fireball
Well-Known Member
Are speed limits any use?
All around us are rules and limits - on the road there are loads of different speed limits and with that there are ways to catch those who choose to ignore them.
We don't entirely get away from this on the water either. Our harbours invariably have a speed limit, but to what purpose?
Well, the obvious answer is safety. As in, It is unsafe to travel over the speed limit - but is it?
In Chichester Harbour, the speed limit is 8 knots. Why 8 knots? I don't know, but it is a speed that most of the displacement craft there cannot achieve.
So - it isn't safe to travel at over 8 knots then? Well - it must be, because the sailing boats are not limited, and you can see quite a large number of racing boats regularly doing 15-20 knots plus.
So - its ok for a dinghy or sailing yacht to travel faster than the limit but not the power driven boats ... why is that then? Well - that could be answered by the 'wash' argument. However, we all know that a planning boat creates less wash than one just coming up onto the plane. So the argument doesn't quite stand.
What we end up with then is a group of dinghies haring around the harbour at breakneck speed whilst the powerboats aim to transit as quickly as possible and end up creating maximum wash.
However, it isn't all sparkling for the dinghies - they now have the moral obligation to avoid the cruising sail and power boats - as it has been deemed the slower vessels cannot adequately anticipate the wild courses of the dinghies.
We could of course, bring all the boats down to the same speed limit - but then with many dinghies quite a distance from the harbour entrance their racing will be curtailed and the enjoyment reduced - so even less could enjoy the harbour!
Perhaps what we should do is bring in a 'sensible speed' limit. After all, going through the moorings at Itchenor Reach or at Emsworth is going to be dangerous at 8 knots, but probably ok at 4 or 5, but it does depend on the wash created, conversly, one winters afternoon during the week it is perfectly safe to travel at 30 knots (baring a lump of wood in the water, but that's your lookout!).
So - why can't we introduce this 'variable' speed limit for power driven craft ... well - for one, how do you judge 'sensible' - my sensible speed limit is different to anothers so to be successfully prosecuted in 'speeding' we'd be reliant on the judge of the day, and with no set limits it's going to be pot luck - which just isn't fair! Secondly whilst most of us here are responsible enough to judge 'safe speed' and usually do so, many water users do not have the experience or understand the wider implications their actions have, and therefore a finite speed limit is required.
All around us are rules and limits - on the road there are loads of different speed limits and with that there are ways to catch those who choose to ignore them.
We don't entirely get away from this on the water either. Our harbours invariably have a speed limit, but to what purpose?
Well, the obvious answer is safety. As in, It is unsafe to travel over the speed limit - but is it?
In Chichester Harbour, the speed limit is 8 knots. Why 8 knots? I don't know, but it is a speed that most of the displacement craft there cannot achieve.
So - it isn't safe to travel at over 8 knots then? Well - it must be, because the sailing boats are not limited, and you can see quite a large number of racing boats regularly doing 15-20 knots plus.
So - its ok for a dinghy or sailing yacht to travel faster than the limit but not the power driven boats ... why is that then? Well - that could be answered by the 'wash' argument. However, we all know that a planning boat creates less wash than one just coming up onto the plane. So the argument doesn't quite stand.
What we end up with then is a group of dinghies haring around the harbour at breakneck speed whilst the powerboats aim to transit as quickly as possible and end up creating maximum wash.
However, it isn't all sparkling for the dinghies - they now have the moral obligation to avoid the cruising sail and power boats - as it has been deemed the slower vessels cannot adequately anticipate the wild courses of the dinghies.
We could of course, bring all the boats down to the same speed limit - but then with many dinghies quite a distance from the harbour entrance their racing will be curtailed and the enjoyment reduced - so even less could enjoy the harbour!
Perhaps what we should do is bring in a 'sensible speed' limit. After all, going through the moorings at Itchenor Reach or at Emsworth is going to be dangerous at 8 knots, but probably ok at 4 or 5, but it does depend on the wash created, conversly, one winters afternoon during the week it is perfectly safe to travel at 30 knots (baring a lump of wood in the water, but that's your lookout!).
So - why can't we introduce this 'variable' speed limit for power driven craft ... well - for one, how do you judge 'sensible' - my sensible speed limit is different to anothers so to be successfully prosecuted in 'speeding' we'd be reliant on the judge of the day, and with no set limits it's going to be pot luck - which just isn't fair! Secondly whilst most of us here are responsible enough to judge 'safe speed' and usually do so, many water users do not have the experience or understand the wider implications their actions have, and therefore a finite speed limit is required.