Money has to come from somewhere, might as well be from the dumb ones.
BS, look at I-35 through Ankeny, its 65 mph through that area and the average vehicle is going 70 or more. Every time we are through there, they have the HW Patrol out issuing tickets. How about raising the speed limit up and stop trying to milk the drivers out of fines.
I think this is somewhat true up to a certain speed. I usually drive 79mph on 70mph highways in Iowa. When I've drive in South Dakota on 80mph highways, I stayed pretty close to 80mph. When I drove on the autobahn, where there are some sections without speed limits, I probably averaged around 90. A lot of it depends on the cars around me and the conditions. I slow down a lot at night and in the rain/snow I'm very slow. I just feel like on 35 north of Ames, with very little traffic, in 2024 70mph is too slow.At 65 mph speed limit, tickets do not get issued until 76 mph. Those traveling 70 mph need not worry about cameras.
If you raise the speed limit to 70, the average speed will be 75. It isn’t about the actual speed, it’s about the desire to be going faster than the car next to you. Someone will always want to be going 5 more than the speed of traffic.
Did you forget a jimlad?For the last 15 years or so I've had to drop down from 74mph to 69mph for roughly 1/4 mile on my way to work to avoid those cameras.
Every day that costs me .881 seconds if I drop my speed from 74 to 69 for 1/4 mile.
If those cameras have been in place for 15 years, and I've worked 3,900 days, the city of Des Moines owes me 57 minutes.
I decided to say F the man and drive 74.2 mph the rest of the way on 235 and it saves 1.3 seconds.....so I can arrive at 5:49am to work
I think this is somewhat true up to a certain speed. I usually drive 79mph on 70mph highways in Iowa. When I've drive in South Dakota on 80mph highways, I stayed pretty close to 80mph. When I drove on the autobahn, where there are some sections without speed limits, I probably averaged around 90. A lot of it depends on the cars around me and the conditions. I slow down a lot at night and in the rain/snow I'm very slow. I just feel like on 35 north of Ames, with very little traffic, in 2024 70mph is too slow.
I’m old enough to remember when the speed limit was 70 almost everywhere, including narrow, winding two-lane roads with gutters on the edges. Hard to believe I survived riding around with my parents back then, especially in the bed of the pickup truck.You’ll need to talk to your state representatives to get this changed. That’s more than just a DOT study to determine the appropriate speed limit for that stretch of road.
Unless you're driving huge distances the difference between arriving while driving 73 versus 85+ is like 3 minutes. Most of which gets pissed away the moment you get off at your exit ramp and hit a red light.They give you all the information you need right there as you're driving, just pick the speed that aligns with your own risk/reward tolerance, drive, and don't be a little baby about it. For me, 5-7 over means I don't have to worry if I see a cop and is "fast enough".
Which suburb is that, we travel through St. Louis a lot on our way to S. Carolina?I went to a St. Louis cardinal game and a local told me a speed trap to watch as we entered a new suburb on the interstate and that much of their income comes from that. I think they drop the speed from like 60 mph to 45 or 50.
Does that explain the early silver hair?I’m old enough to remember when the speed limit was 70 almost everywhere, including narrow, winding two-lane roads with gutters on the edges. Hard to believe I survived riding around with my parents back then, especially in the bed of the pickup truck.
There’s one like this in the town of Elizabeth, Illinois too (East of Galena). Steep hill coming into town if you’re traveling west and the speed limit is dropping as you come down the hill.Its on that stretch, people come around the curve heading west and before they know it, its down to 35 and they have you. The only worse that this one, is in What Cheer, where they sit at the bottom of the hill and as you drop down it going north, they nail you as you hit the city limits.
Not sure. It was a few years and you were probably in it no more than a mile or two. I’ll ask my St. Louis friend sometime and report back.Which suburb is that, we travel through St. Louis a lot on our way to S. Carolina?
Brakes not work?There’s one like this in the town of Elizabeth, Illinois too (East of Galena). Steep hill coming into town if you’re traveling west and the speed limit is dropping as you come down the hill.
As I read it those or at least some of them were approved by the DOT. Presumably for the reasons you elaborate.That brings up what at least I believe is an interesting aspect of these as clearly the CR ones that most people hate are on 380. If the city is not allowed to enforce the laws in a manner they see fit on a road going through their city does that mean it falls solely on the ISP? If accidents happen due to high speed and other bad driving behaviors that put a strain on other city resources (Fire/EMS) where does the line get drawn?
The CR ones on 380 are at places where speed has been a danger in the past. Further, this area is dangerous if not impossible for LEOs to safely execute a traffic stop without endangering themselves or other motorists. I don't like the premise of the cameras and there absolutely is a financial aspect to them but every instance is not equal.
I've been told by many people that these speed cameras have more rare earth metals than catalytic converters and are worth at least 10x as much.