Hey, I did not claim that such explanatory signboards are always to be expected at country borders. Just saying that it is at least common in Europe.
Anyway, so, in order for data consumers to infer a concrete speed limit from a road that has no explicit speed limit posted, the different road types for which different default speed limits apply need to be tagged somehow. From your anecdote, it seems, an implicit speed limit tagging scheme is even more important in the US than for example in the UK Cheers Tobias On 18/09/2018 20:16, Tod Fitch wrote: > >> On Sep 18, 2018, at 10:41 AM, Tobias Zwick <o...@westnordost.de> wrote: >> >> There is a misunderstanding. >> >> So, there are 597 towns, 77 counties and 2 councils in the state of >> Oklahoma and I understand that you want to say that all these entities >> have authority over defining the default speed limit(s) within their >> borders, right? >> But if they do set a different default speed limit for their town, then >> they will post signs for that. >> >> What I mean with default speed limits are speed limits that apply *when >> no sign is posted*. These kind of speed limits that are known (learnt in >> driving school) by heart by drivers and usually explained in parts on >> big signboards at country borders [1]. >> >> These defaults are with very few exceptions always defined state- or >> country-wide, because, claro, noone can be expected to know the special >> default speed limit that applies only in your town/country. Even if >> there it is only signposted once at the city limits, it still counts as >> signposted - perhaps as a (large) speed zone [2]. >> > > To the best of my recollection, there are no signs on the California border > with Oregon, Nevada or Arizona stating default speed limits when you change > jurisdictions. > > It has been a long while since I have driven into or through states other > than listed above, but I don’t recall seeing that type of signage anywhere > I’ve driven and at one time or another I’ve driven in about half of the > states. > > I vaguely recall some towns and villages that had default speed signs when I > lived “back east”. But that was the rare exception and I’ve not seen that in > the western United States at all. > > So, no: Many roads don’t have signed speed limits even if you accept a sign > at a border potentially hundreds of miles away proper signing. > > You are, I suppose, simply supposed to know the default or prima facia speed > limits for the state or town you are going into. This is somewhat mitigated > by the fact that the default speed limits are not radically different from > one place to the next. A unsigned residential road might be 25 MPH or 30 MPH > depending on the state but probably isn’t higher or lower than that. Since > enforcement of speed laws is relatively relaxed you are pretty safe from > being ticketed if you drive reasonably. > > FWIW, at my last job one of my colleagues was originally from England and he > noted that one of his pet peeves in driving in the United States was the lack > of what he considered proper speed limit signage. > > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > Tagging mailing list > Tagging@openstreetmap.org > https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/tagging > _______________________________________________ Tagging mailing list Tagging@openstreetmap.org https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/tagging