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Group: uk.transport · Group Profile · Search for Car in uk.transport
Author: Adrian
Date: Sep 20, 2008 11:45
... interfere on a post that is addressed to Duhng, but I'm not sure that you're correct that a car may not be driven if it does not have a current/valid VED. It can be - in certain very ... driver/owner of the vehicle may be prosecuted (by the DVLA, not the police) for the offence, but the car may not be siezed at it would be if it was uninsured Oh, yes, it can... On ...
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Group: uk.transport · Group Profile · Search for Car in uk.transport
Author: Petert
Date: Sep 20, 2008 11:38
...to interfere on a post that is addressed to Duhng, but I'm not sure that you're correct that a car may not be driven if it does not have a current/valid VED. It can be - in certain ...the driver/owner of the vehicle may be prosecuted (by the DVLA, not the police) for the offence, but the car may not be siezed at it would be if it was uninsured Oh, yes, it can... On what...
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Group: uk.transport · Group Profile · Search for Car in uk.transport
Author: Adrian
Date: Sep 20, 2008 11:35
...me to interfere on a post that is addressed to Duhng, but I'm not sure that you're correct that a car may not be driven if it does not have a current/valid VED. It can be - in certain very limited ..., the driver/owner of the vehicle may be prosecuted (by the DVLA, not the police) for the offence, but the car may not be siezed at it would be if it was uninsured Oh, yes, it can...
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Group: uk.transport · Group Profile · Search for Car in uk.transport
Author: Petert
Date: Sep 20, 2008 10:52
...>Good point. Let's look at the error. On a 1:3 hill (probably the steepest to be encountered), the angle will be arctan(1/3) = 18 degrees. For a hypotenuse of 1 unit (the true distance that the car travels), the horizontal distance that the GPS senses will be cos(18 degrees) = 0.95 So the GPS will read 95%% of the true speed and the error will be (1-0.95)/1 = 5%%. I suppose a...
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Group: uk.transport · Group Profile · Search for Car in uk.transport
Author: Mortimer
Date: Sep 20, 2008 10:30
...Good point. Let's look at the error. On a 1:3 hill (probably the steepest to be encountered), the angle will be arctan(1/3) = 18 degrees. For a hypotenuse of 1 unit (the true distance that the car travels), the horizontal distance that the GPS senses will be cos(18 degrees) = 0.95 So the GPS will read 95%% of the true speed and the error will be (1-0.95)/1 = 5%%. I suppose a really ...
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Group: uk.transport · Group Profile · Search for Car in uk.transport
Author: Boltar
Date: Sep 20, 2008 10:16
...GPS + the current speed sensor for when there's no satellite coverage (such as inside tunnels) would be enough. The speed sensor could be calibrated from the GPS when there is a signal. This is already used for some upmarket in-car GPS navigation systems. GPS doesn't give an accurate speed on gradiants. If you're the amazing engineer you make out you'll know why won't you. B2003
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Group: uk.transport · Group Profile · Search for Car in uk.transport
Author: Petert
Date: Sep 20, 2008 10:10
... in east London when a car mounted the kerb and hit his... mention those cases. Yes but cars are much more damaging and ... 'trying to avoid having her car towed'...' "...The woman driver was ....worldcarfree.net/ Help for your car-addicted friends in the U....'t have been driving the car even if clean and sober....>Point two: Driving an untaxed car. Yep, thats not allowed either....
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