Wikipedia has a world map for this:
Link: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:World_Speed_Limits.svg
Thankfully in metric so we non Americans can understand what the mph values mean.
Of all the conversions km to mph is the easiest at 60%
On the east coast, driving 10-15 miles over the speed limit is considered normal. Some people from other parts of the country have informed me this isn’t true everywhere.
On most Texas roads, it’s expected. Yes, even on the 85 mph ones.
I’ve found 5 over to be much more common in Texas, with the occasional person going faster in light traffic
I thought Montana didn’t have a speed limit? Like a Rocky Mountain Autobahn.
I believe that was just for a few years they had roads without limits. My understanding is it didn’t last too long.
I was suspicious, so I looked it up. 40 miles of one road in tx is 85mph.
"What this translates to in reality is an average interstate speed limit of 75 mph in both rural and urban areas (though some segments within city limits are 70 mph).
There are several segments of I-10 and I-20 through the state that have max speed limits of 80 mph.
Then, there’s Texas’s claim to speed limit fame – the single stretch of freeway in the country with a speed limit of 85 mph.
It is located on Texas’s State Highway 130 (a toll road) and stretches just over 40 miles from Austin to near San Antonio." https://www.drivinggeeks.com/texas-speed-limits/
I’ve driven the entirety of that road one time. It ran me about twenty bucks in tolls. To do it once was worth it. With an 85 limit, most were pushing a hundred. I got down to San Antonio in a fraction of the time it would’ve taken via 35. I certainly wouldn’t want to pay that on a daily commute though. I also don’t think I’d want to navigate the speeds some of the more aggressive drivers were going. I did feel a little bit unsafe.
It’s 85 mph in Texas so that the smarter people growing up there can then exit the state as quickly as possible.
Now do traffic accidents per mile driven per state!
Found it. Well, it’s fatalities instead of accidents, but I imagine it’s similar enough.
There doesn’t appear to be any relationship.
The more depressing it is to live in a state the more vehicle fatalities there are.
I just meant the two maps don’t seem to correlate much.