Driver Caught Doing 122mph In Hampshire
28 May 2014, 07:05 | Updated: 30 March 2016, 13:50
New figures have revealed drivers on the South Coast have been caught by speed cameras doing more than 120 miles per hour.
Cameras have recorded top speeds of 122mph on the A31 in Hampshire.
The figures have been revealed following Freedom of Information requests to 39 police authorities by the IAM (Institute of Advanced Motorists). 85% of police authorities responded.
Hampshire Constabulary
Location Speed Limit Difference
A31 122 70 52
A34 110 70 40
A33 97 50 47
A33 73 30 43
A3024 70 30 40
Other findings include:
- The highest speed recorded on 30mph road was 96mph on the B1288, on Leam Lane, Gateshead
- The highest speed recorded on a 50mph road was on the A414 Stanstead Abbotts, Hertfordshire where a motorist clocked 119 mph
- The highest speed recorded on a 60mph road was 127mph on the A413 Wendover By-Pass, Wendover
The guidelines to magistrates on sentencing for speeding include:
- 70 mph road: For driving between 101 and 110 mph. Fine plus 6 points or disqualified for 7-56 days.
- 50 mph road: For driving between 76 and 85 mph. Fine plus 6 points or disqualified for 7-56 days.
- 30 mph road: For driving between 51 and 60mph. Fine plus 6 points or disqualified for 7-56 days.
IAM chief executive Simon best said:
"149 miles per hour equates to nearly two and a half miles in a minute. If anything goes wrong at that speed, you're unlikely to walk away and you are a grave danger to the innocent road users around you.
"Speed limits are a limit. They are not a target to beat. Unfortunately this message has not got through to many motorists and it's clear that efforts to make speeding as socially unacceptable as drink driving continue to fail. That's why we need sustained campaigning by the government, motor industry and charities to keep ramming home the message that excessive speed kills. Catching speeders at two or even three times the limit also shows the importance of keeping speed cameras at well-known black spots.
"The current guidelines on sentencing for excessive speeding offences are out of sync with modern roads, modern vehicles and society's view of the value of lives lost in crashes. We all share the roads with these speeding drivers and the government must crack down on them with more consistent penalties and tougher measures to break their addiction for speed."