I got ticketed on the 50mph straight-as-a-drag-strip Clearview once (I was passing in the left lane) for "75". I still didn't feel it was excessive - safety-wise, but the cop talked to me like I was insane seeing I had 2 toddlers in the car too. 2 minutes before that, everyone was doing 70+ on the LIE. He didn't even catch me on the gun - but my traffic lawyer said it doesn't matter (are they in cahoots or what?) - he was able to lower the ticket but the cost after everything was almost the same. It was about the principle of the matter. Caught for exactly 25mph over? What a coincidence.
It was ordained by almighty God that Arizonans drive ten miles an hour over the speed limit in all circumstances except rain and school zones. In rain, they drive like embalmed grannies. In school zones, they drive real nice. I don't know what the penalty is for speeding in a school zone but it must involve castration because no one does it.
When I-10 was widened to six lanes between Tucson and Picacho a couple years ago, I could park in the right lane and go as fast as I pleased. The center and left lane were packed with people jockeying for position. I'd blow by them. It was like no one else could see this beautiful, empty lane. It's still that way to a lesser extent.I-10 between Phoenix and Tucson is a speedway. If you aren't doing 85 prepare to get run off the road.
You have to learn your highways. In Northern NJ I would always go 80 on highways like the Turnpike, Parkway, 287 and Route 80. On other highways like Route 3, 46, 23, 17 and others - more like 65-70. Each highway has it's own true speed limit.
I go between 5 and 15 over. It depends on the conditions and what road I am on. Any roads with schools and many crosswalks, I then go or close to the speed limit.
Red, from what I have the Canadian Police are pretty strict about speeders. And I do not know for sure if you can legally us a Radar Detector up there.
Legal in British Columbia, Alberta, and Saskatchewan.
Illegal in Newfoundland and Labrador, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, New Brunswick,
Quebec, Ontario, Manitoba, Yukon, Northwest Territories and Nunavut.