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Re: No More Speeding in the UK?

To: "MG List" <mgs@autox.team.net>
Subject: Re: No More Speeding in the UK?
From: Max Heim <mvheim@studiolimage.com>
Date: Wed, 5 Jan 2000 12:41:21 -0800
Yes, I suppose that would be simpler... but where is the digital 
electronic speed readout on an MG? Or indeed, almost any car made before 
the mid-nineties?

I suppose it could be required in new cars, but I wouldn't be too worried 
about retrofitting on this scale. The enforcement/maintenance hassles and 
integration problems would be too much for a gov't agency or a private 
contractor, and I don't think the electorate would stand for the entire 
onus being on the car owner. The smog laws in the US, for example, 
frequently have a "maximum expense" cut-off for older cars.

But then, some people probably think a Labour gov't is capable of 
anything...

Eric had this to say:

>Max Heim wrote:
>> 
>> Having used a GPS satellite receiver for navigation at sea I can't
>> imagine that this would really work as advertised. For one thing you
>> aren't getting continuous data, which makes any calculations of
>> instantaneous speed pretty shaky. 
>
>I believe that the satellite/gps just 'positions' the car for an
>on-board computer to see what speed limit you should be doing.  The
>onboard computer works out what speed you are doing (simple enough) and
>makes you stick to it.  
>
>In other words, the onboard computer has maps marked with speed limits
>and the gps just tells it where the car is on those maps.
>
>Maybe the satellite system could also be used for updating mapping info
>and new speed zones (like special road sections under construction, etc.
>
>
>Eric
>'68MGB MkII
>


--

Max Heim
'66 MGB GHN3L76149
If you're near Mountain View, CA,
it's the red one with the silver bootlid.


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