Drago
Legendary Member
- Location
- Suburban Poshshire
I love posting drivel, nonsense and downright bullpois, but I do have this nasty habit of sometimes posting something so correct, so adroitly observed, that it makes grown men weep.
I think they would be great... if people could be trusted to behave with them.
It applies to all those things, but the consequences for users, pedestrians, etc, are proving to be disproportionately serious for escooters when people misbehave.
It astonishes me sometimes that we permit people with such low IQ's to breed.
Meh, that little scooter is barely going to be struggling along at walking speed with all them on it. The most likely way to crush anyone will be if someone else runs into them!It astonishes me sometimes that we permit people with such low IQ's to breed. Poor old Waynetta will be crushed if they run into anything.
That was just a phase that I omitted, and nothing you wrote disproves what I posted. The so-called red flag act was reversed after about 30 years, but then speed limits were reintroduced in part due to concerns about fast cornering leaving ruts injuring other road users (human and animal), according to Hansard. Except for 4 years, some sort of speed limits have been in force ever since, mostly creeping up until the 1970s.Not true though, is it?
Early steam vehicles were limited to walking pace on the public highway. Speed governed by the man carrying the red flag. The weight and size was a bigger problem than their "cornering too fast". Spade lug wheels did more damage than their road wheels. But changing wheels took time and not everyone bothered either buying road wheels or swapping them for short trips on roads.
And just like horse drawn wagons, they used wide wheels(Often over 12" in width) to spread the weight.
Important piece you missed though.That was just a phase that I omitted, and nothing you wrote disproves what I posted. The so-called red flag act was reversed after about 30 years, but then speed limits were reintroduced in part due to concerns about fast cornering leaving ruts injuring other road users (human and animal), according to Hansard. Except for 4 years, some sort of speed limits have been in force ever since, mostly creeping up until the 1970s.