Oh.. that's a pretty good way of doing things actually. Fine a billionaire 60 quid for doing 95 on a motorway, and he doesn't care.
Fine a single parent with 3 kids £60 for doing 34 in a 30 trying to get her kids to school who's lost their job in the financial meltdown with the same amount of money and it's very different.
40 km/h limit is very usual on urban areas with a lot light traffic. IE. when children walk beside the road it is good to have a low limit.
On urban areas I like to respect those low limits.
I think that you know it already, but 40 km/h is a lot faster than walking.
On this little village road (what is in bad shape) near I live in, my speed is usually 20-30 km/h.
Probably because the car manufacturer needs to give few samples for the us authorities for crash testing before the car is allowed to be registered (or sold?). Nissan didn't either want to give few cars for crash testing or then it is some other issue...?
40 KMPH is like what? 18-25mph? Something like that, some small villages have temp 20mph limits before and after School time when an insitute for learning is located in the vicinity.
and the only reason they didn't put enough fuel in it, was because it was on a suicide mission, they were going to intentionally beach it on the opposite side of okinawa from the U.S forces, to create unsinkable artillery. But it got intercepted by U.S planes before it reached it's destination.
50 km/h is a standard limit here in Finland for urban areas, 40 km/h is then used in more busy areas, city centers and in places where is a lot light traffic. On tiny non paved village roads and in some cases in school areas it is 30 km/h.
50 km/h is ~30 mph, if I'm not completely mistaken that's a normal speed limit in UK in urban areas?
On driving school they teached me that on urban areas you doesn't always have to drive as fast as the limit allows, when visibility is low and children are playing among the road in can be dangerous to drive even 40 km/h.
60 km/h is a normal "pre urban" area limit here, 80 km/h is normal for nice "windy road" and 100 km/h for a normal highway. 120 km/h is the highest allowed speed in Finland and that limit is used on "big" highways.
oh I agree, but it's the 20kp/h limit that seems a bit too slow, theres rarely any areas in the UK that are this speed unless it's a parkinglot, or a one way system around a shopping outlet.
25% of a humans bones can't be in the feet, unless you have REALLY big feet. It's a hard one to explain, I know what you mean, but 25% of a humans bone, are not in the feet! :P put it together, it's just about a lower leg
The smallest bones in the human body are in the ear