Hi Gary
Surely the pic is evidence,dry road no rain.They wouldnt be able to hold it up against you in court,surely not!!!
Andrew
Anyone who regularly uses the F3 north of Sydney will know that on the run up the hill north of the Brooklyn Bridge there is a dual speed limit of either 90kph or 100kph depending on whether it is raining - the sign is a non electronic speed sign.
On my way to Newcastle just before Christmas it had been raining during the day but on the relevant section of road, it was not raining and the road was perfectly dry - so the 100kph limit should apply. As you would appreciate at the top of the hill there is a speed camera and about 50m past it is an electronic sign that gives the current speed limit - I assume that when you get snapped the speed limit appears in the background.
So my question is this - if it is not raining and you are doing 100kph but the electronic sign at the top of the hill indicates the speed limit should be 90 and you get 'happy snapped' doing 100 - do you have a case to answer?
I guess the answer is well yes - but what is the limit - when it is not raining to lower signs say it should be 100 but the top sign (with the camera says 90).
Any thoughts - any legal beagles or NSW cops in the forum.
Gazzz
REMLR 243
2007 Range Rover Sport TDV6
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1976 Jaguar XJ12C
1973 Haflinger AP700
1971 Jaguar V12 E-Type Series 3 Roadster
1957 Series 1 88"
1957 Series 1 88" Station Wagon
Hi Gary
Surely the pic is evidence,dry road no rain.They wouldnt be able to hold it up against you in court,surely not!!!
Andrew
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I don't know the road but the speed limit applies after the sign, so I would think the question would be not what the sign after the camera says but whatever the last sign said before the camera.
I thought NSW guidelines state that they shouldn't place a speed trap right where there is a change in speed limit. Therefore, since it is possible that the posted limit at the bottom of the hill is 100km/h and 90km/h at the top, then the speed camera may be incorrectly sited (therefore contestable).
In any case, I would have thought that the RTA was being more than somewhat devious pinging motorists for doing 100km/h when the determination of what constitutes "wet weather" is fuzzy. Do they mean wet - road, wet - precipitation, wet - forecast, wet - pants ??? Is this defined by the RTA somewhere? And does the 90km/h temporary limit apply the same as a school zone - ie. strictly enforeced regardless of whether the motorist has advice confirming that it's a "school day".
There is also a rumour that on this same section of road the cameras log your time between points. If you make the section in under the prescribed time you get shot (by the camera) and fined. I have yet to find out if this is true of a scare campain.
The overhead cameras have been doing this to heavy vehicles for years. It is just a short step to do it to all!Originally Posted by dobbo
URSUSMAJOR
They are planning to link the cameras up across the country for the trip time checks.
Which will get the truckies back to using secondary roads to bypass the cameras wherever possible, just like the old days of dodging the scales, and the permit and log-book inspection stations.Originally Posted by George130
URSUSMAJOR
One (or several) of those overhead cameras got me in 1998, at 0149 (am), in a Falcon wagon towing a box trailer.....I received a warning letter from the RTA about a month after I drove the road they cited me for......
Big Brother has been watching for some considerable time.
(and yes I still have the letter, somewhere in the bowels of a filing cabinet).
GQ
This is the problem - the sign before says dry = 100kph wet = 90kph and the camera is in this zone. The electronic signs should be at the start not half way through the section so no interpretation by drivers would be needed.Originally Posted by oldzook
REMLR 243
2007 Range Rover Sport TDV6
1977 FC 101
1976 Jaguar XJ12C
1973 Haflinger AP700
1971 Jaguar V12 E-Type Series 3 Roadster
1957 Series 1 88"
1957 Series 1 88" Station Wagon
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