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FOR RELEASE: Tuesday, March 21, 2006
Study Shows Speed Limit Differentials Compromise Highway Safety A new transportation study by University of Arkansas researchers reveals that different speed limits for cars and large trucks on rural, interstate highways lead to greater speed variation and a higher number of vehicles passing each other, thus compromising safety.
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. - A new transportation study by University of Arkansas researchers reveals that different speed limits for cars and large trucks on rural, interstate highways lead to greater speed variation and a higher number of vehicles passing each other, thus compromising safety. "We found that speed variation and vehicle interactions have a direct impact on highway safety," said Steven Johnson, UA professor of industrial engineering with the Mack Blackwell National Rural Transportation Study Center. "Data from previous studies and simple logic say that a higher number of interactions among vehicles increases the chances that accidents will occur. Speed differentials -- 75 miles per hour for regular automobiles and 65 for large trucks, for example -- are a result of state-mandated speed limits and company policies that limit most trucks to a maximum speed of 62 to 65 miles per hour." Johnson reported this finding in "Cost-Benefit Evaluation of Heavy Truck-Automobile Speed Differentials on Rural Interstate Highways," a comprehensive study of speed limits and car-vs.-large-truck speed differentials on rural, interstate highways. Sponsored by the U.S. Department of Transportation, commercial trucking companies and private fleets, the study will help regulatory agencies and trucking-company decision-makers establish policies regarding speed limits and differentials for both heavy trucks and automobiles. After an extensive review and analysis of existing literature on speed limits, Johnson and Naveen Pawar, a graduate student in the College of Engineering, measured driver behavior -- in other words, speeds -- of heavy trucks and automobiles in five states with speed-limit configurations ranging from a uniform 75 mph for cars and heavy trucks to a low differential of 65 mph for automobiles and 55 mph for trucks. The researchers also collected and analyzed speed, accident and maintenance data and conducted hundreds of interviews with various stakeholders, including truck drivers; safety and maintenance managers of commercial trucking companies; and original equipment manufacturers of trucks, tires and engines. There is a caveat, however, to the primary finding that differentials have a negative impact on safety: Johnson and Pawar agree with proponents of lower truck speed limits that vehicle dynamics, such as braking and maneuvering, improve on slower-moving trucks.
"People argue that heavy trucks require longer braking distances for any given speed, and lower truck speeds help equalize the stopping distance," Johnson said. "On the other hand, opponents of lower truck speed limits have suggested that the differential speeds increase speed variance and therefore have a negative impact on highway safety. Our research demonstrates that it is likely that both of these arguments are correct." If transportation researchers, trucking-company safety personnel and motorists agree that highways are safer when vehicles travel at or close to a uniform speed, why do so many states have different speed limits for large trucks and cars? Furthermore, why is there so much speed-limit inconsistency from state to state? The argument that braking distances for slower-moving trucks is one reason and a perception of better fuel efficiency is another, but many factors unrelated to safety, road conditions and traffic influence decisions on setting speed limits. "The large number of safety studies indicates that this issue has received a great amount of attention," Johnson said. "Unfortunately, many of these studies involve more advocacy than science. It's not that these studies aren't valuable, but they have problems with methodology, statistical analysis and even simple understanding of important terms, such as 'speeding.' In accident data, speeding is defined as both 'traveling faster than the posted limit' and 'traveling too fast for conditions.' Studies often do not differentiate between these definitions." Johnson and Nawar reported these additional findings:
A copy of Johnson's report can be obtained at http://www.mackblackwell.org/web/research/final-reports.htm. ### Contact:Steven
Johnson, professor, department of industrial engineering Matt McGowan, science and
research communications officer |




