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#161
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Ken Wilshire wrote:
Modern downward tinkering of speed limits is practically all about anti-car, not common sense, cf ever increasing swathes of 20 mph zones, etc. Cite? I was with you until that. Some 20mph zones are excessive (the ludicrous one on the approach to Ambleside was one example but it's now mostly been increased to 30, and most people did 30 anyway), but many or most of the ones on estates are justified. That said, the better approach on newer residential estates is to design the road layout with curves and natural chicanes (on-street parking) so the natural speed is 20mph or below, then it doesn't matter if the limit is the default 30. This is done to great effect on many Milton Keynes estates, especially newer ones. Neil Chris / Neil I was specifically thinking about the London Borough of Merton which for the last three years has been going through the borough converting whole swathes of streets (not enclosed estates) into 20 mph zones (from 10 to 20 roads at a time!). The SW19 and SW20 postcode areas. Minutes of the Street Management Advisory Committee meetings can be found he http://www.merton.gov.uk/council/com...tee&com_id=221 Okay, so having looked at those minutes, specifically http://www.merton.gov.uk/democratic_...eports/146.pdf I see the following with regard to that policy: 2.1 It is the Council¢s policy to improve road safety by reducing vehicular speeds and volume on borough roads. The key objective of these proposals are to convert existing traffic calmed roads within the proposed areas into 20mph zones / 20mph speed limits. The majority of roads have traffic calming measures in place, therefore minimum changes are required for the introduction of these measures. 2.2 20mph zones / 20mph speed limits are dedicated areas where improving safety and maintaining the quality of life for local residents takes precedence over the general objective to ease traffic flows. 2.3 For a 20mph zone, traffic calming features in the form of road humps; speed cushions; road closures; one way systems; pedestrian refuge islands and road narrowing are required to achieve a legal and self-enforceable zone. A 20mph speed limit, however, does not require any form of traffic calming features as part of the legal process. Signs and road markings are mandatory within zones and limits. So it's not "anti-car, not common sense" - it's "pro-resident". Indeed, if the above is correct (and surely there's some liability if it isn't) then although you can see 20 signs sprouting, they are only sprouting in areas where there's already traffic calming in place. So I can't see that any high-speed routes are being lost to the 20 zones. Indeed, referring to para 2.3 - if I had the choice between driving along a 30 with lumps in the road, and a 20 that was plain, I'd go for the latter, and I assume most drivers would. I resent speed bumps much more than I resent low speed limits. -- http://gallery120232.fotopic.net/p9638813.html (08 103 and 08 920 at Birmingham New Street, 1979) |
#162
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"Adrian" wrote in message
"David A Stocks" gurgled happily, sounding much like they were saying: My car (also two years old) has options for 17", 18" or 19" wheels. I have the the 17" wheels and the speedo reads about 10% over actual speed. If I were to fit 18 or 19" wheels the speedo would still read more than actual speed, but by a lot less as the rolling radius of wheel/tyre combination gets larger. I strongly suspect you'll find that there's very little difference in rolling radius between the standard-fit tyre sizes. As the rim diameter goes up, so the tyre sidewall profile comes down, keeping the overall size around the same. If there is a marked difference between, then cars with the different tyre sizes either factory or dealer-fitted should have the speedo and odo recalibrated. Yes, I'm sure that's correct. However, the large wheel/low profile tyre combo rolling radius is less likely to be affected by air pressure variability. |
#163
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"Tim Woodall" wrote in message
e.uk Obviously, this breaks down for high performance cars at very high speeds. I doubt that any road-legal car generates signficant down force at speeds much below about 100mph due to the dire effect it has on fuel consumption. What about the sports cars which have retractable rear spoilers that pop up at, say, ~75mph? |
#164
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On Sat, 31 Jul 2010 19:55:31 +0100,
Recliner wrote: "Tim Woodall" wrote in message e.uk Obviously, this breaks down for high performance cars at very high speeds. I doubt that any road-legal car generates signficant down force at speeds much below about 100mph due to the dire effect it has on fuel consumption. What about the sports cars which have retractable rear spoilers that pop up at, say, ~75mph? No idea. But if they do generate appreciable down force then they'll also cause significant drag and you'll see that in the fuel economy. Tim. -- God said, "div D = rho, div B = 0, curl E = - @B/@t, curl H = J + @D/@t," and there was light. http://www.woodall.me.uk/ |
#165
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On Sat, 31 Jul 2010 19:55:31 +0100, "Recliner"
wrote: "Tim Woodall" wrote in message . me.uk Obviously, this breaks down for high performance cars at very high speeds. I doubt that any road-legal car generates signficant down force at speeds much below about 100mph due to the dire effect it has on fuel consumption. What about the sports cars which have retractable rear spoilers that pop up at, say, ~75mph? Some of them pop up at much lower speeds - I think the Porsche 911 and Audi TT spoilers pop up at 40 mph. |
#166
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"Tim Woodall" wrote in message
e.uk On Sat, 31 Jul 2010 19:55:31 +0100, Recliner wrote: "Tim Woodall" wrote in message e.uk Obviously, this breaks down for high performance cars at very high speeds. I doubt that any road-legal car generates signficant down force at speeds much below about 100mph due to the dire effect it has on fuel consumption. What about the sports cars which have retractable rear spoilers that pop up at, say, ~75mph? No idea. But if they do generate appreciable down force then they'll also cause significant drag and you'll see that in the fuel economy. Yup, but that's probably not something that owners of cars with automatic rear spoilers (eg, Porsches) worry about too much. |
#167
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"Bruce" wrote in message
On Sat, 31 Jul 2010 19:55:31 +0100, "Recliner" wrote: "Tim Woodall" wrote in message e.uk Obviously, this breaks down for high performance cars at very high speeds. I doubt that any road-legal car generates signficant down force at speeds much below about 100mph due to the dire effect it has on fuel consumption. What about the sports cars which have retractable rear spoilers that pop up at, say, ~75mph? Some of them pop up at much lower speeds - I think the Porsche 911 and Audi TT spoilers pop up at 40 mph. I think it's 75 mph by default with both of those cars, but may be lower in other cars. It can also come up at lower speeds to cool a hot engine in the case of the Porsche. Of course, they can usually be deployed manually, which is especially useful in countries with speed limits 75 mph, like the UK! |
#168
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In message , Bruce
writes Some of them pop up at much lower speeds - I think the Porsche 911 and Audi TT spoilers pop up at 40 mph. I remember reading about this. In Germany, they deploy at the proper speed of 90 mph, but in the UK where the speed limit is 70 mph they come up at 50 mph to allow the owner to show off, it's a sales gimmick. -- Clive |
#169
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On Sat, 31 Jul 2010 19:55:31 +0100, Recliner wrote
"Tim Woodall" wrote in message e.uk Obviously, this breaks down for high performance cars at very high speeds. I doubt that any road-legal car generates signficant down force at speeds much below about 100mph due to the dire effect it has on fuel consumption. What about the sports cars which have retractable rear spoilers that pop up at, say, ~75mph? In many cases they have an appreciable effect at speeds not often reached in the UK. In order to give them some 'pose value' they are recalibrated to rise at speeds more likely to be achieved in the UK, otherwise the driver might not feel they're getting value for money/the required pose effect. Of course, there is an argument that says a properly designed car shouldn't need 'add-on' wings/spoilers etc fixed or otherwise. |
#170
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On Sun, 1 Aug 2010 15:01:31 +0100, Stimpy
wrote: Of course, there is an argument that says a properly designed car shouldn't need 'add-on' wings/spoilers etc fixed or otherwise. Many cars suffer from increased lift at higher speeds. The spoiler provides increased downforce to counter this. The Audi TT (first model) suffered a significant increase in rear lift at higher speeds. In some markets, but not the UK, the automatic rear spoiler was standard equipment. In the UK, which has a 70 mph limit, it was an optional extra, presumably on the basis that it was not actually needed at 70 mph. There was some discussion in the motoring press about whether TTs sold in the UK should all be so fitted, in case they were taken to (for example) Germany and driven at much higher speeds - some stretches of German autobahn have no speed limit for cars in good weather. IIRC Audi UK accepted the suggestion. Subsequently all TTs sold in the UK had the spoiler fitted as standard. |
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