Speed limit

A speed limit is the maximum speed of travel permitted by a vehicle on a road (usually, although speed limits are applied elsewhere on different modes of transport e.g. on some stretches of railroad, on boats in harbours, etc) by law.

Speed limits vary by type of road. Residential streets, with primarily an access function, typically have much lower maximum speeds than intercity roads, with primarily a movement function.

Signage

Speed limits are usually marked with a speed limit sign.

International speed limit sign (in kilometres per hour)

North American speed limit sign

Note: In Canada in kilometres per hour and in United States in miles per hour (often units are given, especially in border areas)

Design Speed

Speed limits are generally peripherally related to the design speed[?] of the road, which is "a selected speed used to determine the various geometric design features of the roadway." according to the 2001 AASHTO[?] Green Book, the highway design manual. It has been changed from previous versions which considered it the "maximum safe speed that can be maintained over a specific section of highway when conditions are so favorable that the design features of the highway govern."

85th Percentile Rule

Traffic engineers are taught the 85th Percentile Rule, which claims that maximum speed limits should be set at a speed at and above what 85% vehicles are driving. (Thus 15% of vehicles are speeding). This rule has been used for many years, yet no scientific evidence has been produced that this particular rule is safer than any other.

Speed Limits on United States Interstate Highways

On interstate highways in the United States speed limits range from 55 mph to 75 mph (about 88 km/h to 121 km/h). Before the oil embargo crisis in the 1970s, some states posted no speed limit on the interstate highways. In 1974, Congress imposed a nationwide 55 mph (88 km/h) speed limit by threatening to withhold highway funds from states that did not adopt this limit. This limit was unpopular, especially in Western states. In 1987 states were permitted to raise speed limits to 65 mph (104 km/h) on rural interstate highways. The federal restriction on speed limit was lifted in 1995, leaving speed setting to the states. All states except Montana imposed numerical speed limits (Montana had a "reasonable and prudent" speed limit), many higher than 65 mph.

In addition to the legally defined maximum speed, there is often also a minimum speed. Vehicles are expected to travel above 45 mph (about 72 km/h) under normal conditions.

Safety

The question of speed limits and safety is also an important one. It is argued that lower speeds save lives. Vehicles crashing at slow speeds rarely cause deaths. However, the evidence from raising speed limits in the 1980s and 1990s found mixed empirical evidence. While there were more fatalities on the interstate roads immediately affected, overall roadway death rates went down. This is because high speed drivers switched from even more dangerous non-interstate facilities to interstates, now that the risk of being caught for speeding was diminished. Thus fatal accidents on non-interstates were reduced. Others argue that it is speed variance that kills, and accidents are caused by vehicles traveling at very different speeds. (Vehicles traveling the same speed in the same lane will not crash).

See also: hierarchy of road[?], interstate highway, Speed trap, Road-rule enforcement camera


An axiom of Einstein's relativity theories states that the Speed limit of the Universe is Light speed, 2.997 924 58 × 108 metres per second (or the distance light travels).

Common misspelling and questions (FAQ)

peed-limit  seed-limit  sped-limit  sped-limit  spee-limit  speedlimit  speed-imit  speed-lmit  speed-liit  speed-limt  speed-limi  pseed-limit  seped-limit  speed-limit  spede-limit  spee-dlimit  speedl-imit  speed-ilmit  speed-lmiit  speed-liimt  speed-limti  speed-limi  sspeed-limit  sppeed-limit  speeed-limit  speeed-limit  speedd-limit  speed--limit  speed-llimit  speed-liimit  speed-limmit  speed-limiit  speed-limitt  wpeed-limit  apeed-limit  zpeed-limit  epeed-limit  xpeed-limit  epeed-limit  dpeed-limit  xpeed-limit  s0eed-limit  soeed-limit  sleed-limit  s-eed-limit  s;eed-limit  s-eed-limit  s[eed-limit  s;eed-limit  sp3ed-limit  spwed-limit  spsed-limit  sp4ed-limit  spded-limit  sp4ed-limit  spred-limit  spded-limit  spe3d-limit  spewd-limit  spesd-limit  spe4d-limit  spedd-limit  spe4d-limit  sperd-limit  spedd-limit  speee-limit  spees-limit  speex-limit  speer-limit  speec-limit  speer-limit  speef-limit  speec-limit  speed0limit  speedplimit  speed[limit  speed-oimit  speed-kimit  speed-,imit  speed-pimit  speed-.imit  speed-pimit  speed-;imit  speed-.imit  speed-l8mit  speed-lumit  speed-ljmit  speed-l9mit  speed-lkmit  speed-l9mit  speed-lomit  speed-lkmit  speed-lijit  speed-linit  speed-likit  speed-likit  speed-li,it  speed-lim8t  speed-limut  speed-limjt  speed-lim9t  speed-limkt  speed-lim9t  speed-limot  speed-limkt  speed-limi5  speed-limir  speed-limif  speed-limi6  speed-limig  speed-limi6  speed-limiy  speed-limig  speed-lymit  speed-limiy  speed-limity  speed-limits 


Against all outer vain attack invincibly bastioned, Mark with serene impartiality Knowing that by the chain causality Into one supreme whole, whose utterance Through which the rational intellect would find Ignoble else, lend fire to the mind, More mystical than that which binds the stars planetary, Strike from their several tones one octave chord Through all the circling spheres, then to its Lord And more exultant power,--this indeed To keep one's life free and inviolate, By our own hands our heads are desecrate, Of what should be our own, we can but feed on wild unrest. Somehow the grace, the bloom of things has flown, Must live each other's lives and not our own All that we lived for--it was otherwise With weary feet to the new Calvary, Sees his own face, self-slain Humanity, Learn what an awful phantom the red hand of man can raise. O smitten mouth! O forehead crowned with thorn! Thou for our sakes that loved thee not hast borne And we were vain and ignorant nor knew The night that covers and the lights that fade, The lips betraying and the life betrayed; Lords of the natural world are yet our own dread enemy. Is this the end of all that primal force .

getting around

home

adv.search

site map



Current spider themes

news archive

 

Licence of article: GNU FDL.
Original source @ wikipedia.