Driving in Germany tomorrow
Discussion
matt3001 said:
Any useful pointers? I.e on different or quirky road laws?
http://www.gettingaroundgermany.info/autobahn.shtmlThey drive a *lot* faster and more accurately than the Brits.
You can be fined for tailgating. There is a sliding scale of fines.
Various offensive hand signals also have fines.
Lane discipline is strict. Pull in and let faster traffic pass, even if
you only pull in for 10 seconds.
A small set of lights a long long way back on the autobahn,
might be doing 250 - 300kmh on the unrestricted bits.
Look at least twice and, if it's your first time over there, stay *out*
of the fast lane of the autobahn. The locals won't appreciate clueless
newbies trying to keep up with them and making a dog's breakfast of it.
stefan740 said:
In the centre of some large cities a "umweltplakette" is needed, available at petrol stations for instance.
Hmmm, didn't realise this. Have driven into the centre of Cologne at least twice and all the way across the middle of Stuttgart last year without realising. Oops.I remember seeing the signs in Cologne last time and the signs that said 'frei' with a picture of the red, yellow and green discs obviously meant 'free if you have a disc' and not 'free from having to have a disc'.
I wonder how it's enforced as having unintentionally got away with it at least three times now, the chance of a €40 fine seems cheaper than buying a €40 disc...
topalwaysdown said:
stefan740 said:
In the centre of some large cities a "umweltplakette" is needed, available at petrol stations for instance.
Hmmm, didn't realise this. Have driven into the centre of Cologne at least twice and all the way across the middle of Stuttgart last year without realising. Oops.I remember seeing the signs in Cologne last time and the signs that said 'frei' with a picture of the red, yellow and green discs obviously meant 'free if you have a disc' and not 'free from having to have a disc'.
I wonder how it's enforced as having unintentionally got away with it at least three times now, the chance of a €40 fine seems cheaper than buying a €40 disc...
topalwaysdown said:
stefan740 said:
In the centre of some large cities a "umweltplakette" is needed, available at petrol stations for instance.
Hmmm, didn't realise this. Have driven into the centre of Cologne at least twice and all the way across the middle of Stuttgart last year without realising. Oops.I remember seeing the signs in Cologne last time and the signs that said 'frei' with a picture of the red, yellow and green discs obviously meant 'free if you have a disc' and not 'free from having to have a disc'.
I wonder how it's enforced as having unintentionally got away with it at least three times now, the chance of a €40 fine seems cheaper than buying a €40 disc...
Prancing Hippo said:
Buying the sticker costs EUR 7. Not all petrol stations sell it though, and you normally need your service book handy for them to check.
Yeah, after a bit more research I see the €40 option is a website trying to con extra out of people. I'll take all my papers and see if I can pick one up over there next month, will probably be useful in the future 
topalwaysdown said:
Prancing Hippo said:
Buying the sticker costs EUR 7. Not all petrol stations sell it though, and you normally need your service book handy for them to check.
Yeah, after a bit more research I see the €40 option is a website trying to con extra out of people. I'll take all my papers and see if I can pick one up over there next month, will probably be useful in the future 
Mine arrived in 3 days.
https://www.berlin.de/labo/kfz/dienstleistungen/fe...
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