Kev...Your post 78...all good mate.
Thanks, Pickles.
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Kev...Your post 78...all good mate.
Thanks, Pickles.
Better roads would probably help, but I believe that one difficulty we face is our population density.
Most of the European countries that people hold up as examples of the way roads should be built have many more taxpayers per kilometre of roads than we do. Australia has too many kilometres of roads and too few people to get a road system like some European countries.
I think some of the difference between Victorian roads and NSW roads can be put down to the size of the states relative to the number of taxpayers.
Brock's death can't be compared to the motorbike bloke.
Totally different type of road. Sharp corner, no rail, tree on outside.
Compared to a divided road with good visibility it's chalk and cheese.
Now, I'm not condoning his speed but neither is it the unmitigated level of evil that some have said.
There was a big risk, unacceptable, but it was not an almost guaranteed suicide either.
As for risking life over a car....put yourself in his position.
He KNOWS if he stops he is losing his licence, his bike, perhaps permanently if he has done it before, and a bloody big wad of cash. He may also do time, especially if he is already suspended.
On the other hand, he knows he has a near certain chance of leaving the police behind and while there was a risk, he obviously was a fairly skilled rider and believed (correctly as it happened) that he could get away in one piece.
Probably a snap judgement, but once decided on the stakes were raised so he had to follow through.
I have discussed in depth with people who have done exactly that, and been successful.
Also with someone who tried to run but spun out after a few hundred metres and got done....he is now facing the almost certain prison sentence that comes from being a habitual offender of traffic laws...
When your freedom is on the line, many people will say screw it, prison if I stop, prison if they catch me, freedom if I lose them. Some of them even get a thrill from the risk. A risk that is on par with many legal extreme sports.
I am not condoning those actions, but I can understand them.
Speed limits are a separate topic, and yea in many places they are too low.
Wrong. At 140 detected he'd be written up at 138 alleged.
Penalty Code 1929 - Exceed speed limit in a vehicle other than a heavy vehicle by 25km/h or more but less than 30km/h. $387 and 4 demerits against RR20.
He would have lost his licence for a month after 28 days.
What a load of tripe. I must have been dreaming while my partner did CPR on that bloke in the car that time, or when I was picking up the bits of that teenager that other time, or......
I do note however that you've never been a copper; but you still know how it all works :TakeABow:
A lot of the problems and frustrations on the Hume (in VIC anyway, where it is all dual carriageway) could be solved by:
1/ A Left-hand traffic equivalent of the Rechtsfahrgebot rule, ruthlessly enforced by police and punishable by heavy fines. It ****s me the number of people, particularly on public holidays, who think the right hand lane is an additional lane for traffic. If you aren't passing, get the hell out of it.
2/ A 130 km/h speed limit, but speed restrictions for trucks, cars towing etc of 100km/h. This works in tandem with the above rule. How many times have you seen someone overtaking a truck at 0.5 kmh faster and they sit there blocking the right lane up for kms on end?
Overtaking should be quick IMO, especially when its a single carriageway. Much safer to reduce overtaking time spent in the "wrong lane" with oncoming traffic than dawdling past at a few kmh faster...
SPOT ON!!!.....but who listens?........No-ONE?
Gotta keep them fines rollin' in?
As a prior poster has said, & I forgot to mention, it is public knowledge, it was a promotable fact when the Hume was built...."THAT IT WAS BUILT & SAFE FOR 140KPH".
So,....... now?
Cheers, Pickles.
Back to the original subject, police are no longer 'irate' and 'hunting', they've arrested the guy.
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