frostbite
Active Member
- Joined
- Oct 5, 2014
- Messages
- 201
- Location
- Cheshire
- Car
- C43 AMG, 96 Jeep Cherokee 2.5, Triumph Explorer and Thruxton
I have a car that will do 155mph (apparently). On any British road this would need a lot of concentration and room. For probably 99% of the time nationwide, there just isn't the room. So I enjoy how quickly it will get to 70 rather than how much it will go over it, and then how relaxed it is at 70.
Safety improvements over the years are meant to improve safety, not to go faster and be no safer.
I rode a fast motorbike on an unrestricted German road last year. Traffic was moderate and I was on lane 2 most of the time going at about 80 - 90 mph. Moving into lane 3 was terrifying as the closing speed of some of the cars in lane 3 meant I just couldn't see back far enough to judge it was safe to move out. I got off the autobahn and took a delightful route on lesser roads and got to my destination about the same time I would have on the autobahn anyway.
So no, raised limits, though convenient for my pleasure, would be a bad move.
Safety improvements over the years are meant to improve safety, not to go faster and be no safer.
I rode a fast motorbike on an unrestricted German road last year. Traffic was moderate and I was on lane 2 most of the time going at about 80 - 90 mph. Moving into lane 3 was terrifying as the closing speed of some of the cars in lane 3 meant I just couldn't see back far enough to judge it was safe to move out. I got off the autobahn and took a delightful route on lesser roads and got to my destination about the same time I would have on the autobahn anyway.
So no, raised limits, though convenient for my pleasure, would be a bad move.