Jimjamesak
Already insane, UAA making it worse
I could do 85 on I-5 from Olympia to Vancouver without even anyone blinking at me.That's cruising speed for the Illinois Tollway. You need to speed up if you want to pass.
I could do 85 on I-5 from Olympia to Vancouver without even anyone blinking at me.That's cruising speed for the Illinois Tollway. You need to speed up if you want to pass.
Didn’t realize how fast she was going my ****ing ***. At about 85 I get the, “oh crap I’m going too fast felling.”
I briefly pushed 100 on a long, flat stretch of unsigned back road in Keweenaw County once or twice, in my younger, slightly dumber years. I also did Brockway Mountain Drive (lots of ups/downs/curves, with a pretty sheer drop-off to the left) in the 55-60 range. That was enough. And I didn't even do it in a flashy, RWD sports car!
I’m actually of the mind we should open up the highway system like the autobahn and do dynamic speed limits. Grossly over-enforce the “stay out of the left lane” rules.
At least between the major cities.
I'd be cool with that. Some of these left lane hogs around here are terrible.
Driving I95 between Delaware and Baltimore the far right lane is frequently the fastest.
The break down lane?
I hate I-95.
Well, it could be if you dodged the debris and didn't mind the rumble strip.
I95 is a necessary evil for us on the East Coast. Kudos to NJ for widening the turnpike from Exit 6 to Exit 9.
CT Turnpike needs to be nuked.![]()
CT has the Hutch -- prettiest highway on the Eastern seaboard (though an East Coast 8 is a West Coast 3).
I-95 is hell on earth. The only thing I've seen remotely as bad is the QEW. F-cking Canadians at rush hour -- they drive with the patience of New Yorkers and the ability of New Englanders.
Slight correction - NY has the Hutch. CT has the Merritt and Wilbur Cross. It needs to be 1 lane wider.
If I'm headed to Mass., it's the Merritt. If I'm headed to Providence, it's I95.
I’m actually of the mind we should open up the highway system like the autobahn and do dynamic speed limits. Grossly over-enforce the “stay out of the left lane” rules.
At least between the major cities.
I missed this earlier. Michigan actually adjusted some stretched of their speed limits based on 85th percentile testing. They radar'd traffic in the rural expressways and trunkline highways and gave yes or no approval to raise the speed limits to 75 MPH on expressways and 65 on rural state and US highways.
Funny thing is a heavily traffic'd corridor in the Central UP did not see their speed limits bumped (when, they likely should have) due to (in my opinion) the heavy semi-truck traffic actually behaving closer to the speed limit throughout those stretches of highway.
I believe the Illinois Tollway and IDOT also performed some form of 85th percentile testing when deciding to raise their speed limits, but they only bumped it to 70 on rural expressways. ISTHA has an extensive camera/traffic monitoring system on stretches of I-90, 294, 355, and 88 that already gathers traffic speeds without the need for specialized radaring.
IINM, AZ, NV and WY have all done this and some of the speed increases have been pretty steep. I'm not sure if there are actual posted 75s anywhere in the west but if there are they are in places like this in NV:
<img src="https://i1.wp.com/unusualplaces.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/US50.jpg" height="300" />
High desert straight climbs are even more stunning than the famous flat straights in CA and AZ because the horizon runs much farther.
No posted limits in most of northern AZ on the route to the North Rim of the Grand Canyon. I rented a Camaro convertible for that trip, and it was great.
Someday, this is how we'll test for sociopaths.