Advisory speed limit
An advisory speed limit is a speed recommendation by a governing body, used when it may be non-obvious to the driver that the safe speed is below the legal speed. It is a posting which either approximates the Basic Speed Law or rule (and is subject to enforcement as such) or is based on a maximum g-force exerted at a specific speed. Advisory speed limits are often set in areas with many pedestrians, such as in city centers and outside schools, and on difficult stretches of roads, such as on tight corners or through roadworks. While travelling above the advisory speed limit is not illegal per se, it may be negligence per se and liability for any collisions that occur as a result of traveling above the limit can be placed partially or entirely on the person exceeding the advisory speed limit.
Signposting of advisory speed limits varies from country to country; Australia makes extensive use of advisory speed limits across its highway networks while the Richtgeschwindigkeit ("reference speed") in Germany is valid for the whole autobahn network (but can be overruled by speed limits in particular sections or for special reasons like weather conditions or roadworks), while the United States and the United Kingdom only give advisory speed limits for hazards such as bends.
Use
Use of advisory speed limits varies by locale, but they are generally used to reduce speed along short stretches of dangerous road, such as on the tight curves of an off-ramp or on a busy shopping street. The advisory speed limit when not posted is generally the same as the mandatory speed limit in ideal conditions.
Australia
In Australia, if a person is involved in a single vehicle accident and the resulting investigation reveals that the driver was exceeding the Advisory Speed Limit displayed it can be a breach of the Insurance Cover Contract, resulting in no payout.
Advisory speeds in corners are set out in AS (Australian Standard) 1742.2-2009 Manual of Uniform Traffic Control Devices, Part 2, appendix F.[1] Corners are signed to indicate a speed at which lateral g-forces will not exceed 0.22g to fall well within the minimum suggested static rollover threshold of 0.35g for non-dangerous goods.[2]
Germany
The Richtgeschwindigkeit (German Advisory or Suggested Speed of Travel) is a legal term in Germany describing the advisory speed limit for roads without a mandatory speed limit. Autobahns have an advisory speed limit of 130 kilometres per hour (81 mph) on non-signposted sections.
Exceeding the advised speed is not a criminal offense, but may result in greater liability in the case of a collision due to an increased danger of operating the vehicle.[3]
In Germany, the Autobahn-Richtgeschwindigkeits-Verordnung (Directive on Reference Speed on Motorways), introduced in 1974, recommends a speed of no more than 130 km/h (81 mph) for autobahns and similar roads, whose lanes are separated by a median or which have at least two lanes per direction, provided there are no traffic signs posting a lower speed limit.
Until 31 August 2009, a different reference speed could be posted by the traffic signs number 380 and 381, according to §42 of the German traffic code (Straßenverkehrsordnung, StVO), as seen above. As these traffic signs were only rarely used, they have been abolished, and will be fully removed by 31 October 2022.
New Zealand
Advisory speeds are not legal speed limits.[4] Advisory speeds end in 5 to avoid confusion with mandatory speed limits which end in 0. The limits are established at 0.22g lateral g-force[5] to fall well within the minimum static rollover threshold of 0.35g.[6]
United Kingdom
In the United Kingdom, most speed limits imposed by variable-message signs are advisory, and there are no sanctions for drivers who exceed them; a notable exception being the Gatsometer-camera enforced, MIDAS and ATM variable limits on the M25, M42 and M6 motorways.[7] Crucially, the signs imposing these limits are distinct from regular, advisory VMS displays by the inclusion of a red ring surround, effectively changing them from advance hazard warnings into standard, mandatory speed-limit signs.
As local councils require consent from the Department for Transport before changing speed limits, some use advisory speed limits on roads that the DfT refuses to officially downgrade.[8]
The usefulness of advisory speed limits has been questioned by a number of studies: one group from the Transportation Research Board found advisory speed limits through roadworks being consistently flouted by motorists,[9] while an investigation by Manchester Evening News found that almost all buses in Manchester city centre exceeded the local 10 miles per hour (16 km/h) advisory speed limit; some by as much as 30 miles per hour (48 km/h).[10]
Signage
The signage for advisory speed limits is not defined by the Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals, and is therefore not standardised internationally. The United States uses a small yellow sign under the main warning sign, as well as a standalone variation on the standard speed limit sign, with a yellow background instead of a white one, the words "speed limit" omitted and an additional panel stating the type of hazard ahead. Though they list speeds, the United States advisory speed signs are classified as warning signs, not regulatory signs, as primary speed signs are.[11] Australia uses a similar design as the United States in spite of regulatory speed limit signs being quite different. Germany used a square sign with a blue background and white lettering, similar to the minimum speed limit sign,[3] and New Zealand uses a yellow background with black lettering (similar to the Australian design without the "km/h" lettering). The United Kingdom currently uses an oblong white rectangle with black lettering stating "Max Speed".
- Most of Europe
- Australia
- Australia (motorway exits)
- Australia (with diagram of motorway exit shape)
- Victoria, Australia (curve)
- Western Australia, Australia (traffic-calming bumps, known as speed bumps)
- Canada
- Canada (Ontario) (highway ramps and exits)
- Canada (British Columbia) (highway ramps and exits)
- Denmark
- Japan
- Netherlands
- New Zealand
- New Zealand (motorway exits)
- New Zealand (dangerous curve)
- New Zealand (extremely dangerous curve)
- New Zealand (warning of danger of truck roll-over)
- Norway
- Philippines
- United Kingdom (imperial)
- United Kingdom (roadworks, imperial)
- United States (customary)
- United States (metric)
- United States (highway exits)
- United States (highway ramps)
- United States (highway curves)
- United States (warning of danger of truck roll-over)
- United States (integrated into curve warning sign)
References
- "AS1742.2-2009 Manual of Uniform Traffic Control Devices, Part 2" (PDF).
- "Mainroads Western Australia Static Rollover Threshold Calculator".
- "Autobahnrichtgeschwindigkeitsverordnung" (PDF) (in German). German Federal Government. Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 September 2007. Retrieved 2007-10-28.
- "The difference between speed limits and suggested speeds".
- "Heavy Vehicle Stability Guide, P.11" (PDF). NZ Transport Agency.
- "Curve speed management July 2007 (Research Report 323, section 4)" (PDF). Land Transport New Zealand.
- "Safer motorway driving". Department for Transport. Archived from the original on 2007-06-09. Retrieved 2007-10-28.
- "Speed limits". Bristol City Council. Archived from the original on 2007-10-17. Retrieved 2007-10-28.
- Pesti, Geza; Jessen, Daniel; Byrd, Patrick; McCoy, Patrick. "Traffic Flow Charactaristics of the Late Merge Work Zone Control Strategy" (PDF). Transportation Research Board. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-05-30. Cite journal requires
|journal=
(help) - "Speeding buses put lives at risk". Manchester Evening News. 2005-04-26. Retrieved 2007-10-28.
- Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices (2009 edition), Section 2C.06