The one that I do, that gets me scolded by my wife and kids, is hit the high-beams if I'm the only car at a stop light.
I don't know about other places but here in the KC metro the high-beams seem to trigger a photo-electric sensor in the traffic light turning it from red to green.
I don't know about other places but here in the KC metro the high-beams seem to trigger a photo-electric sensor in the traffic light turning it from red to green.
There's a rumour that the same happens in the UK, based on the theory that emergency vehicles coming through have flashing lights, and a sensor detects this to turn the lights in favour of them.
Thus, when you pick up a taxi at night the wonk behind the wheel flashes his headlights every time he approaches a red light.
And I've never seen it change them to green any quicker than they would otherwise. It's okay though, as most taxi drivers keep creeping past the line anyway regardless what colour the light is showing.
There would be far more robust ways of doing it than just relying on emergency vehicle high beams.
There is also a rumor that it is a ticketable offense. So, look before your leap.I need to try this now, I didn't know that you could do that. I'm not sure if it'll work but he worth a try!
MatskiMonkThere would be far more robust ways of doing it than just relying on emergency vehicle high beams.
It's more common as far as I know to have induction loops (?) in the road, that sense a car driving over them, and if it's appropriate to do so, change to let that vehicle pass (ie, no on coming traffic). There is a traffic light near me that definatley operates like this... people approach it slowly flashing their lights, thinking this is what makes it change.
Governments everywhere claim that speeding causes accidents and kills. A PSA run in Washington by the State Patrol asserted that speed was a factor in a WHOPPING 25% of fatal accidents in the state. Sorry, but that's not convincing me that driving 70 mph on the freeway in light traffic is dangerous. Yet if I'm caught, it's a $150 ticket and a pep talk from a man in aviator sunglasses. Speed is not the problem. Peoples' lack of care, lack of judgment, and lack of respect for driving is the problem. If they want to clean up the roads, go after people doing stupid things. Don't be lazy and just point a light beam down the road until it beeps.
Regarding accuracy in speedometers, how can you determine the true vehicle speed at the time? Are external GPS units like Garmin, tomtom etc, are those 100 percent accurate? There was always a discrepancy between my speedo speed and the GPS unit speed when i had one.
They are more accurate, yes. In fact probably the most accurate way of quickly knowing your road speed at any given time, without long, unwieldy calculations.
Thanks, you spelled out my argument a little more elegantlyThere's a few issues here...
(copious amounts of indigo text)
Even if somebody is injured in an accident, speed is only a factor and not a cause. A driver's decision to speed would be a cause, and he should be punished for making that decision. You can't outlaw speed because if you did nobody would be able to go anywhere - a 4000 pound machine can be dangerous at any speed. The only reasonable argument for speed limits is to create order - the idea that governments could rake in serious revenue by not simply suggesting a speed to travel, but outlawing any speed above it, came after the fact.And speeding is only a victimless crime if no-one is injured or killed because of it... I'm not sure - but I'm pretty sure that happens everyday.
Out of curiosity, do you know if police radar and lasers are calibrated for the typical angle at which they are used? It's easy enough to calibrate it straight-on, at which point it will have whatever error plus or minus, but if you then set it at a healthy angle to the road, those errors are compounded. Especially in the case of radar, because their range is pretty short.Yes and no. The devices need to be calibrated to within a twentieth of a mph. Your speedo does not but, again, it will overread (unless you've futzed about with the wheels and gained yourself an underread, which is illegal).
However, it is the reason ACPO advise that no prosecutions should be brought at or below +10%+2mph. They advise. In practice you can be prosecuted for +1mph, though it rarely happens.
Out of curiosity, do you know if police radar and lasers are calibrated for the typical angle at which they are used? It's easy enough to calibrate it straight-on, at which point it will have whatever error plus or minus, but if you then set it at a healthy angle to the road, those errors are compounded. Especially in the case of radar, because their range is pretty short.
Static cameras are radar-based and angle calibrated. They have a short "killzone" of about sixty feet and are generally required to provide two photographs (the road also has markings to provide the distance travelled) to show it's not a false-positive.
Mobile fixed cameras ("Tali-vans") and mobile hand detectors are typically LIDAR and are set to read head-on at distance, generally 400-800m - anything other than head-on is inadmissible as evidence due to tracking error. Talivans are also required to provide a photograph, whereas handheld cameras are often backed up with marked vehicles - though it's still possible to secure a prosecution without a photograph in the case of excessive speed (like my brother) based solely on the opinion of excessive speed (100mph+).