How many kilometers can you drive at a speed limit of 120 on the highway?
2 Answers
You can drive 110 kilometers at a speed limit of 120 on the highway. The following is the relevant introduction to speeding: 1. Definition: Speeding refers to the driver driving at a speed exceeding the legal or regulatory speed limit during the driving process. A turbine overspeed accident is a major and severe accident caused by faults in the turbine's speed regulation and protection system, as well as its inherent defects. 2. Impact: Speeding accelerates the wear and tear of mechanical components. The faster the speed, the more it disrupts the vehicle's operational indices in specific environments, increases the vehicle's working intensity and load, and accelerates the wear and tear of mechanical components. It is particularly detrimental to the wheels, causing not only jumping and dragging wear but also raising the friction temperature, which can easily lead to tire aging and deformation, triggering tire blowout accidents.
I was thinking about this the other day while driving on the highway. The 120 km/h speed limit actually allows you to go up to 132 km/h. But don't push this red line! Speed cameras have tolerances—if my dashboard shows 130 km/h, the actual speed might be 128 km/h, but the camera could clock it at 132 km/h, resulting in a speeding ticket. Experienced drivers know that maintaining 110-115 km/h is the safest bet, leaving some margin for speedometer errors, especially on inclines or declines. On rainy days when roads are slippery, I'd rather drive slower. In special zones like tunnels or sharp curves, the limit might drop to 100 km/h—keep an eye on navigation alerts. Exceeding the limit by 10% won't deduct points, but you'll still get fined—it's not worth saving a few minutes just to pay hundreds in penalties.