Here's a brainteaser for your Monday: if a road user is travelling at exactly 20mph in a 20mph zone, and there are other road users in front also travelling at 20mph, why would there be any need for the road user behind to overtake the other road user in
front?
That's the question the internet is trying to answer after one person's TikTok about a newly introduced 20mph speed limit in Wales caused some befuddlement...
Driver can’t deal with the fact that these cyclists are going as fast as the speed limit #MGIF (link is external) pic.twitter.com/od4rYHGsoZ (link is external)
The "reality" of the speed limits, the social media sharer claimed, is that when "going at 20mph" she has been behind "these cyclists for about four miles" without being "able to overtake them" because... "they're actually cycling faster than me going at
20mph".
"I'm going 20mph and I cannot overtake these bikes".
Sounds like, dare I say it, the rules of the road working perfectly as intended? Scary stuff...
Some questioned the point of the video, one reply asked then "why would she need to overtake the cyclists?" Another keen to know "if there were no bikes there what speed would she be doing?"
It's not the first eyebrow-raising reaction to Wales' introduction of default 20mph speed limits we've seen... there was that bloke on Twitter who reckoned the recent media coverage of Russell Brand was all a plot to distract from the introduction of
lower limits. Then there was the person who claimed driving instructors were being forced to lengthen their lessons because they simply couldn't cover the necessary distance in an hour. The internet's a fun place, isn't it?
Anyway, here's our report into the initial analysis of Wales' 20mph speed limit implementation from transport and public health data analysts Agilysis...
https://road.cc/content/news/cycling-live-blog-9-october-2023-304367#live-blog-item-50337
--- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
* Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)