside built-up areas, 100 km/h. Western Australia have a limit of 110 km/h, and the Northern Territory is limited to 110 km/h or 130 km/h on selected roads [4].
New Zealand

Speed limits in New Zealand range up to and including 100 km/h. The most commonly seen are:

★ 100 km/h, the "open road limit." Used in rural areas, motorways, expressways and highways and places where there is little development on the roadside

★ 70 km/h in small country towns, urban fringes (often preceding a change from the open limit to urban limit), or where development is only on one side of the road

★ 50 km/h in most urban or built-up areas; LSZ (see below) under adverse conditions

★ 30 km/h through most roadworks.
These speed limits are less common:

★ 90 km/h on rural roads as agreed to by the Director of Land Transport

★ 80 km/h on urban arterial routes passing through rural areas if there is cause for it to not be faster

★ 60 km/h for many urban arterial routes that meet specific design requirements

★ 40 km/h variable speed zone past a school

★ 20 km/h traffic traveling both ways past school buses that have stopped to unload or pick up passengers; accident sites

★ 10 km/h particularly for shared zones
Signage tends to follow the European model of a number inside a red circle. Sometimes "open road limit" occurs as a black forward slash inside a thin black ring (similar to the UK's National Speed Limit sign).
The letters LSZ (Limited Speed Zone) indicate that the limit is 100 km/h unless conditions (visibility, road condition, rain, many other road users) would make this unwise, in which case it is 50 km/h. This type of speed limit can no longer be set since 2003, and is progressively being replaced, mostly with 70 km/h limits.
A local bylaw in Auckland produced the speed limit of 16 km/h in Waikumete Cemetery. When New Zealand converted from Imperial to metric measure, the statutes concerning speed in this location were not updated even though the signage legally had to be altered from Imperial units. This limit existed into the early 21st century. Typically speeds in such areas were 10, 15, or 20 km/h after adoption of the metric system.
There is no minimum speed limit but vehicles traveling less than the maximum must keep to the side of the road and pull over to allow others to pass as soon as is safe.
Some vehicles are restricted to lower overall speed limits:

★ 90 km/h for trucks and vehicles with trailers

★ 80 km/h for school buses

★ 70 km/h for motorcyclists with learner licenses

★ heavy vehicles


★ with suspension



★ 20 km/h if it has solid rubber tires



★ 15 km/h if it has metal tires


★ with no suspension



★ 45 km/h if it has pneumatic tires



★ 10 km/h if it has solid rubber tires



★ 7.5 km/h if it has metal tires
There are also variable speed limits in some areas, such as school zones.
Africa

Namibia

The general speed limits in Namibia are (according to Road Authority of Namibia):

★ 60 km/h on a public road within an urban area (may be lifted to 80 km/h on some major urban roads)

★ 120 km/h on every tarmac freeway.

★ 80-120 km/h on non-tarmac freeway ("gravel" road)
South Africa

The general speed limits in terms of the South African National Road Traffic Act, 1989 and its regulations are:

★ 60 km/h on a public road within an urban area

★ 100 km/h on public road outside an urban area which is not a freeway; and

★ 120 km/h on freeways.

Enforcement


Policeman enforcing speed limit

Prior to the invention of radar, speed limits were normally enforced by ''clocking'' vehicles travelling through speed traps. Clocking a vehicle simply means timing how long it takes for the automobile to pass between two fixed landmarks along a roadway, from which the vehicle's average speed could easily be determined. Setting up a speed trap that could provide legally satisfactory evidence was usually time consuming, however, and early speed traps were often difficult to hide. As a result, organizations such as the Automobile Association could often keep fairly accurate records of speed trap locations.
In the early 21st century, police used radar, laser range-finders, aircraft, and automated devices. Officers may also use a method called pacing: following a car for a certain time to establish speed using the calibrated speedometer of the patrol car.
In several countries, notably the Netherlands and the United Kingdom, an increase in automated speed enforcement has resulted in a significant increase in the number of fake number plates. In France, the use of automated enforcement has been credited with contributing to a substantial reduction in fatalities.[16] Most Western European countries now use automated enforcement on at least some roads.
Speed limit policy can affect enforcement. According to the AASHTO, "experience has ... shown that speed limits set arbitrarily below the reasonable and prudent speed perceived by the public are difficult to enforce, produce noncompliance, encourage disrespect for the law, create unnecessary antagonism toward law enforcement officers, and divert traffic to lesser routes[.]"[17]
Enforcement tolerance

Speed limit enforcement often begins at a small amount above the speed limit. For example, speeding citations for 1 unit (mph or km/h) above the limit are rare. In certain cases, such as Houston, Texas, only 1% of speeding citations are for less than 10 mph (16 km/h) above the speed limit (Houston Chronicle, "It's really true: Drivers going less than over limit rarely ticketed", November 24, 2002).
In the United States, speeding enforcement tolerance is usually up to the discretion of the arresting officer. A small tolerance is almost always allowed even where traffic signs advise "NO TOLERANCE." Some states have official tolerances, such as Pennsylvania. As per state law, one cannot be cited by an officer using a radar/laser gun for traveling less than over a speed limit of less than or for traveling less than over a speed limit of or greater.[18]
In Taiwan, even though the Regulations on Establishing Traffic Signs and Indicating Lines () define the speed limit signs to show ''absolute'' limits, the police agencies have generally agreed a tolerance of up to 10 km/h. A notable exception was the Hsuehshan Tunnel opened on June 16, 2006 with automated speeding cameras. After the ''zero tolerance'' on speeding created controversy,[19] effective 00:00 (UTC+8) on September 16, 2006, a tolerance of 10 km/h has been allowed as on other Taiwanese roads. [7]
In the United Kingdom ACPO guidelines[8] recommend a tolerance level of the speed limit "+10% +2 mph" (e.g. a tolerance level in a zone of 35 mph). However, each police force or safety camera partnership has the ability to use its discretion when setting the levels at which drivers will be prosecuted.
Road safety improvements in the Australian state of Victoria are largely attributed to infrastructure improvements and speed management including tougher tolerances and enforcement. Low level speeding is targeted because of the overall population effects. This is best explained by the recent Auditor General's independent review[20] which cites:
The relative risk of casualty crash involvement for vehicles travelling only a few km/h above the speed limit is lower than for those travelling a greater amount above the limit. However the contribution of “low level speeders” to the total number of casualty crashes is high because of the high number of motorists travelling at these speeds. Therefore, “low level speeding” represents a substantial risk across the road network.[2]

Victoria has some of the tightest speeding tolerances in Australia, with 3 km/h if the speed is under 100 km/h, or 3% if over 100 km/h. This is despite the fact that the Australian Design Rules only stipulate that a car's speedometer must be accurate within a 10% tolerance.

Safety and efficacy


Essential physics

The kinetic energy involved in a motor vehicle collision is proportional to the square of the speed at impact. The probability of a fatality is, for typical collision speeds, empirically correlated to the fourth power of the speed difference at impact,[22] rising much faster than kinetic energy.
To illustrate these statistics, suppose two vehicles crash into a massive, fixed object, and one vehicle’s speed is 10% greater than the other vehicle. The faster vehicle will release 21% more energy, and its occupants will experience a 46% higher probability of a fatality.
It should be noted that crashes with dramatic, sudden speed changes that terminate almost all velocity are atypical. These kinds of crashes include head on collisions or collisions with massive, fixed objects like trees or concrete bridge piers.
Although the basic relationship between vehicle speed and crash severity is unequivocal and based on the laws of physics, the probability of a crash as well as crash severity can be mitigated. Safety devices like crash attenuators, barriers, or wide medians are examples. The highest degree of mitigation is found on motorways (which may be called freeways, limited access highways, also Autobahns, Interstates or other national names), which are internationally documented as being the safest roads per mile travelled despite their higher speeds, due to designing out of most conflict opportunities as well as restricted access.
Speed limits, actual speeds, and aggregate safety

The 1998 ''Synthesis of Safety Research Related to Speed and Speed Management'' sponsored by the US Federal Highway administration found, "on freeways and other high-speed roads, speed limit increases generally lead to higher speeds and crashes."[23] Increasing a speed limit by 4 mph (6 km/h) would increase the average speed by 1 mph (1.6 km/h) and increase injury accidents by 5%. The report cautions that "changing speed limits on low and moderate speed roads appears to have little or no effect on speed and thus little or no effect on crashes." The report noted that traffic calming significantly reduced speeds and injuries in treated areas but that the decrease may be due to reduced traffic volumes. The report also suggests that "variable speed limits that adjust with traffic and environmental conditions could provide potential benefits" as most of the speed related crashes involve speed too fast for conditions.
The report noted the landmark study (D. Solomon, "Accidents on Main Rural Highways Related to Speed, Driver, and Vehicle", Federal Highway Administration, Washington, DC, July 1964) that observed a "U-shaped curve" of crash probability versus speed, where crash rates were lowest for travel speeds near the mean speed of traffic, and increased with greater deviations above and below the mean. Subsequent research has found that "The occurrence of a large number of crashes involving turning maneuver partly explains the increased risk for motorists traveling slower than average and confirms the importance of safety programs involving turn lanes, access control, grade separation, and other measures to reduce conflicts resulting from large differences in travel speeds."
A 1994 study by Jeremy Jackson and Roger Blackman[2] showed, consistent with the risk homeostasis theory, that although increased speed limits and reduced speeding fines significantly increased driving speed, there was no effect on accident frequency, with the 24 participants maintaining the same level of risk and risky behaviour. It also showed that an increased accident cost caused large and significant reductions in accident frequency but no change in speed choice. The abstract states that the results suggest that regulation of specific risky behaviors such as speed choice may have little influence on accident rates.
Speed and crash factors

Some safety factors are not always under the full control of the driver, such as driver alertness and distractions, road conditions, weather, daylight availability, actions and alertness of other drivers, and wildlife. While these factors are not directly related to vehicle speed, the effects of these factors can be more severe with more speed. For example, a deer running across the road has no consequences to a parked vehicle but could have disastrous consequences for a vehicle traveling at 100 mph (160 km/h). This suggests that lower speeds can reduce the frequency and severity of crashes; lower speeds can give the driver more time to respond appropriately in the face of unexpected dangers, and it can reduce the severity of a crash should one happen. However, since the efficacy of speed limits in restraining driver speed is subject to debate, it is not clear how well speed limits can ameliorate these other factors.
Another view is that, while speed can play a part of the causal chain which leads to crashes, speed's role is mostly to magnify the consequences of other unsafe acts. This viewpoint is reinforced by the fact that speed is rarely the sole crash factor. In many cases, removing the other crash factors, such as a right of way violation, would have absolutely prevented the collision. While reducing the speed could have a beneficial effect on the severity and probability of the crash, it usually cannot guarantee crash prevention.
Most 'speed-related' crashes involve speed too fast for conditions such as limited visibility or reduced road traction, rather than in excess of the posted speed limit. Most speed-related crashes occur on local and collector roads with relatively low speed limits. However, most speed-related traffic citations involve speeds in excess of posted maximum speed limits. Variable speed limits (q.v.) offer some potential to reduce speed-related crashes, but due to the high cost of implementation exist primarily on motorways. Speed-related crashes can occur on high speed limit roads at low speeds, e.g. below ; for example, truck rollovers on exit ramps.

Variable speed limits


Example variable speed limit sign in the United States.
Recently some jurisdictions have begun experimenting with variable speed limits which change with road congestion and other factors (this is distinct from France's reduction of limits during adverse weather). One example is on Britain's M25 motorway, which circumnavigates London. On the most heavily-traveled 22 km section (junction 10 to 16) of the M25 variable speed limits combined with automated enforcement have been in force since 1995. Initial results indicated savings in journey times, smoother-flowing traffic, and a fall in the number of accidents, so the implementation was made permanent in 1997. Further trials on the M25 have been thus far proved inconclusive.[25]
In Germany, the first experiments with variable signs took place in 1965 on A8 Munich-Salzburg with signs that were operated manually.[26] Beginning in the 1970s, more and more advanced ''Streckenbeeinflussungsanlagen'' (linear control systems) were put into service. Modern motorway control systems can work without human intervention using various types of sensors to measure traffic flow and weather conditions. By 2007, 1200 km (10 %) of German motorways will be equipped with such systems.[27]
In 2006, Austria began experimenting with a 160 km/h (100 mph) speed limit on a selected test stretch of Autobahn as part of their program of variable speed limit, using the slogan "flexibility with responsibility."
New Zealand has had variable speed limits since 2001. The first installation was on the Ngauranga Gorge, a steep section of dual carriageway on SH1 north of the capital, Wellington. The speed limit is normally 80 km/h. The downhill section is monitored by a fixed speed camera.
In The Netherlands, much of the dense motorway network is equipped with variable speed regulation systems. The electronic signage is commonly posted every 500 metres. The system keeps track of all traffic movement and lowers the speed limit if it detects the start of traffic congestion. When activated the speed limit usually is 100 km/h but can be set at 90, 70 or 50 km/h according to the level of expected traffic congestion.
Variable speed limits are used on some stretches of highway in the United States, but it has not been implemented on a national basis. On Interstate 90 at Snoqualmie Pass, Washington, (near Seattle) variable speed limits are used to slow traffic in severe winter weather. This is also done on other mountain passes in Washington.[28] Variable speed limit signs, in combination with variable message signs, have been in use since the 1960s on the New Jersey Turnpike, where officials can adjust the speed limit according to weather, traffic conditions, and construction. Other roadways with variable speed limits include the Pulaski Skyway in New Jersey and I-495 in Delaware.

Opposition


Speed limits and their enforcement have been opposed by some motorists since their inception. Britain's first motoring organization, the AA, was formed to warn members about speed traps. Other organizations, such as the Association of British Drivers, Safe Speed, the North American National Motorists Association, and German Auto Club ("ADAC"), have sought to ban or discredit certain speed limits as well as other measures, such as automated camera enforcement. The debate over speed limit enforcement has become a large part of the road safety and environmental policy debate in some countries.
Critics of speed limits and strict enforcement outside built-up areas point to:

★ Inconclusive results from most speed limit studies. For example, a 1972 OECD Road Research Group report entitled 'Speed Limits Outside Built-Up Areas' reviewed most international studies to that date. They concluded that "because of the weaknesses in the research designs of many investigations, scientifically well-established conclusions cannot be drawn." "Indeed, some of the speed limit changes were more in the nature of administrative exercises than scientifically designed experiments and the methods of analysis in these cases were deficient from the statistical point of view." The Group stated that "speed limit policies should be based on reliable research work and generally accepted scientific evidence." They proposed an international co-operative experiment to overcome weaknesses in prior studies. However, the 1973-1974 oil price crisis intervened, and widespread blanket speed limits became more common without exacting study. More recently, a review of the effect of speed on vehicle crash rates noted that the studies and evidence are "ample, but not unequivocal."




★ Misleading definition of 'speeding' or 'speed-related' to combine the concepts of:


★ crashes that occur often at relatively low speeds, but excessive for adverse conditions, such as low visibility


★ citations that are issued for travel in excess of the posted speed limit
In Australia for instance, Government & Police attribute speed as the main cause in 30% of crashes, even though speeding is a cause in only 20% of those cases (or 6% of total cases). This is due to an extremely wide-ranging definition of speed, in order to explain fixed speed cameras and zero-discretion traffic policing.




★ Surprisingly broad range for 'speed-related' fatalities as a percentage of total traffic fatalties, suggesting that categorizing accidents as 'speed-related' is highly subjective. Among the U.S. States, the range is from 10% in New Jersey to over 60% in Rhode Island.




★ "Evidence that suggests the net effect of [higher motorway] speed limits may be positive on a system wide basis [by shifting more traffic to these safer roads]." This statement from 1998 U.S. Federal Synthesis is based on the published, peer-reviewed work of Charles A. Lave et al., e.g. "Did The speed Limit Save Lives?"




★ Motorists generally pick reasonable speeds for conditions, even on motorways.[29] For example, the 75 mph (120 km/h) speed limit in the U.S. State of South Dakota has good compliance: the average speed is less than or equal to the posted limit almost a decade after it was increased.[30]
Prior to the (now defunct) 1974 national 55 mph (88 km/h) speed limit in the U.S., German Autobahns had a higher fatality rate than U.S. Interstates; however, a few years later, the Autobahn rate fell below that of (then) 55 mph (88 km/h) limited U.S. Interstates. IRTAD records show the U.S. rate remains higher than that on the largely unrestricted German Autobahn network. While the fatality rate on the UK's 70 mph (112 km/h) speed-limited motorways is about half of Germany's, the 60 mph (96 km/h) limit in rule-conscious Japan corresponds to a motorway fatality rate greater than Germany's. However, simple comparisons of fatality rates between countries neglect to account for differences in traffic density, quality of medical care, and Smeed's law.

Roads without speed limits


In some juristictions some public roads have no speed limits:

★ The German intercity Autobahn, two-thirds of which have only advisory limits (Richtgeschwindigkeit).

★ The Isle of Man has no speed limit on many rural roads. A 2004 proposal for 70 and 60 mph (112 and 96 km/h) speed limits was very unpopular. [13]

★ Nepal has average traffic speeds of 40-50 km/h and has no statutory speed limits set on most of its roads. [14]

★ The state of Uttar Pradesh in India has no default speed limit for cars. (see Speed Limit#India)
Montana has had a speed limit since June 1999 (see Speed limits in United States#Montana for more information). Australia's Northern Territory had no blanket speed limits outside major towns until January 2007, when rural speed limits were reduced to 110 km/h or 130 km/h.[15]

See also



Road-traffic safety

Speed trap

Road-rule enforcement camera

Traffic Violations Reciprocity

References


1. [1]
2.
3. http://www.ite.org/standards/speed_zoning.pdf
4. Reference
5. Kollektive Verkehrsbeeinflussungsanlagen auf Bundesvernstraßen
6. German Straßenverkehrs-Ordnung (StVO; Highway code), paragraph 3: Geschwindigkeit (speed), section (1)
7. Road Traffic Act 2004 SECTION 8
8. Road Traffic Act 2004 SECTION 9
9. Road Traffic Act 2004 SECTION 7
10. Road Traffic Act 2004 SECTION 6
11. Road Traffic Act 2004 SECTION 9
12. Road Traffic Act 2004 SECTION 5
13. Road Traffic Act 2004 SECTION 12
14. Four of the reasons why there's a good time coming
15. MoT Speed Review Report
16.
17. [5]
18. [6]
19. PChome Online: Speeding for 1 km/h fined 3000 TWD, the people heavily scold the bandit government (in Chinese)
20. An independent review of Victoria's speed management program which has helped to cut road trauma as part of the Arrive Alive! strategy
21.
22. [9]
23. Synthesis of Safety Research Related to Speed and Speed Management
24.
25. [10]
26.

27. http://www.bmvbs.de/Anlage/original_15523/Kollektive-Verkehrs-beeinflussungsanlagen-auf-Bundesfern-strassen-Stand-Maerz-2003.pdf
28. [www.tfhrc.gov/pubrds/03jan/10.htm]
29. [11]
30. [12]

External links



★ Governments


Transport, Local Government and the Regions - Ninth Report A comprehensive UK report into the effects of speeding.


The Speeding Driver: Who, How and Why? A major research report into the psychology of the speeding driver.

★ Motorists' and other groups


National Motorists Association A U.S. organization arguing for 85th percentile limits.


Slower Speeds Initiative A UK road safety organisation which campaigns for lower speed limits.


Higher/Flexible Speeds Initiative An Austrian project that aim at more flexible speed limits and also higher speed limits for a better traffic control and safer driving.

★ Other links


Alert and Find Speed Traps In Your Area pigradar.com


John F. Carr's State Traffic and Speed Laws


R.A. Krammes, K. Fitzpatrick, J.D. Blaschke, D.B. Fambro. Speed: Understanding Design, Operating, and Posted Speed, Research Report 1465-1. Project No. 1465. Texas Transportation Institute, College Station, TX. March 1996.


★ The United States' Transportation Research Board (TRB) National Cooperative Highway Research Program (NCHRP): Report 504: Design Speed, Operating Speed, and Posted Speed Practices 2003.


★ C. Lave and P. Elias, "Did The 60 MPH speed Limit Save Lives?" Accident Analysis and Prevention, Vol. 26, No. 1, 1994.


Effects of Raising and Lowering Speed Limits on Selected Roadway Sections, United States Publication No. FHWA-RD-97-084, January 1997.


Actual Speeds on the Roads Compared to the Posted Limits, Final Report 551, Arizona Dept of Transportation, October 2004.


Special Report 254: Managing Speed, Transportation Research Board, 1998.


The Flicker Fusion Factor Why we can't drive safely at high speed

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