this post was submitted on 23 Aug 2024
42 points (100.0% liked)
Bicycling
2206 readers
13 users here now
A community for those who enjoy bicycling for any reason— utility, recreation, sport, or whatever!
Post your questions, experiences, knowledge, pictures, news, links, and (civil) rants.
Rules (to be added on an as-needed basis)
- Comments and posts should be respectful and productive.
- No ads or commercial spam, including linking to your own monetized content.
- Linked content should be as unburdened by ads and trackers as possible.
Welcome!
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
I'm confused. Low speed limits with ordinary traffic is safer for cyclists... but this isn't ordinary traffic. They are support vehicles, used in every major race.
Whoever is enforcing this law is doing so because they hate cyclists. It's like petty revenge for motorists having to abide by the lowered speed limits.
Thank you for commenting what I was thinking but couldn't quite figure out how to articulate.
Unless they get an exclusion, all the risk is on the driver's of the support cars. It would probably be fine, but if there is an automatic speed camera somewhere there would be problems.
But... these support cars are already following the racers for hundreds of KM, so I'm not sure what risk you are referring to.
We're talking about a very small stretch where the speed limits are lower (for the general population during everyday driving), and I'm still not sure why this would be a problem during a planned racing event.
The article makes it seem like they can't continue on those small stretches "because the law says you can't go over 20mph". Seems crazy in this context!
What about on other roads, where there are stop signs or traffic lights? Is it expected that the support vehicles along the race route would have to stop for each one? If so, the race should be completely taken out of Wales for the absurdity of it.
Yeah, that would be an inconvenience, but the local authorities would know how to remedy it.