Home Forums Chat Forum What's your understanding of the National Speed Limit in the UK?

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  • What's your understanding of the National Speed Limit in the UK?
  • sbob
    Free Member

    daveatextremistsdotcouk – Member

    NSL is either 50, 60, or 70 depending on the type of road and what you’re driving. Perfectly simple and nothing to do with street lights.

    Now prove me wrong….

    40mph for HGVs on single carriageways in Scotland. 😛

    So Q594 is wrong then?

    GrahamS
    Full Member

    And 80+ if you are “making progress” 😉

    wobbliscott
    Free Member

    And 80+ if you are “making progress”

    Only if you declare yourself a “tasty driver”, if not you’re a crazy maniac who’s a danger to themselves and everyone else on the road.

    zilog6128
    Full Member

    So Q594 is wrong then?

    this sentence is wrong, yes, wrt to motorways and/or Scotland (as mentioned above):

    The national speed limits for goods vehicles, such as non car based vans, and also for vehicles with more than 8 passenger seats are 10mph less than the limits mentioned above.

    pistonbroke
    Free Member

    You think it’s confusing in the UK. Here in Spain there are many sections of road where on a long hill there is a lane for slow vehicles with an overtaking lane. The vehicles using this overtaking lane must not drop below 70kph but the maximum speed limit os 80kph, so you have a 10kph window in which to drive. A road locally had a temporary limit of 60kph but kept the 70 minimum on a hill which is obviously impossible to achieve.

    Drac
    Full Member

    When is it 50 in a car?

    Ooops I misread your post.

    bikebouy
    Free Member

    #speeders 😆

    nedrapier
    Full Member

    One of the most useful things I learned on my naughty boys’ speeding class was to check side roads if you missed a sign and you don’t know whether it’s a 30 or 40. If it’s a little residential road, it will definitely be a 30. If there’s a big sign telling you a 30 zone starts there, you’re in a 40, possibly 50, and if there’s no big sign at the junction telling you that you’d be entering a 30mph zone, you’re in one already.

    I think NSL confusion is partly down to the course presenters trying to make their courses more interesting:

    Presenter: What’s the National Speed Limit everyone?

    everyone: 60/70mph

    Presenter: ha, well it’s actually not that simple! There are actually 27 “national” speed limits!

    stilltortoise
    Free Member

    NSL is either 50, 60, or 70 depending on the type of road and what you’re driving. If you’re not in a NSL area, you will have passed a sign that says 20,30,40,50 or 60. Perfectly simple and nothing to do with street lights.

    Now prove me wrong….

    The link below, screen shots of the contents of this link, and copied and pasted text from this link have cropped up many times already on this thread. It clearly shows that the NSL is 30mph in certain circumstances and is from Gov.uk, a source that we should be able to rely on.

    https://www.gov.uk/speed-limits

    I’m not sorry I started this thread. It proves the system is imperfect and mis-understood. The conclusion I’m drawing is that I’ll take the bus instead 😆

    zilog6128
    Full Member

    Presenter: ha, well it’s actually not that simple! There are actually 27 “national” speed limits!

    to be fair, it actually isn’t that simple; on the course I was on there were a few professional drivers (vans & HGVs) who had no idea that the NSL was lower for them! 😯

    Drac
    Full Member

    The NSL sign is indicative for open roads not built up areas, you’re mixing up 2 different things.

    Please yes use the bus.

    sbob
    Free Member

    daveatextremistsdotcouk – Member

    So Q594 is wrong then?

    Ask the Police has a separate site for Scottish law, which is different.

    gonefishin
    Free Member

    So Q594 is wrong then?

    Only if you have a binary definition of right and wrong. I’d say that it’s not 100% correct. (it’s not 100% wrong either).

    It clearly shows that the NSL is 30mph in certain circumstances and is from Gov.uk, a source that we should be able to rely on.

    No it doesn’t, at least now how I read it. I would read the reference to “national speed limits” (N.B. this limits is plural in the text) as meaning it’s a list of speed limits that are applied nationally depending on circumstances. The “National Speed Limit” (Note capitalisation and limit singular) is something different.

    Remember legal definitions of words are often different to those used colloquially.

    You should also note that despite what the text says, not all motorways have a 70 mph limit, some are less than that no matter wat vehicle you are driving.

    Drac
    Full Member

    You should also note that despite what the text says, not all motorways have a 70 mph limit, some are less than that no matter wat vehicle you are driving.

    And will have a sign indicating that.

    wobbliscott
    Free Member

    It proves the system is imperfect and mis-understood

    Not really, just do what the signs tell you to do. An NSL sign was 60mph on a single carriageway and 70mph on a dual carriageway and motorway unless otherwise stated (for a car obviously) when I passed my drivers test. Nothing I heard in my speed awareness course changed my view of that, and nothing I’ve read in this thread has caused me to re-visit my understanding. So seems pretty simple really.

    Again, I repeat my question, if the system was that you had to decide what the speed limit was based upon what street furniture is around you then what is the point of any speed limit sign….just assume its all national speed limit and decide what the national speed limit is based on the street furniture around you. I really don’t think this is the case.

    scotroutes
    Full Member

    stilltortoise – the Highway Code is not the law. It’s a summary meant for the layman. I guess that’s why there are imperfections in the wording.

    thomthumb
    Free Member

    And why do (some) roundabouts have 60mph/NSL signs just before them?

    it would be chaos if people had different speed limits due to the road they entered from. The RB needs one speed limit. Locally that’s set by your tyres not the law 😯

    bikebouy
    Free Member

    Nah, you’re right to start a speeding thread.

    Every one loves a speeding thread 😆

    stilltortoise
    Free Member

    I would read the reference to “national speed limits” (N.B. this limits is plural in the text) as meaning it’s a list of speed limits that are applied nationally depending on circumstances. The “National Speed Limit” (Note capitalisation and limit singular) is something different.

    Someone else suggested that above (possibly you). I asked them to explain what the difference is between “national speed limits” and the “National Speed Limit”. Can you explain? If there genuinely is a difference, surely you acknowledge how ridiculous it is to have a distinction like that.

    “Sorry, m’lud, I was paying attention to the National Speed Limit, not the applicable speed defined by the national speed limits

    if the system was that you had to decide what the speed limit was based upon what street furniture is around you then what is the point of any speed limit sign

    The signs are there to over-ride the visual indicators such as street lighting or the type of road. There are plenty of dual carriageways that have 50mph limits for example (that’s how I got caught). The crux of my thread is that the repeater signs on this particular stretch of road are the NSL sign. For my entire driving life I have taken that to mean – as a car driver – a 60mph limit on a single carriageway. My speed awareness course suggested otherwise.

    DezB
    Free Member

    It’s a summary meant for the layman.

    As opposed to the driving gods?

    sbob
    Free Member

    For my entire driving life I have taken that to mean – as a car driver – a 60mph limit on a single carriageway.

    Correct.

    Unless you can find an example of a 30 limit being signed by an NSL sign (you won’t) then this thread is pointless. Everyone else gets it.

    gonefishin
    Free Member

    If there genuinely is a difference, surely you acknowledge how ridiculous it is to have a distinction like that.

    It only seems ridiculous fto the terminally hard of thinking. If you can’t figure it out you should probably just surrender your driving license.

    mattsccm
    Free Member

    In good old STW fashion I am going to go off at a tangent a bit.
    I wonder what the rule is where you enter a 30mph zone , all properly signposted by a road that doesn’t have the sign. You there fore have no instructions to slow from NSL to 30. Conversely if you enter through the speed limit signs but leave by a non signposted way you are restricted to 30 until another signpost appears.
    Where you ask? I know of several villages that have an unsurfaced, maybe almost undriveable, UCRs that enter in the middle of them. They leave NSL 60 mph zones several miles away and then pop out in the middle of a 30 zone. Hmmm
    These villages, in two definite cases have no streets lights that could indicate any limit and no signs within the village or they are some way from the UCR.

    stilltortoise
    Free Member

    this thread is pointless

    How very dare you 😆

    Perhaps I should have said “For my entire driving life I have taken that to mean – as a car driver – a 60mph limit on a single carriageway, until I attended a speed awareness course where they introduced doubt

    Those that get where I’m coming from (at least two of you!) recognise the ambiguity is in what constitutes a built-up area as a mechanism to define the national speed limit, which is indicated by the black diagonal sign. The crux is that it will make no practical difference and will never be tested in a court of law, since the worse case scenario is someone travelling 30mph when they are allowed to go at 60mph.

    Thanks for the many comments. It’s been interesting…

    jimjam
    Free Member

    I kind of got your point OP. Were it not for the recent speeding mega thread I think this could have gone to 11 pages but I think everyone inclined to do so is slightly over dosed on speed for the now.

    It might still have some legs if we get some real experts to chime in.

    sbob
    Free Member

    30 limits are indicated by 30 signs as I’ve already told you. It would be impossible to pass your test without knowing this.

    stilltortoise
    Free Member

    If you can’t figure it out you should probably just surrender your driving license.

    OK, OK, I’ll bite!

    Seriously, please help this terminally hard-of-thinking person understand. My understanding is that there is no National Speed Limit (singular). Neither speed awareness courses, Gov.uk nor the Highway Code suggest otherwise. For those who are saying there is, what do you think it is and why?

    nedrapier
    Full Member

    It’s easily understood if you’re familiar with it, but I do agree with stilltortoise: if you imagine explaining it to someone completely new to the concepts, I think you’d have to admit to them the the naming is pretty silly*, or you’d be better off explaining it without using the words “national speed limit”, just tell them what the signs actually mean you should do.

    *

    “national speed limits” (N.B. this limits is plural in the text) as meaning it’s a list of speed limits that are applied nationally depending on circumstances. The “National Speed Limit” (Note capitalisation and limit singular) is something different, and could be any one of several National Speed Limits (so you’ll note that these are not really any more singular than any of the other speed limits applied nationally) depending on what type of road it is and what type of vehicle you’re driving.

    zilog6128
    Full Member

    I wonder what the rule is where you enter a 30mph zone , all properly signposted by a road that doesn’t have the sign.

    Surely it’s not properly signposted then?! Get on to the local council if it bothers you, it will certainly contravene some regulation or other.

    Rorschach
    Free Member

    gonefishin
    Free Member

    My understanding is that there is no National Speed Limit (singular).

    When you see the sign which is white with a black diagonal it means that the “national speed limit for the vehicle you are driving on this type of road in this part of the UK applies.”

    It’s really not hard.

    sbob
    Free Member

    Are you actually having trouble working out what the speed limit is for any given road?
    If you are, link to the location and someone will tell you.

    If you’re not, stop wasting bandwidth and find something more important to occupy your time.

    trailwagger
    Free Member

    When you see the sign which is white with a black diagonal it means that the “national speed limit for the vehicle you are driving on this type of road in this part of the UK applies.”
    It’s really not hard.

    This.

    Plus any change in speed limit has to be shown with a gateway sign (one either side of the road), and then repeater signs have to be shown along the restricted section, before the next gateway which will be either another limit sign either side of the road, or a black diagonal on either side indicating a return to national speed limit for you vehicle on that type of road.

    simondbarnes
    Full Member

    I think the OP should just post his license back to the DVLA and give up driving. It’s the only safe option.

    stilltortoise
    Free Member

    OK, I promise this is my last attempt to try and help one or two other see where I’m coming from.

    When you see the sign which is white with a black diagonal it means that the “national speed limit for the vehicle you are driving on this type of road in this part of the UK applies.”

    Yep, completely get all that. My understanding of that has not changed in the many years I’ve been driving. In determining what the “national speed limit for the vehicle you are driving on this type of road in this part of the UK applies”, the presence of street lights indicates a built-up area, ergo a 30mph limit.

    The black diagonal tells you “national speed limit”
    The streetlights tell you “built up area” (hence national speed limit of 30mph)
    The presence of streetlights is “over-ruled” by signage
    The signage is a black diagonal indicating “national speed limit”
    The streetlights tell you “built up area” (hence 30mph)
    The presence of streetlights is “over-ruled” by signage
    etc

    I’ll provide feedback to the Speed Awareness course that using street lights as a determinator of the national speed limit has caused doubt in what was previously very clear to me. Thanks for your thoughts.

    traildog
    Free Member

    Why don’t you post a link to the road in question?

    stilltortoise
    Free Member

    Why don’t you post a link to the road in question?

    et voilá

    If the presence of street lights indicates a built-up area, and the national speed limit for a built up area is 30mph, why is the speed limit 60mph here?

    whatyadoinsucka
    Free Member

    Google it “Signs show speed limits in miles per hour (mph) or use the national speed limit (NSL) symbol. The national speed limit is 70 mph (112 km/h) on motorways, 70 mph (112 km/h) on dual carriageways, 60 mph (96 km/h) on single carriageways and generally 30 mph (48 km/h) in areas with street lighting (restricted roads).”

    I would disagree with the final bit about 30, the national speed limit to me is always 70 on a dual carriageway and motorway or 60 everywhere else,

    20,30,40,50 are other common speed limits but will never show as NSL white/Black signs
    It just won’t happen

    sbob
    Free Member

    the presence of street lights indicates a built-up area, ergo a 30mph limit.

    The big **** off signs indicate a 30 limit. Street lights are just a reminder.
    Smaller signs act as a reminder in the absence of street lights.
    In special areas such as the new forest, signs can be painted on the road.

    You have been told this already.

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