U.K. Should the amount of points on your licence?
Answers:
Hello again David, enjoy your sleep ;o) thx for choosin my answer the other day. In answer to this question no it shouldn't
No same rule for everyone should apply these rules are there for a reason to save lives and possibly your life, people moan about speed camera but you shouldn't have anything to moan about if you are doing the correct speed on that road.
nope don't speed and buy a scanner so you know when to correct yourself xx Ive never got any points as i drive wisely, no good having mod cons if we don't use them xx the law will never change regarding mileage Hun, no haulage firm would ever pay for speeding , enough loony lorry drivers as it is thnx xx
what lose a point off your licence every 10000 miles or something? Depends, does the get away rampage count a miles against the ban you are about to get.
A deep and meaningful question, but wouldn't a better one be: wouldn't it be a better idea to add £100 per year to the road tax rather than the chancellor using the speed cameras as stealth tax?
I drive 50K miles per year and have done for the last ten years, I have got caught once by plod with a laser on a bridge over the A34. Despite this if you are aware of everything on the road around you, you should be able to spot cameras etc and not get any points. Always obey 30 and 40 limits especially as they are the most important.
No, you can kill someone just as easily driving 1000 miles a year as driving 1000 miles a week. The 12 points has just spread to spain, where you start of with 12 points on your license, and then lose points for every violation. Apparently road mortality dropped 27% in the first two weeks of the new system.
Good answer by Richie.
Please obey 30 limits, as they are generally in places where you are more likely to come across pedestrians. If you hit a person at 40, they are more likely to die - simple as that.
But I do hate artificial limits of 40 or 50 imposed on dual carriageways, where it is so unlikely that an incident will occur.
To answer the original question: no, of course not. If you drive more miles, you are more likely to have an accident.
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