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Speeding in Switzerland

Speeding in Switzerland

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Started by Mike3000 in Ski Chatter - 47 Replies

Re:Speeding in Switzerland

AllyG
reply to 'Speeding in Switzerland'
posted Aug-2009

Ian,
I'm afraid that doesn't make sense, unless you're assuming that YOUR speedo is the only one that's not inaccurate at all.

I asked our local police force - Dyfed Powys Police - about their tolerances on speeding, and they said their cameras are set to 10% plus 2 mph, but an individual policeman with a 'gun' can book you for doing only 2 mph over the limit, and that different police forces have different tolerances, so you'd have to know what these were for each area, and where the boundaries were.

I am very careful not to speed, ever, and the only time I do it is when I've accidentally got confused because the limits keep changing on the same piece of road, but I've never been caught - yet!

Ally

Admin
reply to 'Speeding in Switzerland'
posted Aug-2009

Ian Wickham wrote:taking into consideration that car speedos are approx. 10% inaccurate you should never get caught....

How old is your car? 8) speedos are legally permitted to over-read by up to 10% (but not to under-read, at all) - modern cars are / should be pretty accurate.

The speedos in cars I've driven / ridden in recently were within 1 or 2mph of the GPS (on flat, straight roads) at any speed.

Go carefully - especially with French Autoroute limits being lowered in some areas lately... :shock:
The Admin Man

Pablo Escobar
reply to 'Speeding in Switzerland'
posted Aug-2009

speedos are legally permitted


AllyG
reply to 'Speeding in Switzerland'
posted Aug-2009

I would think even a sat nav system wouldn't be totally accurate if you were going up and down hills (or mountains) because the mapping must be only 2-D.

So I rather think that means you'd be going faster than your sat nav system said, in the mountains, because you'd be travelling a greater distance, something like the hypotenuse on a triangle, and speed equals distance over time. But I've always been very bad at maths so I'd have to think about it.

I have noticed that my new Tom Tom says I'm going about 2 mph slower than I'd estimate using my speedo, on the flat. And I have a newish car (4 years old).

Ally

Edited 1 time. Last update at 09-Aug-2009

Ian Wickham
reply to 'Speeding in Switzerland'
posted Aug-2009

Admin wrote:
Ian Wickham wrote:taking into consideration that car speedos are approx. 10% inaccurate you should never get caught....

How old is your car? 8) speedos are legally permitted to over-read by up to 10% (but not to under-read, at all) - modern cars are / should be pretty accurate.

The speedos in cars I've driven / ridden in recently were within 1 or 2mph of the GPS (on flat, straight roads) at any speed.

Go carefully - especially with French Autoroute limits being lowered in some areas lately... :shock:


2007 so coming three years, my comparisons are made between my speedo and the Tom tom and it seems to work out at a 10% difference, the french are much more civilised with their speed cameras I suppose they do not view them as a money making exercise, what I like about our french cousins is that if they put up a motor way sign warning of a speed camera you can be dam sure that there will be one.
As for the mobile guys only saw two for the whole duration of my 17 day holiday, perhaps I was driving too fast !!! but seriously it is one of the reasons I have my Tom tom on all the time in Europe it continuously reminds me if I am driving too fast . 8)

Ian Wickham
reply to 'Speeding in Switzerland'
posted Aug-2009

Pablo Escobar wrote:
speedos are legally permitted




Oooiii you Columbian tea leaf have you been raiding my iphoto's..... :wink:

Bandit
reply to 'Speeding in Switzerland'
posted Aug-2009

Ian Wickham wrote:
Admin wrote:
Ian Wickham wrote:taking into consideration that car speedos are approx. 10% inaccurate you should never get caught....

How old is your car? 8) speedos are legally permitted to over-read by up to 10% (but not to under-read, at all) - modern cars are / should be pretty accurate.

The speedos in cars I've driven / ridden in recently were within 1 or 2mph of the GPS (on flat, straight roads) at any speed.

Go carefully - especially with French Autoroute limits being lowered in some areas lately... :shock:


2007 so coming three years, my comparisons are made between my speedo and the Tom tom and it seems to work out at a 10% difference, the french are much more civilised with their speed cameras I suppose they do not view them as a money making exercise, what I like about our french cousins is that if they put up a motor way sign warning of a speed camera you can be dam sure that there will be one.
As for the mobile guys only saw two for the whole duration of my 17 day holiday, perhaps I was driving too fast !!! but seriously it is one of the reasons I have my Tom tom on all the time in Europe it continuously reminds me if I am driving too fast . 8)


Wickers, does your Tom Tom have a speed cameras database?

We use a Blaupunkt Sat Nav, plus a couple of InfoRad´s. Between them, they get most of the fixed stuff. Naturally, a little creativity is needed for Switzerland :D We don´t go fast, but particularly in Switzerland it´s often hard to tell what the speed limit is on the motorway, as it´s constantly changing. Swiss Border police will confiscate Sat Nav´s with camera databases or GPS based camera detectors :roll:

Ian Wickham
reply to 'Speeding in Switzerland'
posted Aug-2009

bandit wrote:
Ian Wickham wrote:
Admin wrote:
Ian Wickham wrote:taking into consideration that car speedos are approx. 10% inaccurate you should never get caught....

How old is your car? 8) speedos are legally permitted to over-read by up to 10% (but not to under-read, at all) - modern cars are / should be pretty accurate.

The speedos in cars I've driven / ridden in recently were within 1 or 2mph of the GPS (on flat, straight roads) at any speed.

Go carefully - especially with French Autoroute limits being lowered in some areas lately... :shock:


2007 so coming three years, my comparisons are made between my speedo and the Tom tom and it seems to work out at a 10% difference, the french are much more civilised with their speed cameras I suppose they do not view them as a money making exercise, what I like about our french cousins is that if they put up a motor way sign warning of a speed camera you can be dam sure that there will be one.
As for the mobile guys only saw two for the whole duration of my 17 day holiday, perhaps I was driving too fast !!! but seriously it is one of the reasons I have my Tom tom on all the time in Europe it continuously reminds me if I am driving too fast . 8)


Wickers, does your Tom Tom have a speed cameras database?

We use a Blaupunkt Sat Nav, plus a couple of InfoRad´s. Between them, they get most of the fixed stuff. Naturally, a little creativity is needed for Switzerland :D We don´t go fast, but particularly in Switzerland it´s often hard to tell what the speed limit is on the motorway, as it´s constantly changing. Swiss Border police will confiscate Sat Nav´s with camera databases or GPS based camera detectors :roll:


Yep, mine has a speed camera database and he ( The jobs worth border guard ) at least was not interested in that, I guess it could have been very embarrassing for him if he was seen to not be able to get me on anything apart from having a speed camera database. I might even have been able to do him for harassment :evil:

Topic last updated on 09-August-2009 at 19:21