Mildly Infuriating
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There are no US roads I am aware of where the speed limit is over 80mph.
Why can a stock US car go faster than 80mph, then? Why does NHSTA approve of cars that can go double, triple that speed? Makes no sense to me, for sure. Especially when similar agencies are doing idiotic and pointless shit like banning Kei Trucks for "safety" reasons when these vehicles are objectively safer and better for the public than any current-model "light truck" 120mph+ road yacht.
Europe approached this same question with a pretty straightforward answer: Intelligent Speed Assistance. ~~It'll be mandatory relatively soon for all new cars, as far as I am aware~~. It's already mandatory for new cars in the EU. There's some nasty privacy implications of it, obviously. Very possibly nasty enough to bring me to a "no" overall on the idea. But the safety considerations are without doubt correct.
Intelligent Speed Assistance is great, went to Spain a few years back and essentially the car would know the limit of each road and give you a little signal/sound each time you went over. Great feature tbh, took about a day to get used to it at first but after that it was smooth sailing.
Texas has a toll road with an 85 mph speed limit https://www.foxnews.com/auto/texas-opens-highway-with-85-mph-speed-limit-fastest-in-america-is-it-too-fast
I didn't know that, sounds incredibly dystopian tbh. Guess I'll have to keep my dinosaur of a car running as long as possible.
Running a motor at or near its mechanical limit for long periods is very bad for it and also is less efficient (in terms of fuel economy). That's why cars are "capable" of 140mph, even though there is nowhere you can actually drive that fast except for race tracks.
What is it for though? It's overridable, so essentially it just makes it easier to ride without paying too much attention. Also, the speedometer legally had to be slightly lower than the actual speed, sp you're actually driivng slower than the speed limit.
Always good to get the US perspective on an article about Amsterdam
We Europeans often share our view on US's business, and you want to gatekeep Americans from sharing their view on European's stuff? The whole point of a link aggregator with comments is people sharing their view.