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Speeding

    Speeding Editor's Picks

    • FAQs on Speeding Tickets

      If you receive a speeding ticket, you must, under the law, appear in court to provide evidence of your innocence; you may also enter a guilty plea and pay the penalty or pay the bail to stop the case from ever appearing before a judge. more »

    • Effect of Speeding Tickets

      Speeding tickets are moving violations issued by the police when they have caught you exceeding the legal speed limit while driving. Speeding is one of the more serious traffic offenses, and speeding tickets can have negative effects on your finances, driving record and even your freedom. more »

    • How Does a Speeding Ticket Affect Your Insurance?

      Insurance companies try to charge enough money in insurance premiums to cover the amount of money that they will have to pay out to their insureds under all of the auto insurance policies that they have issued. Insurance companies make an educated guess about how likely they will have to pay out on the auto insurance policies that... more »

    • Laws on Speeding Tickets

      Drivers are subject to ordinances regarding minimum and maximum speed limitations. While laws vary by state, most states write similar statutes into law regarding speeding tickets and speeding laws. more »

    • How Does Getting Speeding Tickets Affect Insurance?

      These days, no matter what state you may have received a traffic violation, your driving record follows you wherever you go. This means that speeding tickets in California will still be on your record in North Carolina. Speeding tickets stay on your record for several years, and insurance agencies use your driving record along with... more »

    Speeding Quick Guides

    Speeding Articles

    • About Speeding Tickets

      The unwelcome sight of blue lights in your rear view mirror as you're cruising down the highway usually means one thing: a speeding ticket is soon... more »

    • What is a Speeding Ticket?

      A speeding ticket is a citation issued by a police officer. It indicates that a driver was driving beyond the posted speed limit. Sometimes you... more »

    • How to Get out of a Speeding Ticket

      Nobody likes driving slow. But the ramifications of getting caught speeding can mean points on a license, increased auto insurance and hefty... more »

    • How to Avoid Speeding

      The Internet is full of tips for how to avoid speeding tickets. One of the most common tips is also the most common sense of them all: Don't... more »

    • How Does a Speeding Ticket Affect Insurance?

      If you receive a speeding ticket--or another kind of traffic ticket--it will most likely cause your car insurance rates to go up. This is because... more »

    Wikipedia

    Speed limit

    A road speed limit is the maximum speed allowed by law for road vehicles. Speed limits are commonly set and enforced by the legislative bodies of nations or provincial governments.

    The first maximum speed limit was the limit introduced in the United Kingdom in 1861.

    The Isle of Man and Germany, where over 50% of the autobahn system remains free from speed limits, are the only places in the world that do not have a general speed limit."iomguide"/>, Press Release, October 2007.

    Currently, the highest posted speed limit in the world is on Polish motorways
    |date3 April 2009
    |publishergazetaprawna.pl
    , although a variable speed limit up to was permitted experimentally on a stretch of Austrian motorway in June 2006.
    [http://kaernten.orf.at/stories/114065/
    |accessdate2009-09-17
    |title
    |languageGerman
    |date6 June 2006
    |publisherORF.at
    }}

    History
    The first speed limit was the limit introduced by the Locomotive Act of 1861 (or "Red Flag Act") in the United Kingdom (automobiles were in those days termed “light locomotives”). In 1865, the revised Locomotive Act reduced the speed limit to in the country and in towns. The 1865 Act required a man with a red flag or lantern to walk ahead of each vehicle, enforce a walking pace, and warn horse riders and horse drawn traffic of the approach of a self-propelled machine. The replacement of the "Red Flag Act" by the Locomotive Act of 1896, and the increase of the speed limit to has been commemorated each year since 1927 by the London to Brighton Veteran Car Run.

    Safety and efficacy
    Essential physics
    The kinetic energy involved in a motor vehicle collision is proportional to the square of the speed at impact. The probability of a fatality is, for typical collision speeds, empirically correlated to the fourth power of the speed difference (depending on the type of collision, not necessarily the same as travel speed) at impact,"tfhrc_1998" /> rising much f read more at » http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speed+limit

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