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Comments
That's the standard answer, however all I've seen is more money get's floated into the pockets of city officals.
Rocky
Article said that EDR in a Corvette helped convict a 17-year old driver who said he was going 50-55 mph when he crashed into a car and killed its two occupants. The EDR however revealed that he was going 139 MPH. The EDR data was admitted in court and helped convict the guy and put him in prison for 3 years.
Article said that Fed Govt last week was expected to issue rules requiring automakers to standardize the recorders and make the info captured uniformly downloadable.
Article also said that some privacy advocates are concerned that these black boxes along with GPS in cars could lead to real-time surveillance and police issueing tickets for infractions not witnessed by them. These advocates also concerned that the data would be used by insurance companies to raise rates.
Imagine someone getting multiple tickets driving to work via an interstate. Leaving house and driving 15 over on road to interstate, driving 20 over 55 on interstate, driving 10 over on interstate frontage road, driving 10 over on suburban road to office. With efficiency of present day computer systems, these 4 tickets could be processed and put in mail to offender without a human intervention. Just imagine.
Just imagine the revenue possibilities. Drivers could establish accounts with their states using their credit card number so that payment for fines could automatically be debited from their charge card. The notice of violation in mail would show the details and fine amounts for each ticket and the charges to the card. Such efficiency.
Rocky
Does anyone think the driver of the Corvette should have gotten away with his irresponsibility? After all, he killed two people, plain and simple.
I agree, I put them in the same group that went around yelling that tollway transponders were going to let them track you and give you tickets if you get to the next toll booth to quickly.
2011 Hyundai Sonata, 2014 BMW 428i convertible, 2015 Honda CTX700D
I think the driver of the Vette shouldn't of had a computer tattle tale on him. The police could of estimated his speed by looking at the damage at the accident scene.
The "mark of the beast" is getting his way. :sick:
Next, like I said will be chips in the wrist and you will beable to go to the dealership, scan your wrist, and pick out whatever vehicle you want or can afford.
Rocky :surprise:
Cops go where the money is - traffic infractions. Let's have more transparency on how revenues are generated and where the money really goes. It's everyone's right and responsibility as a citizen to be aware of the misdeeds of their so-called leadership.
There's a considerable difference between 55 mph and 139 mph. I can't believe that the EDR would be necessary to prove that the Corvette was going much faster than the 55 mph claimed by the defendant at the time of the accident. This should have been proven by accident reconstruction techniques.
And why not? More accurate underwriting by the insurance industry is always welcome. Risk assessment can always stand improvement.
Hasn't this been done already on the Ohio Turnpike? The card that you get when you get on the Turnpike has a time stamp. The place and time you get off can be easily checked against where you got on. If your average speed over distance was in excess (by some amount) of the speed limits, they give you a ticket. If they are doing this, it behooves anyone getting on the Turnpike to check very carefully that the timestamp is correct.
As far as I know no they don't. I was stationed in Ohio in 1979-1980 and would travel the Turnpike at break neck speeds and never got a ticket. I have traveled it many times since (latest was 2 years ago) traveling at speeds fast enough to do that and they haven't given me one yet.
2011 Hyundai Sonata, 2014 BMW 428i convertible, 2015 Honda CTX700D
The Tollway system in Illinois could generate a lot of extra revenue for the state by charging fines for speeding. This could be earmarked for funding some type of critical need such as school systems to lighten tax burden on home owners.
Does not take much to imagine that software could be easily made (if not already on the shelf) to identify drivers who have gone some amount over the limit (say 15 mph) and issue fines against their transponder account. This could be well publicized in advance so that there is fair warning. It could be trialed on certain stretches to work out any problems, then implemented over all toll roads.
After awhile, the amount over the limit could be tightened to say 10 mph. The fines would not count as points on drivers license until some amount of infractions were recorded. Drivers afraid of this system would be free to turn in their responders for a refund and to use other types of roads.
I don't think that many drivers would turn in their responders and pay toll manually to avoid speeding detection. Manual tolls cost twice as much as transponder tolls. But, drivers that have a need to speed on certain days could leave their transponders at home and pay higher tolls manually. They would have to be mindful of times when there might be long lines at the toll booths.
The Illinois Highway robbers association, oops sorry the tollway authority has already said they will not do this. Plus there is a sizable number of drivers who only go through one toll booth on their commute so you could not determine their speed this way.
2011 Hyundai Sonata, 2014 BMW 428i convertible, 2015 Honda CTX700D
Just three weeks ago my father drove my wife and I from Harrisburg to the Philadelphia Airport, which meant taking the Pennsylvania Turnpike from the East Shore exit to Downingtown (suburban Philadelphia). He never drives faster than 65 mph (the speed limit on the Turnpike).
During that trip we passed ONE - count it, one - vehicle, and were passed by everything from minivans to Toyota Camrys, all traveling at 75-80 mph.
And there was zero enforcement. But even if the police cars were out, they still aren't going to stop you for anything up to 75 mph, unless you are tailgating, constantly changing lanes, etc.
Most drivers like to cruise along at 75 mph, regardless of what two numbers on a sign happen to be, and people need to accept that. I doubt that it's any different in Illinois. And if people want more money for schools, etc., I'd also suggest that they tax themselves directly to pay for it, or find ways to cut school costs. It's not the responsibility of drivers to fund distant school districts.
The New Jersey Turnpike was way different this past weekend -- lots of police everywhere. It didn't stop people from going 75 mph though. But I was going 65 carrying a mattress in my pickup and passed a lot more than one vehicle.
Maybe I was imagining it, but a few people seemed to have slowed down from the breakneck pace of only a few months ago -- higher gas prices possibly?
Really? Seems like every time I am in PA and within 50-75 miles of Ohio there is someone pulled over every 10-15 miles.
2011 Hyundai Sonata, 2014 BMW 428i convertible, 2015 Honda CTX700D
My friend is a Pennsylvania State Police trooper, and she told me that, conditions permitting, the police aren't going to stop you for anything up to 75 mph, as long as you aren't engaging in reckless behavior. Given that I've cruised along at 75 mph - and been passed by a marked units cruising along at 80 mph - I believe her. I've also cruised by "hidden" police cars at 75 mph, with no problem.
Which suits most of the drivers up here just fine.
And I haven't noticed people slowing down. It did seem, however, as though traffic volume was down on the weekends. I know that we've tried to cut back our driving when possible.
Once you pass the Fort Littleton exit, police presence increases, especially around Breezewood, and again at Somerset.
Pretty much the same thing here in IL, the state police will allow 10 over with no problem as long as you're not reckless.
Now the strange thing is I sometimes see county police hiding alongside the interstates. I always wonder what they are doing there.
2011 Hyundai Sonata, 2014 BMW 428i convertible, 2015 Honda CTX700D
Sometimes it's best to let sleeping dogs lie...
There is good and bad in the technology. Then, you start getting tickets from some GPS system....
2011 Hyundai Sonata, 2014 BMW 428i convertible, 2015 Honda CTX700D
If anyone knows where they are I would be most grateful for a link. Thank you very much.
Note: these are only excerpts.
http://www.wired.com/news/autotech/0,2554,58616,00.html
But that means someone registering a vehicle that drives 8000 mi/year will pay the same for road maintenance as a vehicle that drives 150000 miles a year.
I also laughed at the signs ont he back of semis saying "This vehicle pays $6000 in road taxes." My answer was yeah, and it does $40,000 in damage to the roads and it caused two accidents with $100,000 in damages and $500000.in injuries
2014 Malibu 2LT, 2015 Cruze 2LT,
I paid LESS when I moved here to register 3 vehicles for 2 years and get them emissions tested than I paid for 2 vehicles in AZ to get them registered and tested for 1 year.
You pay for emissions testing? May I ask how much, here in IL its free.
2011 Hyundai Sonata, 2014 BMW 428i convertible, 2015 Honda CTX700D
It was a small fee if only the whole state had had to have the checks it would have caught a lot more bad cars. Now they're rid of it and instead they get forumlated gasoline at a much higher cost than having $10 per year. But the local yokals complaining finally got rid of E-Check.
2014 Malibu 2LT, 2015 Cruze 2LT,
The testing places are owned and run by the state and do not charge for the test. On newer cars they just plug into the computer and read the on board diognostics.
2011 Hyundai Sonata, 2014 BMW 428i convertible, 2015 Honda CTX700D
So instead of fixing the 5% of cars that needed repairing, we all get to drive on gasoline that gets less mileage and costs more!!!
2014 Malibu 2LT, 2015 Cruze 2LT,
I think everyone is getting that. Here we get that re formulated gas and still have emission tests.
2011 Hyundai Sonata, 2014 BMW 428i convertible, 2015 Honda CTX700D
The problem here is that the inspections are conducted by private businesses -- it could be your local independent mechanic, most car dealers (which will usually only inspect cars purchased there), franchises like Midas, etc. The system is ripe for abuse, and there are plenty of horror stories.
I see a lot of cars with huge gaps between the stickers, or an inspection sticker that might as well be smack dab in the middle of the driver's line of sight, and it drives me crazy.
The gas tax is still the most efficient way to collect the variable component. You drive more, you pay more. And even though it isn't exact, most heavier cars (that beat up the road more) also get lower mileage, so in effect they pay a higher road tax. hey, a Smart car isn't going to do much damege, right?
What they should do is have tiered registration fees based on weight. That way, the H2 driver pays more to account for the extra pounding his rig does to the roads. Then they pay more for the gas tax too, over a more efficient vehicle.
2020 Acura RDX tech SH-AWD, 2023 Maverick hybrid Lariat luxury package.
It's funny though...my mom lives in a podunk town, the kind of place where stoplights go on blinking mode from 11pm-7am...and there the lights have a second or two where both directions are red.
http://www.azcentral.com/community/pinal/articles/1120gr-qcdrivers20-ON.html
He wants to install more as soon as they're sure Ohio won't "ban" the cameras unless they have a police officer at each one to hand out tickets.
The mentality of the safety director kills me. It's typical of their city and how it's handled problems (not) through a couple of decades.
2014 Malibu 2LT, 2015 Cruze 2LT,
I wonder how many of those tickets get tossed out.
In City of Dayton there was a news story about how many millions of $ were owed for the unpaid sheets of paper (not legal tickets). The red light camera company was pushing Dayton to pursue the deadbeats (many of them probably were their own residents) so the company would get it's 75% or so. Dayton city didn't seem to want to anger some of those folk by going after the ones with a handfull of repeat violations.
Did you see the story in Arizona about the police vehicles and others being exempt from having to pay the bills for those speed/red light camera violations? I wonder if police offices and FOPA members get off without paying those bills for red light violations.
I just can't get over how simple-minded the safety director was about how well the speed and redlight camera combined worked at the one intersection; sure violations went down compared to when it was first installed!!! What brainpower. I rarely see a police car from that city unless they in the line at McDonalds which is right next to Lowes that I frequent.
2014 Malibu 2LT, 2015 Cruze 2LT,
I didn't see the police/FOP exemption, but I am not surprised. One can't expect consistent and justifiable law enforcement. What's gonna happen, will the bigshots get fired? These people are lifers., untouchable .
I can believe a safety director would be simple minded. You should have asked about his credentials and work experience.
Yes, the City of Scottsdale worked out an agreement with DPS so that they wouldn't be issued tickets. IIRC, they were let out of hundreds of tickets in the short time the 101 cameras were operating, with the highest being ~118 MPH.
I now drive a red Corvette. If there is anything any speed law enforcement officer would prefer to stop than a red sports car, I don’t know what it might be.
I drove through at least 8, maybe 10 areas where LEOs were utilizing “Detection Devices”. In every case, I was always traveling above the speed limit, but ‘only’ 5 – 7 MPH over.
I do find it interesting that the speed limit is really not the speed limit.
Meaning: In the eyes of the ( typical ) actual enforcement officer, the speed limit is actually 8 or 9 or 10 MPH higher than the posted limit.
Much as I have observed over my past 40+ years of driving.
Even with a car capable ( according to GM and most independent sources ) of about 100 MPH more than any currently posted speed limit in this country, 75 to 80 MPH is actually ‘fast enough’ – for me, with typical traffic, on most US roads.
Just my 0.02 gallons worth. . .
- Ray
Happy to achieve over 28 MPG in such driving.
A friend of ours does not have those markings on any of his cars.
2014 Malibu 2LT, 2015 Cruze 2LT,
There's more to a "take" than governmental benefits and entitlements. Those who pay the most benefit the most from society. The bottom 40% hold .2% of the wealth, you realize.