What does interval speed mean?
1 Answers
Interval speed refers to the average driving speed of a vehicle on a specific road section, where two adjacent monitoring points are set up at the front and rear of the same road section. Below are the rules for interval speed measurement and the penalties for speeding: Rules for interval speed measurement: Interval speed measurement is a method used to detect the average speed of motor vehicles passing through the road section (speed measurement interval) between two adjacent speed monitoring points. In actual implementation, interval speed measurement is often combined with mobile speed measurement and fixed speed measurement, meaning that even if a vehicle exceeds the speed limit at a certain point, it may still violate traffic rules if the overall average speed does not exceed the limit. Penalties for speeding: Speeding within 10% results in a warning. Speeding between 10%-20% incurs a 3-point deduction, speeding between 20%-50% incurs a 6-point deduction, and speeding over 50% incurs a 12-point deduction, along with varying amounts of fines.