Speed Limiters?
Discussion
I was on the A34 heading north on the lumpy bits between Newbury and Oxford last week.
I was overtaking a line of lorries which were just getting on with work, on the last down hill stretch the foremost truck which had been leapfrogging the others a bit started to accelerate down the hill, I kept pace with him to an indicated 80mph - no porkies there!
At that point he was still accelerating so i let him go and pulled in behind him, it was a Polish registered truck, i caught him up again where on the flat he was still doing an indicated 65mph.
My question is: Do commercial vehicles have speed limiters that can be overridden?
Cheers
I was overtaking a line of lorries which were just getting on with work, on the last down hill stretch the foremost truck which had been leapfrogging the others a bit started to accelerate down the hill, I kept pace with him to an indicated 80mph - no porkies there!
At that point he was still accelerating so i let him go and pulled in behind him, it was a Polish registered truck, i caught him up again where on the flat he was still doing an indicated 65mph.
My question is: Do commercial vehicles have speed limiters that can be overridden?
Cheers
sherbertdip said:
I was on the A34 heading north on the lumpy bits between Newbury and Oxford last week.
I was overtaking a line of lorries which were just getting on with work, on the last down hill stretch the foremost truck which had been leapfrogging the others a bit started to accelerate down the hill, I kept pace with him to an indicated 80mph - no porkies there!
At that point he was still accelerating so i let him go and pulled in behind him, it was a Polish registered truck, i caught him up again where on the flat he was still doing an indicated 65mph.
My question is: Do commercial vehicles have speed limiters that can be overridden?
Cheers
I know that road well.I was overtaking a line of lorries which were just getting on with work, on the last down hill stretch the foremost truck which had been leapfrogging the others a bit started to accelerate down the hill, I kept pace with him to an indicated 80mph - no porkies there!
At that point he was still accelerating so i let him go and pulled in behind him, it was a Polish registered truck, i caught him up again where on the flat he was still doing an indicated 65mph.
My question is: Do commercial vehicles have speed limiters that can be overridden?
Cheers
The speed limiter only prevents the engine pushing the truck beyond 90 kph on the flat or uphill.
Downhill, the "Soap Box Derby" effect takes over. The weight of the truck carries it beyond 90kph and needs the driver to use the brakes, retarder and/or the exhaust brake to control the speed. The heavier the truck, the faster you can go, downhill
bigwheel said:
sherbertdip said:
I was on the A34 heading north on the lumpy bits between Newbury and Oxford last week.
I was overtaking a line of lorries which were just getting on with work, on the last down hill stretch the foremost truck which had been leapfrogging the others a bit started to accelerate down the hill, I kept pace with him to an indicated 80mph - no porkies there!
At that point he was still accelerating so i let him go and pulled in behind him, it was a Polish registered truck, i caught him up again where on the flat he was still doing an indicated 65mph.
My question is: Do commercial vehicles have speed limiters that can be overridden?
Cheers
I know that road well.I was overtaking a line of lorries which were just getting on with work, on the last down hill stretch the foremost truck which had been leapfrogging the others a bit started to accelerate down the hill, I kept pace with him to an indicated 80mph - no porkies there!
At that point he was still accelerating so i let him go and pulled in behind him, it was a Polish registered truck, i caught him up again where on the flat he was still doing an indicated 65mph.
My question is: Do commercial vehicles have speed limiters that can be overridden?
Cheers
The speed limiter only prevents the engine pushing the truck beyond 90 kph on the flat or uphill.
Downhill, the "Soap Box Derby" effect takes over. The weight of the truck carries it beyond 90kph and needs the driver to use the brakes, retarder and/or the exhaust brake to control the speed. The heavier the truck, the faster you can go, downhill
Chipchap said:
GC8 said:
The EU limit is 90kph which trumps the British limit of 60mph.
The EU legislation states [or used to] 85 km/h with a tolerance of 5 km/h. In UK we do straight to 90 km/h or 56 MPH generally. Some fleets set them lower for fuel economy.Some fleets set them lower to cause congestion ,elephant racing and stress..
From talking to a techie about a digicard unit that was fubar , the limiters are getting and will get more and more sophisticated .
Most are linked with the digicard units , so as the naughty boys find bypasses the boffins add more technology.
If you are really unlucky you work for a company that have a tracker system that records every indiscretion of overspeed or progress on restricted roads, they even know when a door is open.
Once when doing agency work I was phoned at the first call telling me to slow down and to turn the engine off while unloading , at the second call the battery died because the tail lift killed it , nice short trip that was .
Most are linked with the digicard units , so as the naughty boys find bypasses the boffins add more technology.
If you are really unlucky you work for a company that have a tracker system that records every indiscretion of overspeed or progress on restricted roads, they even know when a door is open.
Once when doing agency work I was phoned at the first call telling me to slow down and to turn the engine off while unloading , at the second call the battery died because the tail lift killed it , nice short trip that was .
grumpy52 said:
The old trick of having old tyres on their last re-cut when going for speed limiter calibration and then fitting nice new tyres would give a few more mph .
I understand the latest trucks use GPS links for speed limiters !
It's the Tacho calibration when you want to have a set of old tyres on, the speed limiter just receives a speed signal from the Tacho.I understand the latest trucks use GPS links for speed limiters !
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