Comment on Like to drive fast? Virginia has an anti-speeding device for you.
elfpie@beehaw.org 2 weeks ago
I’m pretty sure this is one freedom US people won’t let technology take away in the name of safety and ease of use. The roads and the culture are the problem. You can go fast and people will say going as fast as you can the whole time is the right way to drive.
SteevyT@beehaw.org 2 weeks ago
It’s bad road design. US roads are nearly all designed to encourage high speed travel by being mostly straight, perfectly smooth (well, until weather happens), and super wide. Then we slap a random-ass speed limit sign down and say “job’s done.” If roads were a bit less wide, even if just painted narrower, not dead fucking straight, and if you want to get fancy use something like how the Dutch use bricks for lower speed road surfaces, the road design alone would encourage lower speed driving.
alyaza@beehaw.org 2 weeks ago
we don’t actually–the basis we derive most speed limits from is actually much worse, if you can believe that. from Killed by a Traffic Engineer:
and, as applied to the example of the Legacy Parkway, to show how this invariably spirals out of control:
SteevyT@beehaw.org 2 weeks ago
Honestly, the 85 percentile rule, when actually used, is about the same as RNG, but with a bias for higher. I forget where I saw it, but from what I remember seeing even the 85% rule gets deemed as to resource intensive so a speed limit from a “similar” (for some random definition of similar) roads speed limit is used.