Wildguzzi.com
General Category => General Discussion => Topic started by: Waterbottle on February 23, 2015, 05:34:19 AM
-
Hi all, Fine Reduced to a sane level, thank the Guzzi Gods !
The story ( From my Tassie Trip ) was that I was keeping up with a mate in Melbourne, and must of had a moment of complete and utter disregard for the law, resulting in my exceeding to posted speed limit of 40 Kph by a rediculously high 7 Kph.
As I'm interested in saving the country money, instead of having a company delivery van or something similar , I opted for a delivery motorbike. The taxation dept. doesn't specify that it should be a small bike so .... I figured a Griso must get the job done more efficiently ? All Griso riders will know that the difference between 40 and 47 kph in 2nd gear is a Poof-teenth of a throttle twist. I Honestly had No idea I had broken the sound barrier .
So here is the deal, A company owned and registered Vehicle ( of any sort ) breaking any road rules in Victoria Australia , Will be Fined a minimum of $2900 ( A law was passed through their government in July 2014) ifyou nominate a driver, the fine " May " be reduced at their discretion . Company fine..........
(http://i1273.photobucket.com/albums/y401/aerotor/5962E74F-A290-47A5-9AAF-3349A3253F87_zpsocug5un9.jpg) (http://s1273.photobucket.com/user/aerotor/media/5962E74F-A290-47A5-9AAF-3349A3253F87_zpsocug5un9.jpg.html)
Corrected Fine for the Responsible person ?
(http://i1273.photobucket.com/albums/y401/aerotor/E3A7A931-64B3-4075-B134-324B5EF1E03B_zps0w7lsdtp.jpg) (http://s1273.photobucket.com/user/aerotor/media/E3A7A931-64B3-4075-B134-324B5EF1E03B_zps0w7lsdtp.jpg.html)
Riding in Victoria... Be Careful :o
-
Goodness. What does 'nominate a driver' mean? That the driver pays the fine?
-
That sounds terrible, but in thinking about it, maybe it's a way to eliminate the attitude that I've heard many times: "I drive as fast as I want, because the company pays all my fines." The company gets hit hard if they pay, so they "nominate" the driver. The only catch I see is if the company later reimburses the driver under the table.
-
That sounds terrible, but in thinking about it, maybe it's a way to eliminate the attitude that I've heard many times: "I drive as fast as I want, because the company pays all my fines." The company gets hit hard if they pay, so they "nominate" the driver. The only catch I see is if the company later reimburses the driver under the table.
Could be like in Finland, where the fine is a percentage of your Adjusted Gross Income on your Finnish 1040 form (whatever that is). For a "reckless driving" level fine, the amount is 1% of your AGI, which can amount to $100,000 for a guy making a lot of money.
Seems like that would slow people down AND help fund all the "free" social services too!
Lannis
-
Goodness. What does 'nominate a driver' mean? That the driver pays the fine?
Yes . The driver then pays the fine and also loses Demerit points off their Licence.
Only 1 point lost here from a total of 12. It's the first one I've lost since 2009 when I was caught on the Hwy doing 120 in a 100 zone, ( 4 points that time ) all excited about picking up a new Griso ::)
-
Could be like in Finland, where the fine is a percentage of your Adjusted Gross Income on your Finnish 1040 form (whatever that is). For a "reckless driving" level fine, the amount is 1% of your AGI, which can amount to $100,000 for a guy making a lot of money.
Seems like that would slow people down AND help fund all the "free" social services too!
Lannis
Lordy.
Ten million dollars? Yes, that qualifies as "a guy making a lot of money." :o
Bill
-
Makes me really proud to be an American!
-
One of the nice things about riding in Kansas. No speed cameras and in most places if you are alert you will detect the patrol car before they nail you. It has also been my personal experience that they give riders on Guzzis quite a bit of slack. :+=copcar
GliderJohn
-
Your revenue enhancement department is industrial strength greedy.
Someone needs to find a way to yank them up on a short leash.
Keep your ears open for a chance to bring a mega lawsuit against them.
Money is the only language they understand.
-
Lordy.
Ten million dollars? Yes, that qualifies as "a guy making a lot of money." :o
Bill
It's happened to some of them. They DO make the news!! "Progressive" fine structure in action!
Lannis
-
Good grief! A 47 in a 40 converted to miles is like 29mph in a 25. The fine here would not be that steep even for 'hitting the crossing guard"
-
Good grief! A 47 in a 40 converted to miles is like 29mph in a 25. The fine here would not be that steep even for 'hitting the crossing guard"
In NC, they won't even bother to write a ticket until it's 10MPH over (or in a school zone)
-
One of the nice things about riding in Kansas. No speed cameras and in most places if you are alert you will detect the patrol car before they nail you. It has also been my personal experience that they give riders on Guzzis quite a bit of slack. :+=copcar
GliderJohn
The only problem with that is "riding in Kansas"
-
It's Victoria. The cops will shoot you for looking at them sideways. You should never go more than 3km/h over the limit down there.
-
I had an Aprilia RSV owning customer who is a NSW highway patrol bloke and he said that they reckon anything under 10kph over is what they call a 'Shit Ticket'. They do give them out in town but if you're on the highway unless you give them a mouthful they'll generally just give you a talking to ::).
Funny one on Sunday morning. Beetle and I were in my preposterous little Suzuki Jimny driving down to the workshop to do some logging runs on Mark III's Griso with the Mistral Conical pipe. Pottering along well below the posted 50kph limit in town and HP goes the other way. As soon as he's past us he throws a U turn and lights me up!
I'm utterly perplexed! I was being the ultimate 'Captain Sensible'! Anyway he comes to the window and gives me the 'You understand everything you say and do is being filmed and recorded' schpeil, (Damn! And there was I about to give him a punch in the gob and curse him out! ;D) and asks for my license. I'm still horribly confused and then he asks me 'Are you a green 'P' plater?' And it dawns on me.
My daughter only got her licence nearly three years ago. In Oz for the first year after you pass your test you have to display a red plate with a P on it and are restricted to 80kph, in the next two years you have to display a green P plate. I'd forgotten to take them off after Erika had been driving us home from the pub the night before!
It was still a crappy pull, he must of been bored, but he didn't ticket me and was as friendly as these bastards ever are so I just pulled the plates off and chatted for a minute and we were on our way. He had peered in at Beetle in the passenger seat and said 'It looks cosy in there', (The Jimny is a tiny car!) and as we pulled off Beetle pulled his tank bag containing his laptop and gear out from between his legs and waved it at me and asked 'Perhaps I should of asked him if he'd like to see the head I have in my bag?'.
Oh dear! I laughed so hard I almost missed the turn off to the workshop!
Pete
-
One of the Aussies that made the Okie camp out in 2011 related a story about getting pulled over for exceeding the speed limit by some small amount . Seemed odd to someone that is acclimated to the norm here , usually 10 over outside of school zones and really congested areas . Guess every country has its norms .
Dusty
-
(http://imgs.xkcd.com/comics/screws.png)
-
I had an Aprilia RSV owning customer who is a NSW highway patrol bloke .....
Yup. I have one law-enforcement friend that rides a 1300cc Yamaha sportbike, and another that has a supercharged Corvette .... Seems to be a lot of that going around. What do you want to bet that they occasionally exceed the speed limit by some fractional amount ... like 150%? :D
-
I received a $75 fine for doing 38 in a 35 zone in Johnston RI, 4 lanes down hill
-
Wow and now you know why American's will never give up their guns.
It keeps the Government Fines somewhat in control for the common folk.
Still I must admit the 1% (of gross) rule of Finland has some merit. and they are the land of the Jokamiesluokka or Folkrace
-
Whilst I see a percentage of gross income being an effective revenue raiser I don't think it directly targets road safety as it should.
I see road travel like any other risk assessment. Its risk and consequence. The consequences of a multi ton B-double traveling 10kph over the limit is far greater than a small sedan. Its all relative kinetic energy and the potential to do damage.
I think the fine should be proportional to the Gross Vehicle Mass.
-
Whilst I see a percentage of gross income being an effective revenue raiser I don't think it directly targets road safety as it should.
I see road travel like any other risk assessment. Its risk and consequence. The consequences of a multi ton B-double traveling 10kph over the limit is far greater than a small sedan. Its all relative kinetic energy and the potential to do damage.
I think the fine should be proportional to the Gross Vehicle Mass.
Good on you Yak Fat ;-T , I don't like my chances of that happening here, but it would make it easier on us motorcyclists. So a griso is around 1/6 the weight of the average sedan ? ........ 1/6 the fine sounds good to me :D
-
Good on you Yak Fat ;-T , I don't like my chances of that happening here, but it would make it easier on us motorcyclists. So a griso is around 1/6 the weight of the average sedan ? ........ 1/6 the fine sounds good to me :D
Rather than just Vehicle Mass, we should use the Kinetic Energy of the vehicle when the offense occurred (1/2MV-squared).
That way, someone on a Griso going 140 MPH with the potential of cutting a school van full of kids in half would get the same penalty as a car capable of doing the same thing at a lower speed .... ? That way, we wouldn't penalize truck drivers disproportionately, since the Mass is just multiplied once but the Velocity twice ....
Over 100 MPH is automatic jail time (overnight at a minimum) in Virginia at any rate.
Lots of ways to do it, just gotta be fair.
Lannis
-
My,my,my.
According to my internet kms-mph conversion skills, the speed limit was 24.855 mph ( I call it 25 ) and you were clipping along at 29.2 mph.
That is a whopping 4 mph !!!! That is 7.3 fps. My goodness, you are a brazen speed demon.
If I had ever written something like that, without any other factors involved, weather-near miss etc., I don't think I would sleep well.
Tell me this was a photo enforcement citation, and not a face to face contact.
kjf
-
Quote from Ken Farr:
If I had ever written something like that, without any other factors involved, weather-near miss etc., I don't think I would sleep well.
Tell me this was a photo enforcement citation, and not a face to face contact.
Back in the 80s my first wife who was about as sweet and polite as you can get received a ticket for ONE mile over on a one way street in Wichita. I told her to go to court with it but she paid it.
GliderJohn
-
It's almost like traffic police are in the business of collecting taxes rather than maintaining public safety, or something.
-
My,my,my.
According to my internet kms-mph conversion skills, the speed limit was 24.855 mph ( I call it 25 ) and you were clipping along at 29.2 mph.
That is a whopping 4 mph !!!! That is 7.3 fps. My goodness, you are a brazen speed demon.
If I had ever written something like that, without any other factors involved, weather-near miss etc., I don't think I would sleep well.
Tell me this was a photo enforcement citation, and not a face to face contact.
kjf
It was a camera that got me, no personal touch, so I guess the local police force where out doing some real work.
If I pay an extra few $$$ I can get the photo sent to me, I'm going to have it framed with the original fine to remind me of what a bad person a Griso can turn you into.
I should be stripped naked and beaten with wet celery until I repent, :D
I think that the New South Wales and Victorian Government here in Aus use Civilian Contractors now to operate mobile speed cameras , or is this just a rumor ?
At the end of the day, I messed up, It's not a huge fine, no one was hurt, I'll just be more careful in the future.....
Cheers Ron
-
Quote from Waterbottle:
If I pay an extra few $$$ I can get the photo sent to me, I'm going to have it framed with the original fine to remind me of what a bad person a Griso can turn you into.
Back in the 70s I knew a wild and crazy New jersey guy that was going to college in Kansas. He had previously owned a highly modified Honda 750 and had a framed speeding ticket on his wall from Jersey for 164mph! He said that speeding ticket helped him to sell that bike for way more than he would have without it even county his bail, fines and court costs.
GliderJohn
-
I think that the New South Wales and Victorian Government here in Aus use Civilian Contractors now to operate mobile speed cameras , or is this just a rumor ?
Nope, it's true. They're frequently lurking around town here.
-
Hey, stop whining. Your vicpol has told you: “Cameras Save Lives!” Believe.
Actually, only one ticket? You were a lucky fellow.
See http://www.camerassavelives.vic.gov.au/home/locations/
Oh, I knew about ‘roos, but had no idea you all had ‘corns, too. https://www.youtube.com/embed/VluOZbSHSks
OTOH, while researching,” saw this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9N1iw5Vdim8 I like that enforcement.
Bill
-
I don't think you'll find many motorcyclists will complain about that. As the Walloper said of the last dizzy bint, "You've been talking on it for five seconds with me next to you with my lights on. You have no idea of your surroundings!"
Sez it all really. No call is that urgent. The ones I love are the ones I see from the elevated position in my van where I can look down on people next to me. You would weep if you knew how common it is to see, (Usually young women!) updating their FB as they are driving! Not even stopped at lights, actually driving in traffic in Canberra! On the bike I try not to think about it too much.
Pete
-
Utah legislature just last year approved increasing the speed limit on numerous stretches of highway to 80mph (128 km). UHP appears to be ok with folks doing 85mph on those stretches. Noticed many other areas being increased from 65 to 70/70 to 75 mph as well. :bike
-
Here's my better side :D, How did the slow guy ( Phil ) on the Road King and the Leader of the pack ( Rick ) not get pinged too ?
(http://i1273.photobucket.com/albums/y401/aerotor/C38CB1D4-11CB-4E0E-B3B6-AEB302793C64_zpsop47pqhf.jpg) (http://s1273.photobucket.com/user/aerotor/media/C38CB1D4-11CB-4E0E-B3B6-AEB302793C64_zpsop47pqhf.jpg.html)
Actually , my most sincere apologies to Rick, that's Warren ( Wazza ) in front on the ever so slow GS BMW, God help me it's like riding with Miss Daisy :D
-
In NC, they won't even bother to write a ticket until it's 10MPH over (or in a school zone)
Sounds just like the sort of place i'd like to live.
and
Are you allowed to go to the local library, find a comfy chair and then sleep most of the day
;-T
-
Yes, if you can find a library. ;D 10 over is right much standard here in the US unless........... :BEER:
Matt
-
It's almost like traffic police are in the business of collecting taxes rather than maintaining public safety, or something.
Bingo,Nail head,Exactamundo. You can tell exactly when the monthy quota is due around here. No cops on the roads then 2 or 3 days of seeing everyone and there brother pulled over then back to ghost town.
-
Here's my better side :D, How did the slow guy ( Phil ) on the Road King and the Leader of the pack ( Rick ) not get pinged too ?
(http://i1273.photobucket.com/albums/y401/aerotor/C38CB1D4-11CB-4E0E-B3B6-AEB302793C64_zpsop47pqhf.jpg) (http://s1273.photobucket.com/user/aerotor/media/C38CB1D4-11CB-4E0E-B3B6-AEB302793C64_zpsop47pqhf.jpg.html)
Actually , my most sincere apologies to Rick, that's Warren ( Wazza ) in front on the ever so slow GS BMW, God help me it's like riding with Miss Daisy :D
Looks mighty close to a red-light violation, too. ;)
Bill
-
I've gotten my share of tickets, but when watching my speed I use a sliding scale, my ~15% rule. That is, I figure it is safe to go about 15% above the posted speed limit, so 29 in a 25; 58 in a 50, etc. The problem, of course, is that the speedo isn't perfectly accurate.
Rich A
-
I got a ticket in OZ once.
*** Where are you heading was the question? Canberra I said to visit the War Memorial there.
They were very polite as they looked at my drivers licenses. Then they informed me that I had made an illegal u turn in the road and although was legal in Canberra is was illegal in NSW.
They issued me a ticket and told me if I failed to pay the fine before leaving OZ I would be on a watch list and if I ever came back to OZ I could be in big trouble! (ridden 1000's of Ks' in OZ since)
mike :-)
I am generally a defender of the LEO's, but those guys were asshats. ::(
The rigid refusal to exercise discretion is a bane and has crept into law enforcement over the past few decades. Their supervisors may insist on that, but cops, like most of us, know how to look the other way if they choose. [And, yes, BTW, I blame lawyers for much of this mindless lockstep "logic." :'(]
That's what I think I always liked about Italian cops, especially the ones who have stopped me over the years. Admittedly, last time in 2006, so mebbe they, too, have changed. Hope not.
First, the Italian blue-light folks seem to give a polite tourist (with a plausible story! ;)) way more than an even break. I never got a ticket, tho Carbs, Polizia, and even a Municipio or three have all stopped me with that red magic wand quite a number of times, and I almost always did not need to be told why.
Yet, those officers were always polite, and some even near deferential and apologetic when I explained that I was (pick the excuse) in my crippled but ernest Italian. In fact, my Italian was so bad in that last (2006) incident in Bergamo, that Mike and Sue Craven, riding behind me, can attest that the city cop just through up his hands in amused frustration and waved me on. ;D
Several friends have gotten camera tix over there and those are hard to argue with "on the spot," but I've luckily missed those evil things except in Washington, D.C.
So, that sort of Ozian shix is pretty off-putting for anyone thinking about a vacation there when one can be a near-hooligan in the Dolomites ... without worrying about 'roo, snakes, and other beasties, including those in uniforms. :D
Bill
-
OTOH, while researching,” saw this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9N1iw5Vdim8 I like that enforcement.
Bill
....what the hell, he ignores all those wrong way drivers......
kjf
-
When we were in Sweden we were warned that speeding tickets start right at 1 km/h above the speed limit and run about $100/km/h over the limit. They also collect the fine at the time the citation is issued. Same story in Norway. They have speed cameras, which have a great deal of signage, you basically have to be unconscious to miss them.
California: apparently if you drive less than 80 mph in a 55 zone you would be cited for obstructing traffic.
Italy's Autostrada: posted max speed 90 kph, which is strictly observed by trucks and buses in the rightmost lane. Center lane runs about 175-180 kph. Leftmost lane appeared to be around the speed of sound.
-
Guess I shouldn't feel bad about getting a warning for 60 mph in a 45. P:)
I was stupid for waiving at the cop before he turned his light on- actually ignorant, not stupid. I had no idea I was speeding in the first place. Glad he didn't catch me before I crested that hill because I was hauling ass then.
-
I'm a glass is half full kinda guy.
When I get the occasional piddling speeding fine, I'm just happy they didn't get me the 1000s of other times I was way, way over!
Kurt
-
I do think that (in recent years) it has more to do with revenue than with traffic safety.
Recently in the news... a city near here was audited to discover an average of 1,000 speeding citations/year issued. This was five years ago.
Last year - 9,000 speeding citations.
A good friend of mine is Chief Of Police in a neighboring town. He complains that he is constantly under pressure to issue more and more citations. Basically, his performance evaluation is directly tied to his revenue stream.
As with speed and stoplight cameras which are operated by civilian enterprises - THIS is nothing short of a revenue machine, clear and simple.
1% of AGI ? That is criminal.
-
1% of AGI ? That is criminal.
Not so different from here in the USA.
Say a guy makes $60,000 a year (sort of normal), and has some credits and losses that make his AGI $40,000.
A 1%-of-AGI fine would be $400. Not too amazing for, say, 25 MPH over the limit in Virginia, making it reckless driving, along with court costs ....
Lannis
-
I do think that (in recent years) it has more to do with revenue than with traffic safety.
Recently in the news... a city near here was audited to discover an average of 1,000 speeding citations/year issued. This was five years ago.
Last year - 9,000 speeding citations.
A good friend of mine is Chief Of Police in a neighboring town. He complains that he is constantly under pressure to issue more and more citations. Basically, his performance evaluation is directly tied to his revenue stream.
As with speed and stoplight cameras which are operated by civilian enterprises - THIS is nothing short of a revenue machine, clear and simple.
1% of AGI ? That is criminal.
Nothing but revenue enhancement. I'm bad about having a one track mind and working something over upstairs while I'm driving and not paying attention to my speed. I admit it, and it's no excuse. Finally broke down and bought a good radar detector a couple weeks ago, and I'm sure it's already saved me getting one ticket. But it_is_nothing but a big source of revenue for the cops, and the cities.