Alongside sliding towards a hard object, backwards, and realising that you aren’t going to be able to make it around the next corner, the double flash of a GATSO going off in your rear-view mirror is one of the most dreadful experiences you can have on four wheels.
It happened to me earlier this week, at five in the morning, on a section of the M25 on which I must have traveled at least a thousand times in the last 10 years, often at the exact same speed that I was doing this week.
The trouble with GATSOs, somewhat annoyingly, is that you can never tell which ones are switched on and which ones are switched off. Most of them are switched off, but this particular one – mounted on an overhead gantry between junction eight at Reigate and junction nine at Leatherhead going anti-clockwise – has been sat there for years, doing not a lot.
Which is why, for years, I’ve driven past it at my regular quiet, empty motorway gait without so much as a dicky-bird by way of a flash.
Same goes for all the cameras on that section of the M25 between the M23 and the A3. For aeons, they’ve laid dormant unless a speed limit lower than 70mph has been posted due to bad weather or some such, at which point you’re a fool not to slow to within an mph or two of the posted limit.
And then earlier this week, boom-boom, it went off, right out of the blue, at the same speed that I’ve always past it at. Someone, somewhere within the local authorities must simply have decided to turn this particular camera on, and so that’s that. Thank you for calling, welcome back sometime soon.
I reckon I was doing eighty-humthing-ish, maybe a touch less; either way, it was a high enough speed for there to be no arguments, and no question about me receiving a penalty, assuming there was actually a camera up there taking photographs and not merely a light that flashes twice to put the wind up unsuspecting (speeding) motorists.
So all I can do now is wait for the dreaded brown paper envelope to appear in the post, informing me of my punishment. Which, I hope to heck, will be just three points and a fine but it could possibly – because that speed is right on the cusp – be something a little bit naughtier.
Or, of course, I might end up being invited to go on a course to realise the error of my ways, in which case I’ll be there like a shot, listening intently with the best of them in the front row. Whatever it takes, basically, to keep my licence clean, just as it has been for the last 15 years.
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Any News?
Any news Steve?
Thankfully I haven't yet but am still a little nervous as it's a lease car.... though I did read an article on the web the other that suggested something to do with an illegal font on the signs hence they weren't actually issuing any tickets from the cameras on overhead gantries!?
http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/uk-world-news/thousands-drivers-could-set-speeding-1753196
No Excuses
You will never conivince the anti-speeding brigade that your speeding was safe, be it on a dry motorway or deserted island. You are far better off just telling them the truth; you find speed FUN. Because, they cannot argue with that.
For what it's worth I was travelling on the M42/M6 and set my cruise control to about 90mph. Went under about 15 camera gantries then flash flash. That was 5 months ago. No ticket. I had almost hoped I would get one because a picture of me doing 88mph and the caption "Great Scott" would look brilliant on my wall and be worth a few naughty boy points.
Paul
I take your point Paul. But there must be a majority of daft people out there as to be honest it seems that very few people stick to the speed limit and also in many cases the limit doesn't always suit the location. I have seen areas where the limit is too high and vice versa and I'm fairly sure I'm not alone on that score! I drove from Belfast to Dublin today and I stuck to the Motorway limit but I lost count of the number of cars that flew past me! I have also seen many occassions where people have easily exceeded a 50km/h limit on the outskirts of towns or villages, believe you me it's very easy to be doing 60km/h or even in some cases 70km/h as you enter or leave the outlying areas of some of those zones.
@Jedgar
But then the Belfast to Dublin road only has one fixed speed camera on the way down, and everyone knows where it is now.
With the 120 kmh limit (75 mph), 10% speedo, 10% lee-way with the speed camera, you could technically be sitting at an indicated (speedo) 90mph and not be flashed.