新西兰天维网社区

 找回密码
登录  注册
搜索
热搜: 移民 留学
查看: 411|回复: 4
打印 上一主题 下一主题

[车友会] Cameras target speed sneaks  关闭 [复制链接]

Rank: 18Rank: 18Rank: 18Rank: 18Rank: 18

升级  22.96%

UID
122872
热情
26387
人气
28461
主题
946
帖子
33226
精华
4
积分
44592
阅读权限
30
注册时间
2007-7-19
跳转到指定楼层
楼主
发表于 2014-9-16 18:28:19 |只看该作者 |倒序浏览 微信分享
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=11325204&ref=NZH_FBpage

By Mathew Dearnaley

5:00 AM Tuesday Sep 16, 2014

Drivers who slow down for cameras in danger of being caught out by high average speed.

Police are rolling out 56 new digital speed cameras around the country over the next year and a half. Photo / Getty Images
Police are rolling out 56 new digital speed cameras around the country over the next year and a half.

Cutting edge speed cameras that can catch out drivers who slow down for traditional cameras then speed up again are being considered by police.

The cameras will judge how fast drivers are travelling between two points. If adopted, they measure the time it takes for vehicles to travel between them to calculate average speed.

It would mean drivers who slow down on spotting speed cameras, only to rev up again once they've passed, would be caught at the second hurdle.

That was indicated to a conference in Auckland yesterday by Assistant Police Commissioner Dave Cliff, who is responsible for road policing.

Mr Cliff told the Traffic Institute of local authority engineers and consultants that police were concentrating immediate efforts on a $10 million rollout of 56 new digital speed cameras on some of the country's most dangerous stretches of road by early 2016.

Three of them - two in Auckland and one in Wellington - will be used to catch red-light runners at dangerous intersections.


But once the rollout was completed, the police would want to keep increasing their use of new technologies to slow motorists.

"We are aware there's a possibility of using mobile point-to-point cameras," he said.

"This means we can have a camera in one location and another four to five kilometres down the road, and the two cameras can measure speed between them."

The technology is used in several European countries, some parts of Australia and in Britain, where a study recorded a 46 per cent decline in fatal crashes and 37 per cent fewer serious injury smashes along 51km of road in southwest Scotland since point-to-point cameras were installed in 2005.

An early version of the idea was trialled in New Zealand in the mid-1980s, when police used spotter planes to time how long it took vehicles to travel between large white strips painted on high-speed roads.

Mr Cliff told the Herald he had only a vague recollection of the trial, and expected it was abandoned as being too expensive.

But a camera manufacturer had indicated the possibility of using newer technology to similar ends, after Victorian police had found it effective in reducing average speeds.

"It forces people to measure speed across the whole journey, and it generates minimal numbers of [infringement] notices because it is a powerful deterrent," he said.

"It's more on long stretches like motorways, where you want to keep speeds nice and even."

He did not yet know if the new digital cameras could be adapted for that purpose.

Automobile Association spokesman Dylan Thomsen said his organisation would support the idea as long as police explained it fairly to drivers.

Road Transport Forum chief Ken Shirley also backed it in principle, as long as the technology did not prove too costly, adding to freight charges.

Mr Cliff told the conference the police and partner organisations such as the Transport Agency still had plenty of work to convince the public that speeding was socially unacceptable in the same way drink-driving was regarded.

Each 5km/h travelled above a speed limit doubled the risk of a vehicle being involved in an injury crash, and the likelihood for a car going 70km/h in a 60km/h zone was the same as one in which the driver's alcohol level was 100mg per 100 millilitres of blood.

That compares with the existing limit of 80mg, to be reduced to 50mg on December 1.

But Mr Cliff said the police had won a positive response after last summer's campaign against speeding.

Cycle safety panel to push for fixed passing buffers

Experts reviewing cycling safety after coronial concern at a spate of road deaths will recommend mandatory passing distances for motorists, and consideration of "side under-run" protection devices on trucks.

A 10-member panel appointed by the Transport Agent is also likely to recommend keeping helmets compulsory for road cyclists, but does not favour making high-viz clothing mandatory, its chairman indicated to a conference in Auckland yesterday.

Richard Leggatt told the NZ Traffic Institute his panel would recommend a mandatory buffer distance of one metre for vehicles passing bikes in urban areas at up to 60km/h, and 1.5m at faster speeds or on rural roads.

It would also recommend Government consider the "cost-effectiveness" of installing devices on trucks to stop cyclists being dragged under them, among other techno-logical improvements such as collision detection warnings and more mirrors.

Mr Leggatt, a former chairman of Bike NZ who is a director of several organisations including New Zealand Post, said the number of serious accidents involving cyclists and trucks was markedly higher than those involving buses.

He believed that was mainly because buses sat much lower on the road than trucks.

"If you fall off a bike you really only hit the side of a bus and roll away," he said.

His panel, appointed after a 2013 review by Coroner Gordon Matenga of 13 bike deaths, is due to present a draft report to cycling groups next week and then to a reference group for consideration next month, before recommendations are made for government response in December.

Road Transport Forum chief Ken Shirley said side under-run protection in countries such as Britain had proven ineffective.

But Assistant Police Commissioner for road policing Dave Cliff said it was "a great idea."

- NZ Herald
人们经常是不讲道理的、没有逻辑的和以自我为中心的。不管怎样,你要原谅他们。即使你是友善的,人们可能还是会说你自私和动机不良。不管怎样,你还是要友善。

使用道具 举报

Rank: 10Rank: 10Rank: 10

升级  96.4%

UID
135831
热情
1860
人气
2959
主题
58
帖子
1964
精华
0
积分
3446
阅读权限
30
注册时间
2008-1-7

10周年纪念

沙发
发表于 2014-9-17 06:50:55 |只看该作者 微信分享

使用道具 举报

Rank: 13Rank: 13Rank: 13Rank: 13

升级  15.38%

UID
365553
热情
5047
人气
5827
主题
23
帖子
607
精华
0
积分
5769
阅读权限
30
注册时间
2013-9-23
板凳
发表于 2014-9-17 10:15:45 |只看该作者 微信分享
这种测速方式国内多少年之前就开始实施了,只是这边高速没有收费站,也没有那么多cctv监控

使用道具 举报

Rank: 4

升级  61.43%

UID
315547
热情
23
人气
98
主题
1
帖子
22
精华
0
积分
73
阅读权限
20
注册时间
2012-3-14
地板
发表于 2014-9-17 11:05:56 |只看该作者 微信分享
老子睡一觉再开快车!操你妈的警察!

使用道具 举报

头像被屏蔽

禁止发言

啥牛逼干啥

UID
383663
热情
1459
人气
1761
主题
4
帖子
1560
精华
0
积分
2399
阅读权限
1
注册时间
2014-7-4
5#分享本帖地址
发表于 2014-9-17 11:23:11 |只看该作者 微信分享
提示: 作者被禁止或删除 内容自动屏蔽
签名被屏蔽

使用道具 举报

您需要登录后才可以回帖 登录 | 注册

手机版| 联系论坛客服| 广告服务| 招贤纳士| 新西兰天维网

GMT+12, 2025-8-29 21:19 , Processed in 0.020024 second(s), 14 queries .

Powered by Discuz! X2 Licensed

Copyright 2001- Sky Media Limited, All Rights Reserved.

回顶部