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Gambit

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Everything posted by Gambit

  1. congratulations mate. and at least you have a real mans car to replace what was once your ball's [emoji1] but I must admit puts me off marriage is the cost a lot of money for one day and a massive pi$$ up. oh and a certificate to say you've now sold your life lol. I can get alot of car parts for that. [emoji6]
  2. Hope you have a great day peeps :) xx
  3. nice one. mate just thought be cool and maybe help sell some ;) I could send the design for him if nothing else.
  4. Shame I didn't know if you could work the postage out with him personally :(
  5. In all honesty I can't see how he thinks it will go in his favour at all. Copper probably see the footage and thought that was it got him bang to rights. I'm more interested to see the faces of his insurance lol... I'd have to send him a letter with the words. Who's the W@nker now ;) with this printed at the bottom.
  6. I'm guessing old style military jeep :)
  7. I'd have followed through a little too.... :o
  8. Nice hope the weather holds out for you guys :) Remember pictures ;)
  9. Anyone messaged that guy on facebook about some ?
  10. That's the other joke it's not Road tax anymore hasn't been for years. As you said they just replace stuff to keep making us pay
  11. No worries :) Here you go mate look at the pictures. I'm guessing he's getting mixed up with the pipe work being 3" at a guess. http://scoobyworld.co.uk/catalog/product_info.php?cPath=24_53&products_id=3396
  12. Yeah they all come like that just a highflow bell mouth by the looks of it.
  13. Any chance you could record it and get it on youtube ? Is it doing it when the car is running and stationary or just when it moves at slow speed. ? :D Might be a pulley or something non major. But could be bottom end or diffs :(
  14. I was referring to the failure at high speed causing the accident. About 15 20 years ago guy I knew was doing about 130mph in his Escort RS when his tyre let go flinging him into the lampposts killing him instantly. I've also had a tyre let go not as high speed but it happens. I think mine was due to the potholes bubbling the inside tyre on the low profiles. But fully agree that every crash I have been in or witnesses was almost down to human error. And not speed related. And my MOT tester openly admits it's only as good as it was when tested something could fail as you drive out the place that would fail it but at the point its done for 12month, one of the reasons he doesn't pull me up about the cats. My biggest gripe is there is lot's of factors that can make speedometers wrong or their speed guns, also the fact they sit hidden or on parts of roads that I generally see as over taking spot's long straights on A roads places I've never seen a death or accidents ever then say it's to save lives yet statistics show that to be wrong. I know not long ago can't remember where it was now was in the UK they removed all speed cameras and had slightly fewer crashes than when they was there.
  15. My thoughts exactly I can't believe with video evidence the officer telling him he's even tried to continue the argument. I guess stupidity is bread let's just hope he's not passed on the genes :D
  16. Done see a few friends had commented already lol ;)
  17. I'll admit I'm a strong believer in it's not speed that kills people it's human error like Tidgy pointed out. I've been driving long enough to make my own mistakes and see others. All must be down to miss judgment. I'll take the German Autobahn has the least accidents in europe yet you can do what you like flatout if you want. I bet any crash on it is someone crawling in the middle lane. Now I appreciate tyre failure at high speed is a factor that can cause death or mechanical for that fact. I also think any high speed racing should be done on track. But what I hate is how easy it is to go over a speed limit and maybe the speedo not up to what the Police camera read's. Oh and the whole it saves lives B$ come on the Treasury earns billions a year from speeding tickets keep that cash cow rolling.
  18. DRIVERS face being fined and even prosecuted for creeping over the speed limit by as little as 1mph under plans being drawn up by police in some parts of the country. The proposal would result in tens of thousands more speeding tickets being issued and force drivers to keep a far closer eye on their speedometers. Under the current system, contained in police guidelines, drivers are allowed a margin of error of 10% plus 2mph. That means, for example, that police won’t usually prosecute motorists travelling at up to 35mph in a 30mph zone. By the same calculation drivers travelling at up to 79mph on motorways are unlikely to be prosecuted. The guidelines were introduced in 2000 to take account of the possibility of inaccuracy in speed cameras. They were also intended to reassure drivers that the system was fair, rather than simply a money-raising racket. Now police in Scotland have announced that they are axeing the thresholds. From this autumn Scottish drivers going fractionally over the limit will receive formal warning letters. If they are stopped a second time, they will receive a £100 penalty notice and three penalty points or be reported for prosecution. The new procedures, approved by the Scottish government, will be tested in a six-month pilot project. Scottish police — unlike those in England and Wales — have never disclosed the margin of error they use, although it is thought to be similar to that of the rest of the country. If the pilot is successful in reducing accidents, as police hope, it may be adopted by other forces in the UK. The College of Policing, which issues codes of practice to forces in England and Wales, is due to review the speeding enforcement guidelines this year, including the 10% plus 2mph threshold. Today, official police guidance states that police speed cameras are approved to work with a maximum tolerance of 2mph at speeds of up to 66mph and 3% thereafter According to Superintendent Iain Murray, head of road policing in Scotland, the change is being driven by safety considerations. “We are talking about people who might be law-abiding in every other respect but fail to realise the risk they pose by driving on autopilot or failing to pay enough attention to what is going on around them,” he told the Scottish daily The Herald last week. “The use of formal warning will enable us to challenge this behaviour, provide real-time education and monitor how behaviour changes by looking at re-offending rates.” Murray would not be interviewed by The Sunday Times but a spokesman for Police Scotland confirmed that repeat offenders would be penalised. “If you were just fractionally over the first time, you would be given a warning, but if you were to again just be fractionally over, you would be given a fixed penalty or it would be reported to the [procurator] fiscal,” he said. The spokesman said the details of the pilot study — including how speeding would be detected — were still being worked out. Another reason for the change could be recent advances in speed camera technology. The 10% plus 2mph was introduced 15 years ago when the rise in the number of speed cameras required a formalised threshold above which drivers would be penalised and that could be standardised across the country. Before that, prosecution was left to officers’ discretion. Today, official police guidance states that police speed cameras are approved to work with a maximum tolerance of 2mph at speeds of up to 66mph and 3% thereafter, which would mean that drivers travelling at 63mph or more on a 60mph road could be prosecuted. Average speed cameras are even more accurate because they monitor cars over a longer distance, says Geoff Collins from Vysionics, the Surrey-based firm that makes the Specs cameras used to enforce speed limits through motorway roadworks. “The 10% plus 2mph [threshold] isn’t really necessary in order to make allowances for camera inaccuracy,” Collins said. He pointed out that the cameras measure a car’s speed over a long distance, so any inaccuracies in their placing would typically result in an error of less than 0.1%. “Technically it is possible to enforce slight breaches in the limit.” The law states that a car’s speedometer must not display a speed slower than that at which it is moving, though a large margin of error is allowed in the other direction. Motoring groups sounded a warning against the changes, saying they could unintentionally result in motorists paying less attention to the road ahead. “Of course, the speed limit is the limit and people should abide by it,” said Edmund King, president of the AA. “However, you do need a degree of flexibility. You do not want people concentrating 100% on the speedo. You want people concentrating on the road ahead, the potential hazards ahead, and that can mean you might be 2mph-3mph over the limit. You shouldn’t be, but doing that and concentrating on what is going on around you is far safer than continually looking down at your speedo.” “You do not want people concentrating 100% on the speedo. You want people concentrating on the road ahead and that can mean you might be 2mph-3mph over the limit.” Edmund King, president of the AA. Police forces are under pressure to cut injuries on the road after government figures published last month showed that road casualties in Britain had risen by 6% last year, returning to 2012 levels. Scrapping the margin for error is the latest in a number of initiatives aimed at reducing speeding. Speed enforcement is already on the increase, especially on sections of “smart” motorways, where variable limits are used to regulate traffic flow and speed cameras ensure that drivers are complying with the rules. A new generation of camera, known as Hadecs 3, is being installed on motorways, including the M25, M1, M4 and M6 this year. It is used to enforce the 70mph limit when the variable speed limits are switched off. Towns and cities are also seeing stricter speed limits. Research by The Sunday Times found that three-quarters of councils had introduced 20mph speed limits in the past two years, slowing cars on more than 20,000 roads. Police forces have now begun enforcing this in some areas. However, enforcing small breaches of the speed limit may require more effort than reprogramming speed cameras, say experts. Nick Freeman, the lawyer nicknamed “Mr Loophole”, who writes for The Sunday Times, warns that any new fines would be open to challenge. “The first thing is the legal principle called de minimis, which means it’s so slight that it’s not really infringing the law,” he said. “At 51mph, 52mph [on a 50mph road], you are certainly de minimis. It would be an enormous waste of taxpayers’ money to pursue this type of very trivial prosecution.”
  19. Still have places on the stand to fill :)
  20. just tell her you've bought her a draft excluder [emoji6]
  21. I subscribed to the free upgrade ages ago not out until the end of the month. But I have got the beta and it's pretty good not that glitchy either even on the early build but not used it as a daily computer just had a look really ran a few programs. I use windows 8.1 anyway and like it, was a huge learning curve though from windows 7. But now I have got used to it and know where stuff is I find it better than seven. So have no problem with the upgrade as a daily at the end of the month :)
  22. Got a baileys and still own my OEM one :D
  23. funny have a few porkie owners local too that sometime try it on then when I keep up they then sit at the legal speed limit lol.
  24. And as for the it damages your car. There has been no proof that it does I've never heard of anyone destroying an engine with one I think people scare people off with saying that because it goes against their grain of what a subaru should be like IMHO So no it won't blow up your engine :) But your engine might not like it you will get running issues so then returning back to the OEM will be needed :) But other than that can try it see how it goes :D
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