...

From: JonCooper15 Jul 2009 07:21
To: mr_swayzee 27 of 71
yes they were, but I was helping someone move house on the day in question, both me and my mate drove the car whenever suited us several/many times throughout the day and the letter came about two weeks later, we just couldn't decide who had been driving at 12:20pm
From: Dan (HERMAND)15 Jul 2009 07:54
To: Peter (BOUGHTONP) 28 of 71

Remember that emergency services don't have any God given right to speed. It was never explained to me for Ambulances, but Police are meant to write it to the log of whatever it is they are responding. I.e.:

 

12:35 - 999 recieved, female, burglary in progress
12:35 - Unit B2 dispatched
12:39 - B2 through Speed Camera, Whatever Road, Birmingham

 

But even so, it can still be deemed speeding depending upon the circumstances. And it could also be used if that police car took out a pedestrian 300 metres down the road.

 

I'm not saying that I agree with Jons example that Ambulance workers should spend hours appealing it, but I don't think they should just be ignored.

 

For more interesting reading, ask a police officer what happens when they try and PNC a car dangerously driving and it ends up belonging to Whitehall...

EDITED: 15 Jul 2009 07:58 by HERMAND
From: 99% of gargoyles look like (MR_BASTARD)15 Jul 2009 09:11
To: Dr Nick (FOZZA) 29 of 71

I've heard of 'professional' (lorry/taxi) drivers passing points onto family members. I can understand why the family members accept them, if it's the main/sole breadwinner, but how would they feel if a subsequent speeding offence resulted in someone else's death when in reality that driver should be off the road?

 

IT MADE ME WANT TO SHOUT AT THEM!!!!!! :@

From: dave (10_ROGUE)15 Jul 2009 09:30
To: 99% of gargoyles look like (MR_BASTARD) 30 of 71
That argument does annoy me, if your job depends on your driving licence then shirley the answer is to drive more carefully.
From: Lucy (X3N0PH0N)15 Jul 2009 09:39
To: dave (10_ROGUE) 31 of 71
If your job depends on a clean drivers' license and your continued employment depends on meeting unrealistic delivery deadlines you're a bit fucked though.
From: Serg (NUKKLEAR)15 Jul 2009 09:47
To: Peter (BOUGHTONP) 32 of 71
I think SPECS cameras are possibly the hardest to see (no stripes etc) and also the most difficult to trick, since they work on average speed - however, they're definitely visible during the day. I've also heard of a possible way of tricking them: just drive through them on different lanes :D

edit: the most irritating cameras as far as I'm concerned are the ones on the M25. Annoying sh!tboxes which slow down traffic on an already busy motorway, doing nothing but generating free money. Grr.
EDITED: 15 Jul 2009 09:49 by NUKKLEAR
From: Radio15 Jul 2009 10:09
To: Serg (NUKKLEAR) 33 of 71
Nope, the most annoying ones are those average speed ones that they setup along roadworks on motorways, when it seems that there's no-one bloody working there at all, certainly on the days/times that I drive past them.
From: milko15 Jul 2009 11:14
To: Radio 34 of 71
that's the SPECS ones yes. Still often narrower lanes I guess though. I have heard that they fixed the lane-change trick but that could be LIES to slow us down. Always makes me laugh when I see people speeding between them misunderstanding what average means.
From: ANT_THOMAS15 Jul 2009 11:15
To: Radio 35 of 71

They're the ones Serge just mentioned.

 

And yeah, the average speed cameras are most definitely the most annoying. I've seen 40 and 50 mph average speed cameras on free flowing motorways that could easily be moving along at 70 or 80 mph.

From: y2rich15 Jul 2009 13:46
To: Serg (NUKKLEAR) 36 of 71

That trick never worked. Think it was more down to the fact that the initial ones were just shit.
Top Gear had the best solution, drive 140mph up to the second camera then stop and a have a cup of tea whilst your average goes down.

From: cynicoid15 Jul 2009 17:12
To: Matt 37 of 71

Don't know if there's any paperwork involved but the ambulances round here have a blue 'running' light on the rear number plate that comes on when the blues are turned on.

 

I thought it was so the camera people could see the vehicle was on an emergency call, but are'nt gatso photos in black and white ?

 

My other theory was that the blue light somehow makes the number plate invisible to the camera because it's at a certain wavelength or something, and that it's all a big secret otherwise everyone would fit them !

From: ANT_THOMAS15 Jul 2009 17:27
To: cynicoid 38 of 71
The best way to do it would be to have a row of very bright IR LEDs. Invisible to the human eye but would possibly mask the plate. Might try that actually!
From: Mouse15 Jul 2009 19:21
To: ALL39 of 71

Slightly off topic, but I had this thought the other day about parking tickets (while watching the third car that day get ticketed outside one of my shops).

 

If you just put a old parking ticket sticker thing on your windscreen when you parked up do you think you'd get away with not getting a proper ticket because traffic wardens would think you'd already been done?

From: ANT_THOMAS15 Jul 2009 19:22
To: Mouse 40 of 71
Good idea but I'm sure I've seen someone be ticketed twice, or maybe a stack of them. I guess if there's only one person for that patch of road then they'll know it's a day old or whatever and stick another on.
From: koswix15 Jul 2009 19:24
To: Mouse 41 of 71

I once saw a woman in a big ass 4x4 park up totally illegally (all squint, straight on on a double yellow with the arse of the car sticking right out into the road), get out of the car and put an old ticket envelope under the windscreen wiper before going into a pub.

 

A warden walked round the corner about 2minutes later and promptly gave her a ticket.

 

I lol'd.

From: Mouse15 Jul 2009 19:28
To: koswix 42 of 71
:')
From: 99% of gargoyles look like (MR_BASTARD)15 Jul 2009 20:15
To: y2rich 43 of 71
Similar to the autostrada in Italy, where your average speed is calculated by the times you pass the tolls. So people have a cuppa en route.
From: Dan (HERMAND)15 Jul 2009 21:46
To: cynicoid 44 of 71

No, because [see my post].

 

I think it's just another blue light.

From: dyl16 Jul 2009 16:31
To: Mouse 45 of 71

I've seen a couple of cars with multiple tickets - one with about 10, and one in a motorway services with probably about 30 tickets - I think that one had a note on the dashboard saying "Broken down" or something. The windscreen was completely covered with tickets anyway.

 

One thing that used to work for someone at our venue was to drive onto the kerb, switch on his hazard lights and leave his boot wide open all evening. Because nobody would do that if they weren't making a real delivery.

 

I've been pulled for speeding once, in France, but the points never made it over the channel.

From: cynicoid16 Jul 2009 18:38
To: Dan (HERMAND) 46 of 71
I think it's just another blue light.


Seems a bit pointless then. It's the rear number plate light, only comes on when the 'blues' are lit, otherwise it's a normal white number plate light.

There's already flashing strobes on the roof and rear of the vehicle and it's quite obvious to anyone following that the ambulance's on an emergency so why put a small blue light in the number plate ? Must be a reason, if not for the cameras then something else. Why would the plate need to be illuminated in blue ?