Theyre not much use as far as advisories about the maximum safe velocity for a given road. If they were, then everyone (just about) wouldnt be driving at least that fast.
Probably, theyd be driving slower.
If speed limits meant anything substantive, that is.
Like the redline on a tachometer, for example. That is a real limit.
Most people do not run their engines at or even near redline for more than brief moments. Because the redline is the fastest you can safely spin the engine without risking engine damage.
So they dont do it.
The idea that driving over the speed limit is risking anything (other than a ticket) is ridiculous.
If that were not the case, then most people wouldnt speed as a matter of routine because most people arent reckless with their own lives or the lives of others.
The fact that speed limits are almost universally ignored (by cops, too) says something about their merits.
Prohibition comes to mind. Another absurd law that was respected accordingly.
But Prohibition went away.
Speed limits are still with us.
Itd be nice if theyd go away, like Prohibition.
It would tolerable if they at least plausibly represented a speed faster than most people on a given road normally drive.
That is, in fact, how speed limits are supposed to be set. Such that most drivers would not be speeding. The few who did could then at least be characterized as driving faster than most other drivers and one could then at least make the claim that maybe these people are driving too fast.
But that is not good for revenue which is what speed limits are really all about.
By purposely setting limits so low such that nine out of ten drivers on any given road are speeding, it makes it easier to catch speeders. Which means more revenue via tickets issued for this manufactured offense.
So, speed limits have little, if anything, to do with safety.
They are useless as far as informing drivers about reasonable speeds for a given (and perhaps unfamiliar) road.
They are not (for the most part) posted on the basis of traffic engineering surveys, as they are supposed to be.
They are arbitrary and typically under-posted, deliberately in order to criminalize reasonable/safe driving so as to give police an excuse to issue citations which just happen to be a major source of local government income.
When there is a profit motive underpinning a law and when most otherwise reasonable (and presumably sane) people routinely violate a law, there is a problem with the law.
And those who enforce it.
Arguably, the entire concept is flawed because it assumes there is a single safe speed for every driver. But each drivers abilities vary. As does the capability of the vehicle theyre driving. A one-size-fits-all speed limit arbitrarily defines Driver A as a danger merely because he is traveling faster than a number posted on a sign even if his actual driving cant be faulted. And it envelopes Driver B whose actual driving can be faulted in the aura of legality (and safety) merely because he is operating at or below the arbitrarily-set speed limit.
It might be saner and safer to get rid of enforceable speed limits altogether. Perhaps post advisory speeds realistic speeds as an aid to drivers not familiar with a given stretch of road or curves up ahead. That would be genuinely helpful as a well as safe.
But then, it would reduce revenue, by taking away the excuse to pull over people whose driving cant be faulted but who did exceed a dumbed-down, arbitrarily set, least-common-denominator number on a sign were supposed to obey but which virtually no one does.
The idea that driving over the speed limit is risking anything (other than a ticket) is ridiculous.
It is not ridiculous that research by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS) found that when speed limits were raised, travel speeds increased and motor vehicle fatalities went up significantly on Interstate highways. Nearly 42,000 people were killed in traffic crashes and almost 3.2 million more were injured, at a cost of over $150 billion during one twelve month period.
It is not ridiculous that research by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety
So logically speed limits are protecting insurance companies. The real problem on long distance highways is that many people don't have the experience to drive a vehicle long distances at higher speed. City dwellers certainly don't, they don't know about fatigue