20 mph....
- Guy Smiley
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I've been a life time rev head... I loved cars so much I trained as a mechanic when I left school. I'm all over the technical complexity that leads to the sort of glory that is a Ferrari V12 on the over run, a slight over steer on a damp road under engine braking, the little lift and cross you get over a turning crest under more power than is advisable and all the rest....
but fuck cars in built areas. We devote so much space and so many resources to catering to car use and imprison ourselves within a tiny proportion of that space while begrudging any attempt to make it safer or cleaner. We live in our little box houses separated off from our fellow humans, we scuttle from inside that to inside the car where we seal ourselves off from discerning other drivers as fellow humans and reduce them to the status of simple problems that should be eradicated for having the temerity to use the space we desire, we distract ourselves with infotainment and phones while we hurtle about like crazed asteroids and we work hard to avoid any contact with our natural surroundings as much as we possibly can...
and we whinge about crime and social problems because someone else should fix it.
but fuck cars in built areas. We devote so much space and so many resources to catering to car use and imprison ourselves within a tiny proportion of that space while begrudging any attempt to make it safer or cleaner. We live in our little box houses separated off from our fellow humans, we scuttle from inside that to inside the car where we seal ourselves off from discerning other drivers as fellow humans and reduce them to the status of simple problems that should be eradicated for having the temerity to use the space we desire, we distract ourselves with infotainment and phones while we hurtle about like crazed asteroids and we work hard to avoid any contact with our natural surroundings as much as we possibly can...
and we whinge about crime and social problems because someone else should fix it.
20mph is fine in an electric. Makes it better to cycle. The countries public health would be much better if people took short journeys by foot or on a bike.
The 50mph limit on the M4 through Newport just makes sense as it was rare it was 70 with the variable speed limit at anyrate.
Pretty sure there have been studies showing that cars make us miserable.
The 50mph limit on the M4 through Newport just makes sense as it was rare it was 70 with the variable speed limit at anyrate.
Pretty sure there have been studies showing that cars make us miserable.
50 mph extension on the M4 over the bridge and up to near as dammit the Neath junction makes no sense at all...No houses around, and going the other way, towards Bridgend, it passes Port Talbot steelworks FFS. Let's slow you down to decrease pollution.... 

I love watching little children running and screaming, playing hide and seek in the playground.
They don't know I'm using blanks..
They don't know I'm using blanks..
I have no issue with 20mph speed limits in Embra, it works fine and if it saves a few lives and serious injuries then all the better. It doesnt really impact on travel times at all around town and there is no noticeable difference as far as I am concerned. In reality it probably slows those who would be doing 35mph in a 30 limit to 25-28mph in a 20 limit. It probably adds a minute or two max onto any journey. If you have a car and can afford to run one around town then you are lucky. In Embra I suspect the average speed of a car in town is no better than what a horse drawn carriage achieved 100 years ago! I honestly dont understand what all the moaning is about, it works, it saves lives and serious injury.inactionman wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 3:45 pmIt's got to be pretty much essential in a city with narrow roads and many, many tourists.Slick wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 12:37 pm Meh, it’s been like this in Edinburgh for ages and it’s fine, in fact, I like it.
Could do with more enforcement but I don’t really see the issue in a city
I do find it a bit irritating when used on roads outside of urban settings - the roads leading up to and past Peebles are 20 miles an hour limits, and I sometimes need to go that way to visit family. I could do without crawling along at 20 past fields when I've got a 9 hour journey. I do note that the 20 is mostly past hamlets, and they can't just chop and change between 60 and 20 every few hundred yards, but it does drag!
BravoGuy Smiley wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 4:27 pm I've been a life time rev head... I loved cars so much I trained as a mechanic when I left school. I'm all over the technical complexity that leads to the sort of glory that is a Ferrari V12 on the over run, a slight over steer on a damp road under engine braking, the little lift and cross you get over a turning crest under more power than is advisable and all the rest....
but fuck cars in built areas. We devote so much space and so many resources to catering to car use and imprison ourselves within a tiny proportion of that space while begrudging any attempt to make it safer or cleaner. We live in our little box houses separated off from our fellow humans, we scuttle from inside that to inside the car where we seal ourselves off from discerning other drivers as fellow humans and reduce them to the status of simple problems that should be eradicated for having the temerity to use the space we desire, we distract ourselves with infotainment and phones while we hurtle about like crazed asteroids and we work hard to avoid any contact with our natural surroundings as much as we possibly can...
and we whinge about crime and social problems because someone else should fix it.

All the money you made will never buy back your soul
I've lived and worked in major cities and towns all around the SE of England and yes, if your in a major city or town where traffic daily crawls around at a snails pace, 20mph zones make sense. Llanelli is not that, no nose to tail crawling along, ever, it's a rural town. You drive through, no probs, if I want to get to the other side of town, even at peak times, I'll allow 10 mins max..dpedin wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 5:57 pmI have no issue with 20mph speed limits in Embra, it works fine and if it saves a few lives and serious injuries then all the better. It doesnt really impact on travel times at all around town and there is no noticeable difference as far as I am concerned. In reality it probably slows those who would be doing 35mph in a 30 limit to 25-28mph in a 20 limit. It probably adds a minute or two max onto any journey. If you have a car and can afford to run one around town then you are lucky. In Embra I suspect the average speed of a car in town is no better than what a horse drawn carriage achieved 100 years ago! I honestly dont understand what all the moaning is about, it works, it saves lives and serious injury.inactionman wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 3:45 pmIt's got to be pretty much essential in a city with narrow roads and many, many tourists.Slick wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 12:37 pm Meh, it’s been like this in Edinburgh for ages and it’s fine, in fact, I like it.
Could do with more enforcement but I don’t really see the issue in a city
I do find it a bit irritating when used on roads outside of urban settings - the roads leading up to and past Peebles are 20 miles an hour limits, and I sometimes need to go that way to visit family. I could do without crawling along at 20 past fields when I've got a 9 hour journey. I do note that the 20 is mostly past hamlets, and they can't just chop and change between 60 and 20 every few hundred yards, but it does drag!
I love watching little children running and screaming, playing hide and seek in the playground.
They don't know I'm using blanks..
They don't know I'm using blanks..
More importantly how will you get home. By passes are a pain to work out when you pissed aren't they?

- fishfoodie
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- Joined: Mon Jun 29, 2020 8:25 pm
I always have that statistic, which must be a couple of decades old at this stage, that average journey speeds in London, are slower now than they were in the 18th/19th century. That's why cars don't work in cities !Guy Smiley wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 4:27 pm I've been a life time rev head... I loved cars so much I trained as a mechanic when I left school. I'm all over the technical complexity that leads to the sort of glory that is a Ferrari V12 on the over run, a slight over steer on a damp road under engine braking, the little lift and cross you get over a turning crest under more power than is advisable and all the rest....
but fuck cars in built areas. We devote so much space and so many resources to catering to car use and imprison ourselves within a tiny proportion of that space while begrudging any attempt to make it safer or cleaner. We live in our little box houses separated off from our fellow humans, we scuttle from inside that to inside the car where we seal ourselves off from discerning other drivers as fellow humans and reduce them to the status of simple problems that should be eradicated for having the temerity to use the space we desire, we distract ourselves with infotainment and phones while we hurtle about like crazed asteroids and we work hard to avoid any contact with our natural surroundings as much as we possibly can...
and we whinge about crime and social problems because someone else should fix it.
Isn’t it something like 60% of car journeys are under 2 miles?Line6 HXFX wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 4:19 pm Most car journeys are non essential, if it encourages car owners to think it is quicker to get where they are going on a pushbike, great.
Also the difference between hitting someone at 30 and 20, to that person is massive.
Wish I was hit at 20mph.
Maybe only one disc would be shot, instead of 3..and the shaking in excruciating pain would be manageable by the use of a couple of paracetamol.
It really irks me that after 13 years of Tory devestation and austerity, and ruin....motorists are outraged when asked to drop their speed by 10mph and drive a bit more safely, to the extent the lot of the motoring lobby in England, GB News (and moaning motorists in Wales) are calling for Mark Drakefords head and the dissolution of the Welsh Assembly.
This fucking country.
All the money you made will never buy back your soul
I want my self-driving car. I’ll drive to the pub, have 4 pints and then sit in the back while AI takes the wheel home.
- fishfoodie
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Whenever someone says this it reminds me of a story an Uncle of mine used to tell about when he was working in the family bar, during the big races week in Galway; & a guy that used to park his donkey & cart in the yard, & after a long days drinking, he'd sit on the cart, & clip the donkey & the donkey would just take off, & he'd flop backwards on the cart, because the donkey was hungry, & knew the way home !Sandstorm wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 8:54 pmI want my self-driving car. I’ll drive to the pub, have 4 pints and then sit in the back while AI takes the wheel home.
Sandstorm wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 8:54 pmI want my self-driving car. I’ll drive to the pub, have 4 pints and then sit in the back while AI takes the wheel home.

And why is that more important that making a safe environment for pedestrians and other road users?TB63 wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 7:41 pmI've lived and worked in major cities and towns all around the SE of England and yes, if your in a major city or town where traffic daily crawls around at a snails pace, 20mph zones make sense. Llanelli is not that, no nose to tail crawling along, ever, it's a rural town. You drive through, no probs, if I want to get to the other side of town, even at peak times, I'll allow 10 mins max..dpedin wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 5:57 pmI have no issue with 20mph speed limits in Embra, it works fine and if it saves a few lives and serious injuries then all the better. It doesnt really impact on travel times at all around town and there is no noticeable difference as far as I am concerned. In reality it probably slows those who would be doing 35mph in a 30 limit to 25-28mph in a 20 limit. It probably adds a minute or two max onto any journey. If you have a car and can afford to run one around town then you are lucky. In Embra I suspect the average speed of a car in town is no better than what a horse drawn carriage achieved 100 years ago! I honestly dont understand what all the moaning is about, it works, it saves lives and serious injury.inactionman wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 3:45 pm
It's got to be pretty much essential in a city with narrow roads and many, many tourists.
I do find it a bit irritating when used on roads outside of urban settings - the roads leading up to and past Peebles are 20 miles an hour limits, and I sometimes need to go that way to visit family. I could do without crawling along at 20 past fields when I've got a 9 hour journey. I do note that the 20 is mostly past hamlets, and they can't just chop and change between 60 and 20 every few hundred yards, but it does drag!
And are there two g’s in Bugger Off?
Exactly! If it takes 10mins max to get from one side of Llanelli to the other then the 20mph limit means it will mean 1 or 2 mins more max so I dont honestly see what the problem is. If all the research say this saves lives and serious injury then basically you are not willing to give up a minute per journey to do so? That's a bit selfish aint it?Biffer wrote: Thu Sep 21, 2023 8:24 amAnd why is that more important that making a safe environment for pedestrians and other road users?TB63 wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 7:41 pmI've lived and worked in major cities and towns all around the SE of England and yes, if your in a major city or town where traffic daily crawls around at a snails pace, 20mph zones make sense. Llanelli is not that, no nose to tail crawling along, ever, it's a rural town. You drive through, no probs, if I want to get to the other side of town, even at peak times, I'll allow 10 mins max..dpedin wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 5:57 pm
I have no issue with 20mph speed limits in Embra, it works fine and if it saves a few lives and serious injuries then all the better. It doesnt really impact on travel times at all around town and there is no noticeable difference as far as I am concerned. In reality it probably slows those who would be doing 35mph in a 30 limit to 25-28mph in a 20 limit. It probably adds a minute or two max onto any journey. If you have a car and can afford to run one around town then you are lucky. In Embra I suspect the average speed of a car in town is no better than what a horse drawn carriage achieved 100 years ago! I honestly dont understand what all the moaning is about, it works, it saves lives and serious injury.
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I think the contention is to do with blanket - ideally, we'd bespoke all speed limits on all roads expressly to the safety characteristics. As it is, we've pretty coarse grades and it means they're too lax in some contexts and too stringent in others - if we try not to lose sight of the fact that roads are a means of communication. Previously 30mph was too fast for many built up areas, but by the same token 20mph is not required in others. No-one disputes 30mph is too fast on Princes Street, but would that be required on places out on Ferry Road.Biffer wrote: Thu Sep 21, 2023 8:24 amAnd why is that more important that making a safe environment for pedestrians and other road users?TB63 wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 7:41 pmI've lived and worked in major cities and towns all around the SE of England and yes, if your in a major city or town where traffic daily crawls around at a snails pace, 20mph zones make sense. Llanelli is not that, no nose to tail crawling along, ever, it's a rural town. You drive through, no probs, if I want to get to the other side of town, even at peak times, I'll allow 10 mins max..dpedin wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 5:57 pm
I have no issue with 20mph speed limits in Embra, it works fine and if it saves a few lives and serious injuries then all the better. It doesnt really impact on travel times at all around town and there is no noticeable difference as far as I am concerned. In reality it probably slows those who would be doing 35mph in a 30 limit to 25-28mph in a 20 limit. It probably adds a minute or two max onto any journey. If you have a car and can afford to run one around town then you are lucky. In Embra I suspect the average speed of a car in town is no better than what a horse drawn carriage achieved 100 years ago! I honestly dont understand what all the moaning is about, it works, it saves lives and serious injury.
I've always wondered, in an age of digital control, whether we could do this bespoke.safety related speed restriction more widely on a street by street basis so we could even tie in time of day (e.g. heavily reduced during school runs). But I think ultimately we'd just end up confusing people.
- Torquemada 1420
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Really.Biffer wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 2:36 pmIt's not about pollution, it's about safety.Torquemada 1420 wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 12:37 pmActually, it possibly increases pollution becauseTB63 wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 11:25 am Living in an area where it was trialled, it's been a pain in the arse tbh, though mostly ignored or enforced. Now it's been rolled out it's a fucking nightmare.. More streets added. 40 down to 30 has been snuck in also.. I'm changing between 2nd and 3rd constantly, how the fuck can that reduce pollution?
To show the madness, Llanelli to Pembrey used to be 30-40-30.. Now it's 30-20-30-20-30-40-30-20-30-20-30..![]()
a) There are optimal running temperatures for stuff like catalytic converters and low speeds are less effective.
b) Obviously combustion engines have better mpg at some speeds than others: and 20 is not it.
c) Meantime, the traffic is spending longer in the zone polluting it at these suboptimal levels of a) and b).
![]()
So let's examine that. 35 tonne lorry doing 30 mph has the same momentum as a 1 tonne car doing?
Spoiler
Show
1,050 mph

Now, I'm not going to bore or confuse with full detail of additional factors such as
- coefficients of friction
- quality of road surface
- incline of road surface
- weather conditions
- temperature
- car safety features: ABS etc
- driver capability
Ultimately, arbitrary speed limits are nonsense but they are there because generally, people are thick and selfish plus the UK hands out driving licences like confetti to anyone who can say the word "car". However, there
are optimums even using speed limits as a blunt tool and 30 mph is not it with the exceptions of high risk areas such as in front of schools (which I will return to**) and pedestrianised areas shared with vehicles.
** Where the biggest breachers of safety (parking on double yellows, speeding, stopping in the middle of the road) are ALWAYS the f**king parents themselves.
I should say, 10 mins to cross town is with the 20mph limit in place, it's the needless extension to very low pedestrian areas from 30 to 20, used to be 20 mins to Pembrey, now it's 35...
I love watching little children running and screaming, playing hide and seek in the playground.
They don't know I'm using blanks..
They don't know I'm using blanks..
Lowering the speed limit by 33% in parts of your journey increases the fourney time by 75%?TB63 wrote: Thu Sep 21, 2023 9:32 am I should say, 10 mins to cross town is with the 20mph limit in place, it's the needless extension to very low pedestrian areas from 30 to 20, used to be 20 mins to Pembrey, now it's 35...
I smell bullshit.
And are there two g’s in Bugger Off?
Pointless whataboutery.Torquemada 1420 wrote: Thu Sep 21, 2023 9:29 amReally.Biffer wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 2:36 pmIt's not about pollution, it's about safety.Torquemada 1420 wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 12:37 pm
Actually, it possibly increases pollution because
a) There are optimal running temperatures for stuff like catalytic converters and low speeds are less effective.
b) Obviously combustion engines have better mpg at some speeds than others: and 20 is not it.
c) Meantime, the traffic is spending longer in the zone polluting it at these suboptimal levels of a) and b).
![]()
So let's examine that. 35 tonne lorry doing 30 mph has the same momentum as a 1 tonne car doing?So artics are allowed the same speed in towns but speed limits are about safety?SpoilerShow1,050 mph![]()
Now, I'm not going to bore or confuse with full detail of additional factors such as
- coefficients of friction
- quality of road surface
- incline of road surface
- weather conditions
- temperature
- car safety features: ABS etc
- driver capability
Ultimately, arbitrary speed limits are nonsense but they are there because generally, people are thick and selfish plus the UK hands out driving licences like confetti to anyone who can say the word "car". However, there
are optimums even using speed limits as a blunt tool and 30 mph is not it with the exceptions of high risk areas such as in front of schools (which I will return to**) and pedestrianised areas shared with vehicles.
** Where the biggest breachers of safety (parking on double yellows, speeding, stopping in the middle of the road) are ALWAYS the f**king parents themselves.
And are there two g’s in Bugger Off?
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I'd suspect there's a degree of truth, as people who would previously creep up near 40ish in a 30 will likely stick to the 20 after the rule changes. And, given it's a 20, not much overtaking and usually pretty slow pulling away.Biffer wrote: Thu Sep 21, 2023 3:40 pmLowering the speed limit by 33% in parts of your journey increases the fourney time by 75%?TB63 wrote: Thu Sep 21, 2023 9:32 am I should say, 10 mins to cross town is with the 20mph limit in place, it's the needless extension to very low pedestrian areas from 30 to 20, used to be 20 mins to Pembrey, now it's 35...
I smell bullshit.
I'd also suspect speeds to creep backup again in pretty short order.
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When not stop there? surely if we cared about deaths on the road we should be driving at 10mph?Biffer wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 2:54 pmYep. Fatality rate at 30mph hitting a pedestrian is one in five. At 20mph it's one in twenty.Margin__Walker wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 2:51 pmYep, I half get any annoyance if it's in place for for wider, non residential stretches.Biffer wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 2:33 pm
Exactly. It's absolutely fine.
And it demonstrably saves lives.
In most cases though it just seems like another thing to get angry about. I live on a busy residential street that has previously been put down from 30 to 20. With young kids, I'm far happier having the majority of traffic going through at 20 - 25 rather than 30 - 35. Stopping distance of a car halves at 20 compared to 30 iirc.
TB63 wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 11:25 am To show the madness, Llanelli to Pembrey used to be 30-40-30.. Now it's 30-20-30-20-30-40-30-20-30-20-30..![]()
I love watching little children running and screaming, playing hide and seek in the playground.
They don't know I'm using blanks..
They don't know I'm using blanks..
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Which Labour party donor?Sandstorm wrote: Fri Sep 22, 2023 10:28 amWhich Party donor has the contract to manufacture and put up thousands of new 20 mph signs across Wales?
Silly, silly commentDavid in Gwent wrote: Thu Sep 21, 2023 7:28 pmWhen not stop there? surely if we cared about deaths on the road we should be driving at 10mph?Biffer wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 2:54 pmYep. Fatality rate at 30mph hitting a pedestrian is one in five. At 20mph it's one in twenty.Margin__Walker wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 2:51 pm
Yep, I half get any annoyance if it's in place for for wider, non residential stretches.
In most cases though it just seems like another thing to get angry about. I live on a busy residential street that has previously been put down from 30 to 20. With young kids, I'm far happier having the majority of traffic going through at 20 - 25 rather than 30 - 35. Stopping distance of a car halves at 20 compared to 30 iirc.
All the money you made will never buy back your soul
£32 mill........Sandstorm wrote: Fri Sep 22, 2023 10:28 amWhich Party donor has the contract to manufacture and put up thousands of new 20 mph signs across Wales?
I love watching little children running and screaming, playing hide and seek in the playground.
They don't know I'm using blanks..
They don't know I'm using blanks..
- Torquemada 1420
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No. And I was about to point out that would be the case in Ed because during much of the time, the traffic in the centre means that is so. Was even worse for the years of the tram construction debacle.dpedin wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 5:57 pm I have no issue with 20mph speed limits in Embra, it works fine and if it saves a few lives and serious injuries then all the better. It doesnt really impact on travel times at all around town and there is no noticeable difference as far as I am concerned.
However, on the bit in bold, then why not save a few more and ban all transport in the city?
- Torquemada 1420
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You are the Obi Wan of false equivalences.Slick wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 1:43 pmStreets closed off for half the day for footie, rugby, cricket, running etc. OKTorquemada 1420 wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 1:21 pmA pet hate of mine.Hal Jordan wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 1:02 pm
Militant cyclists are also twats. "You should cycle to work" Like fuck am I riding 13 miles to work on a bike on a dual carriageway in the pissing rain and then doing the return journey in the dark, and both ways arriving lathered in sweat and road grime.
In Milton Keynes, the one decent bit of design in the place was a network or "redways". These are tarmac (coloured red.........) routes which cover the entire place and mean that mostly cyclists never need to cross a road (bridges and underpasses), let alone cycle along a road. Instead, vast numbers of them insist on using the roads. "It's my legal right"........... "to endanger myself and maybe die". The MAMILs are the uber c**ts of the lot. They are ecstatic now they are allowed to ride 20 abreast down local country lanes in convoys. Even the farmers hate the c**ts now.
A few people cycling on a country lane delaying you by 2 minutes, absolute cunts

In the examples you cite, those are decisions taken by authorities (with whom you can contest or represent your dissent to in whatever democratic manner you desire) ostensibly in the public's interest i.e. the greater overall good. Further, they are occasional.
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On the face of it, this is an entirely plausible and reasonable argument (and one you won't be surprised to hear that we hear a lot here (hear, hear, here) too).inactionman wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 2:04 pm I was brought up in a New Town where the designer (Frederick Gibberd) also put a fair bit of thought into this - he kept the old roads/lanes as fully closed off cycle networks and superimposed a grid-based road system. I could ride a bike from my old house in the original village all the way to the new town centre (about 3 miles) by riding down cycle tracks, most of them surrounded by woods and with underpasses to avoid going on the main roads
It was excellent - for a kid just riding his bike to a mate's house or to school.
The issue is, the paths are shared, so if you want to blast along you can't really use them in that way unless you want to maim a child or get clotheslined by a dog's lead. That's why many cyclists will use a road despite there being a cycle track. They are allowed to do this, and it's ultimately safer if they're going 20mph+
I do agree there are dickhead cyclists - funnily enough, some people are just dickheads regardless of their mode of transport.
However, I can't help feeling it really reads as
- we create a safe environment for cyclists and pedestrians which sometimes would require the cyclists to moderate their behaviour in the interests of wider safety
BUT
- cyclists aren't prepared to accept that and instead want to take to the roads and then expect motorists to afford them exactly the same moderation in behaviour they, themselves are not prepared to give to pedestrians?
Last edited by Torquemada 1420 on Fri Sep 22, 2023 2:52 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Because that would be stupid, as you well know so it's a pretty immature line of argument.Torquemada 1420 wrote: Fri Sep 22, 2023 2:43 pmNo. And I was about to point out that would be the case in Ed because during much of the time, the traffic in the centre means that is so. Was even worse for the years of the tram construction debacle.dpedin wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 5:57 pm I have no issue with 20mph speed limits in Embra, it works fine and if it saves a few lives and serious injuries then all the better. It doesnt really impact on travel times at all around town and there is no noticeable difference as far as I am concerned.
However, on the bit in bold, then why not save a few more and ban all transport in the city?
Life's about risk management and striking a good balance. Commerce and quality of life isn't going to grind to a halt with 20mph limits in built up areas and there will likely be a demonstrable reduction of death and serious injury on roads.
- Torquemada 1420
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Why?Margin__Walker wrote: Fri Sep 22, 2023 2:52 pmBecause that would be stupid, as you well know so it's a pretty immature line of argument.Torquemada 1420 wrote: Fri Sep 22, 2023 2:43 pmNo. And I was about to point out that would be the case in Ed because during much of the time, the traffic in the centre means that is so. Was even worse for the years of the tram construction debacle.dpedin wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 5:57 pm I have no issue with 20mph speed limits in Embra, it works fine and if it saves a few lives and serious injuries then all the better. It doesnt really impact on travel times at all around town and there is no noticeable difference as far as I am concerned.
However, on the bit in bold, then why not save a few more and ban all transport in the city?
Life's about risk management and striking a good balance. Commerce and quality of life isn't going to grind to a halt with 20mph limits in built up areas and there will likely be a demonstrable reduction of death and serious injury on roads.
This whole reduction in speed is reductio ad absurdum and you've shown no data to indicate that lives saved in going from 20mph to 10mph aren't greater than 30mph to 20mph.
Last edited by Torquemada 1420 on Fri Sep 22, 2023 2:58 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- Torquemada 1420
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In other words you either don't understand the arguments or are incapable of refuting them.Biffer wrote: Thu Sep 21, 2023 3:41 pmPointless whataboutery.Torquemada 1420 wrote: Thu Sep 21, 2023 9:29 amReally.
So let's examine that. 35 tonne lorry doing 30 mph has the same momentum as a 1 tonne car doing?So artics are allowed the same speed in towns but speed limits are about safety?SpoilerShow1,050 mph![]()
Now, I'm not going to bore or confuse with full detail of additional factors such as
- coefficients of friction
- quality of road surface
- incline of road surface
- weather conditions
- temperature
- car safety features: ABS etc
- driver capability
Ultimately, arbitrary speed limits are nonsense but they are there because generally, people are thick and selfish plus the UK hands out driving licences like confetti to anyone who can say the word "car". However, there
are optimums even using speed limits as a blunt tool and 30 mph is not it with the exceptions of high risk areas such as in front of schools (which I will return to**) and pedestrianised areas shared with vehicles.
** Where the biggest breachers of safety (parking on double yellows, speeding, stopping in the middle of the road) are ALWAYS the f**king parents themselves.
Answer the question. Why are artics (or buses) permitted the same speeds in built up areas as cars IF this is all about safety?
Yup. Happens where cyclists run red lights because they don't want to be held up, then angrily tell car drivers to slow down to pass them 2 abreast in the countryside.Torquemada 1420 wrote: Fri Sep 22, 2023 2:52 pmOn the face of it, this is an entirely plausible and reasonable argument (and one you won't be surprised to hear that we hear a lot here (hear, hear, here) too).inactionman wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 2:04 pm I was brought up in a New Town where the designer (Frederick Gibberd) also put a fair bit of thought into this - he kept the old roads/lanes as fully closed off cycle networks and superimposed a grid-based road system. I could ride a bike from my old house in the original village all the way to the new town centre (about 3 miles) by riding down cycle tracks, most of them surrounded by woods and with underpasses to avoid going on the main roads
It was excellent - for a kid just riding his bike to a mate's house or to school.
The issue is, the paths are shared, so if you want to blast along you can't really use them in that way unless you want to maim a child or get clotheslined by a dog's lead. That's why many cyclists will use a road despite there being a cycle track. They are allowed to do this, and it's ultimately safer if they're going 20mph+
I do agree there are dickhead cyclists - funnily enough, some people are just dickheads regardless of their mode of transport.
However, I can't help feeling it really reads as
- we create a safe environment for cyclists and pedestrians which sometimes would require the cyclists to moderate their behaviour in the interests of wider safety
BUT
- cyclists aren't prepared to accept that and instead want to take to the roads and then expect motorists to afford them exactly the same moderation in behaviour they, themselves are not prepared to give to pedestrians?
"Being held up in your car for 30 secs is a big deal....?"
Everyone hates everyone else.
My son would love that descriptionTorquemada 1420 wrote: Fri Sep 22, 2023 2:46 pmYou are the Obi Wan of false equivalences.Slick wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 1:43 pmStreets closed off for half the day for footie, rugby, cricket, running etc. OKTorquemada 1420 wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 1:21 pm
A pet hate of mine.
In Milton Keynes, the one decent bit of design in the place was a network or "redways". These are tarmac (coloured red.........) routes which cover the entire place and mean that mostly cyclists never need to cross a road (bridges and underpasses), let alone cycle along a road. Instead, vast numbers of them insist on using the roads. "It's my legal right"........... "to endanger myself and maybe die". The MAMILs are the uber c**ts of the lot. They are ecstatic now they are allowed to ride 20 abreast down local country lanes in convoys. Even the farmers hate the c**ts now.
A few people cycling on a country lane delaying you by 2 minutes, absolute cunts![]()
In the examples you cite, those are decisions taken by authorities (with whom you can contest or represent your dissent to in whatever democratic manner you desire) ostensibly in the public's interest i.e. the greater overall good. Further, they are occasional.

I don't think it's that false. Sporting events cause massive amounts of disruption. Every weekend there are hundreds of road closures for footie up and down the country, but a few cyclists out enjoying themselves are demonised for holding folk up for a few seconds.
I just find the anger towards cyclists so unhinged and disproportionate. Every single time I go out in the car I come across motorists doing really stupid shit that could literally kill someone. But some motorists get held up by seconds and go full tonto about a person on a bike who won't harm anyone but themselves and are often just doing what they are allowed to do.
Well, quite. How often do you get held up on a country road by cyclists and how much longer does it make your journey?Further, they are occasional
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It depends.Torquemada 1420 wrote: Fri Sep 22, 2023 2:52 pmOn the face of it, this is an entirely plausible and reasonable argument (and one you won't be surprised to hear that we hear a lot here (hear, hear, here) too).inactionman wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 2:04 pm I was brought up in a New Town where the designer (Frederick Gibberd) also put a fair bit of thought into this - he kept the old roads/lanes as fully closed off cycle networks and superimposed a grid-based road system. I could ride a bike from my old house in the original village all the way to the new town centre (about 3 miles) by riding down cycle tracks, most of them surrounded by woods and with underpasses to avoid going on the main roads
It was excellent - for a kid just riding his bike to a mate's house or to school.
The issue is, the paths are shared, so if you want to blast along you can't really use them in that way unless you want to maim a child or get clotheslined by a dog's lead. That's why many cyclists will use a road despite there being a cycle track. They are allowed to do this, and it's ultimately safer if they're going 20mph+
I do agree there are dickhead cyclists - funnily enough, some people are just dickheads regardless of their mode of transport.
However, I can't help feeling it really reads as
- we create a safe environment for cyclists and pedestrians which sometimes would require the cyclists to moderate their behaviour in the interests of wider safety
BUT
- cyclists aren't prepared to accept that and instead want to take to the roads and then expect motorists to afford them exactly the same moderation in behaviour they, themselves are not prepared to give to pedestrians?
I used to ride around 24 miles each way to work (back in my less fat and creaky days) and much of that was on the sustrans Bath-Bristol cycle track where I could average 20mph+. On the bits on cyclepaths shared with pedestrians I'd be lucky to get over 10mph. I would frequently use the road instead. I thought that more considerate.
Yeah, depressingly that's where we are.Sandstorm wrote: Fri Sep 22, 2023 3:00 pmYup. Happens where cyclists run red lights because they don't want to be held up, then angrily tell car drivers to slow down to pass them 2 abreast in the countryside.Torquemada 1420 wrote: Fri Sep 22, 2023 2:52 pmOn the face of it, this is an entirely plausible and reasonable argument (and one you won't be surprised to hear that we hear a lot here (hear, hear, here) too).inactionman wrote: Wed Sep 20, 2023 2:04 pm I was brought up in a New Town where the designer (Frederick Gibberd) also put a fair bit of thought into this - he kept the old roads/lanes as fully closed off cycle networks and superimposed a grid-based road system. I could ride a bike from my old house in the original village all the way to the new town centre (about 3 miles) by riding down cycle tracks, most of them surrounded by woods and with underpasses to avoid going on the main roads
It was excellent - for a kid just riding his bike to a mate's house or to school.
The issue is, the paths are shared, so if you want to blast along you can't really use them in that way unless you want to maim a child or get clotheslined by a dog's lead. That's why many cyclists will use a road despite there being a cycle track. They are allowed to do this, and it's ultimately safer if they're going 20mph+
I do agree there are dickhead cyclists - funnily enough, some people are just dickheads regardless of their mode of transport.
However, I can't help feeling it really reads as
- we create a safe environment for cyclists and pedestrians which sometimes would require the cyclists to moderate their behaviour in the interests of wider safety
BUT
- cyclists aren't prepared to accept that and instead want to take to the roads and then expect motorists to afford them exactly the same moderation in behaviour they, themselves are not prepared to give to pedestrians?
"Being held up in your car for 30 secs is a big deal....?"
Everyone hates everyone else.
In saying that, I'd be surprised if the it's the same people regularly running red lights that are out on a weekend doing rides in the country.
All the money you made will never buy back your soul
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Highlighted the relevant section for you Torq. 10mph would be safer still, but renders cars borderline pointless in towns. 20mph doesn't.Torquemada 1420 wrote: Fri Sep 22, 2023 2:55 pmWhy?Margin__Walker wrote: Fri Sep 22, 2023 2:52 pmBecause that would be stupid, as you well know so it's a pretty immature line of argument.Torquemada 1420 wrote: Fri Sep 22, 2023 2:43 pm
No. And I was about to point out that would be the case in Ed because during much of the time, the traffic in the centre means that is so. Was even worse for the years of the tram construction debacle.
However, on the bit in bold, then why not save a few more and ban all transport in the city?
Life's about risk management and striking a good balance. Commerce and quality of life isn't going to grind to a halt with 20mph limits in built up areas and there will likely be a demonstrable reduction of death and serious injury on roads.
This whole reduction in speed is reductio ad absurdum and you've shown no data to indicate that lives saved in going from 20mph to 10mph aren't greater than 30mph to 20mph.
Come on Torq, this is putting you in with DACMargin__Walker wrote: Fri Sep 22, 2023 3:04 pmHighlighted the relevant section for you Torq. 10mph would be safer still, but renders cars borderline pointless in towns. 20mph doesn't.Torquemada 1420 wrote: Fri Sep 22, 2023 2:55 pmWhy?Margin__Walker wrote: Fri Sep 22, 2023 2:52 pm
Because that would be stupid, as you well know so it's a pretty immature line of argument.
Life's about risk management and striking a good balance. Commerce and quality of life isn't going to grind to a halt with 20mph limits in built up areas and there will likely be a demonstrable reduction of death and serious injury on roads.
This whole reduction in speed is reductio ad absurdum and you've shown no data to indicate that lives saved in going from 20mph to 10mph aren't greater than 30mph to 20mph.
All the money you made will never buy back your soul
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A few things here.Slick wrote: Fri Sep 22, 2023 3:00 pm My son would love that description![]()
I don't think it's that false. Sporting events cause massive amounts of disruption. Every weekend there are hundreds of road closures for footie up and down the country, but a few cyclists out enjoying themselves are demonised for holding folk up for a few seconds.
I just find the anger towards cyclists so unhinged and disproportionate. Every single time I go out in the car I come across motorists doing really stupid shit that could literally kill someone. But some motorists get held up by seconds and go full tonto about a person on a bike who won't harm anyone but themselves and are often just doing what they are allowed to do.
Well, quite. How often do you get held up on a country road by cyclists and how much longer does it make your journey?Further, they are occasional
1) If you live near a football stadium, then it's the same as living near an airport: some inconveniences come with the territory and if you really hate it that much, live somewhere else (rarely have people lived there BEFORE the construction). For those just passing through, well, you do have the opportunity to plan in advance. BBC football schedule, local signage and your satnav will tell you often. I went to several games last season and it was a continual joke with my brother why people went shopping around the time at the end of the game and then got annoyed at being stuck in a Lidl car park: we always park a mile away and walk.
You can't plan when you might encounter the mass ranked of militant MAMILs.
2) Hell yeah. There are far more car drivers than cyclists and I'd argue the majority of them (i.e. at least half) should not be on the roads. As I stated earlier, the UK hands out driving licences like confetti. I will avoid an accident at least once a day (and my journey to work is only a few miles) because I've always driven with the assumption that every other driver is a moron and will do the least sensible thing when in my proximity.
But I hate them as much as I hate the militant MAMILs.

But, back to the point, I had no issue with cyclists riding single file on narrow roads as long as they left sensible gaps between themselves if they were out in large numbers. That is not what happened around here and this ludicrous move to allow them to ride n abreast and wherever they like in the lane is simply going to result in more of them being injured or killed. On my Saturday journey to Cranfield, due to the twisting nature of the roads, I will regularly be stuck for a mile at a time. I will wait: because I don't want MAMIL blood on my car or my conscience, but I can tell you very many won't. 2 weeks ago I was within a whisker of a full head-on as a p*ssed off driver decided to overtake a MAMIL convoy on a blind bend. Only avoided because I know the road and the hedge had just been cut so I saw his roof coming.