Putting a brake on speeding

After 42 years of driving, and what must be nearly one million miles of motoring on two and four wheels, I have notched up my first speeding offence.

I have always been speed aware, particularly in built-up areas with low speed limits, so to be pictured by a camera at 37mph in a 30mph zone came as a surprise.

A momentary lapse of concentration and my brain telling me it was a 40mph limit – it switches back to 40mph further along the road – saw me passing the camera at 40mph on the button only to receive the bad news in the post a couple of days later.

I opted to attend a national speed awareness course for £90, rather than pay a £100 fine and take three points on my unblemished licence. It was money well spent!

The speed limit was 30mph when I passed the camera – I thought it was 40mph!

I was expecting four dull hours of being lectured about being a naughty speeder but it was enjoyable, entertaining and educational, delivered in a serious, but fun, way that really helped get the message across.

It started with a photo quiz in which we had to work out the speed limit for various stretches of road and speed limits are for different types of highway, bearing in mind they vary if you are driving a van, lorry or towing.

I didn’t realise smart motorways reduce the speed limit to 40, 50 or 60mph to keeping traffic flowing miles further on by avoiding the traffic bunching. So when the speed limit drops to 50mph don’t question the fact there are no roadworks, accidents or such like. There is a genuine reason that’s out of sight.

Pay extra attention to signs

Speed limits often change near junctions so pay extra attention there and look for the ‘gateway’ limit signs each side of the road to show the speed change.

If you think a couple of miles per hour over the speed limit doesn’t really make a difference, you would have been amazed at a hard-hitting video… in every sense.

  • A modern family car stopped from 30mph in 23 metres under emergency braking. A cardboard box, representing a pedestrian, was then placed where it had stopped.
  • At 31mph the car hit the box at 8mph – at 35mph it was still travelling at 18mph.
  • From 20mph, the car needed 12 metres to stop – at 25mph it hit the box at 15mph.
  • Travelling at 50mph, the stopping distance was 70 metres – at 55mph it was travelling at 23mph when it hit the box.
  • At 70mph, it took 90 metres to complete an emergency stop – at 80mph it was still travelling at 39mph.
  • Between 30 and 40mph the risk of killing a person you hit soars from 7% to 31%.

Speed affects stopping, not arrival time!

Speed doesn’t really affect arrival time but it does impact on a car’s ability to stop. Double your speed and you quadruple your stopping distance… and that’s on a dry road.

Nationally, around 5% of accidents happen on motorways, about 33% on rural roads and some 63% on urban roads. In Norfolk, 70% are on rural roads. And 93% of accidents are down to driver or rider error.

So the message is very much know the limit, why it matters, how to stay in control and select a safe speed.

This educational speed awareness course also included knowing why speed creeps up, such a going downhill, and how to use second gear in a 20mph zone and third in a 30mph limit to help keep the speed down. You could use a speed limiter or cruise control, if fitted, but technology is just an aid to help control speed.

‘Funnel vision’ not ‘tunnel vision’

We also learned about the need for ‘funnel vision’ rather than ‘tunnel vision’ – being more aware of what is each side of the road, including road signs, and dropping back from the car in front when being ‘tailgated’ to increase your ‘safety bubble’. It means you don’t have to brake so hard to stop which could prevent the vehicle tailgating you shunting into your rear end.

Some of you will be saying I now sound like an anti-speeding zealot. So be it!

I paid the price of speeding but it was only £90 and four hours of my time. If I’d hit someone while speeding it could have cost them their life.

The prospect of having to live with that – for the victim’s and my own family and friends, as well as me – would be too high a price to pay.

Next time you’re following a car or motorcycle sticking to the speed limit, don’t get impatient and tailgate. Just consider that it could be me, or someone like me, who has done a speed awareness course and realises the value of their driving licence and the safety of other road-users.

Fuelling a sense of misguided loyalty

You know you’re getting old when you not only start noticing filling station fuel prices but, like the weather, they become a major topic of conversation!

I’ve always been a fan of, what I call, premium brand fuel – Shell, Esso, BP – even though some people insist it all comes out of the same distribution tank.

So, with my local filling station being Shell, I had a Shell Drivers’ Club loyalty card and didn’t think twice about filling up our car, my motorcycle or the fuel cans for the lawnmower.

Occasionally I received a £2.50 voucher in the post off my next fill-up and duly used it next time I topped the tank.

Recently Shell replaced this loyalty scheme with its new Shell Go+ loyalty programme which now rewards visits with 10 being the magic number.

Two visits down, eight to go seems to be wanting a lot of loyalty.

My local Shell garage used to keep its fuel prices roughly in check with the local supermarket. I didn’t mind paying a couple of pence more a litre for Shell petrol or diesel but when the local Shell price was £1.39.9 a litre for diesel and local supermarkets were £1.26.4 and £1.27.9 it made me question the value of these Shell rewards.

With an 800-mile range, I usually fill our car when the gauge gets down to a quarter… or lower. On average, it takes 55 to 60 litres of diesel per fill.

Even at 12p a litre more, filling up with Shell is costing me up to £7.20 extra per tankful. Over 10 visits, at that price difference, that’s up to £72 more – only a few quid less than I would pay for 60 litres of supermarket diesel.

Free fill-up

That seems more rewarding to me – a free fill-up. Or the treat of a nice meal out with the wife, a couple of tickets for a football match or six bottles of half-decent wine.

Unfortunately, the new Shell Go+ reward scheme works on visits instead of points. Surely it makes more sense to be based on how much you spend. The more you spend, the more points you earn and the higher value of the rewards.

All you have to do is spend £10 or more on fuel or £2 or more in the shop. You get 10% off all hot drinks, deli2go, Jamie Oliver deli by Shell food ranges and Shell Helix Motor Oil and Shell Super Shine car wash or Quick wash every time.

AR diesel AdBlue filler
A visit to the Shell filling station normally involves 60 litres of diesel so 10 visits seems excessive to be rewarded.

So I could just fill up with £10 of fuel and turn my one tankful, at the Shell fuel price, into eight or nine visits but I can’t be bothered to keep going into the filling station.

And when I fill my motorbike it rarely takes more than £20 unless it’s running on fumes when I arrive and I don’t let it get that low. Normally it takes £16 to £18 so that would count only as one visit and, again, I’m not going to just top up with a tenner’s worth.

After a couple of visits I received a voucher for £2, hardly a reward given how much more I am paying for the fuel in the first place. It just doesn’t add up to good value at that price, however much you rate the fuel.

So instead of following this new reward programme’s slogan, after a couple of visits I will no longer ‘Say hello to Shell Go+’.

Instead, I’m bidding it ‘Goodbye’ because Shell fuel no longer seems a good buy for me!