In the past, you could quickly overtake a group of left-handers between the exit and the ramp on the A2. The trajectory control did not work there then. Today, the A2 from Utrecht to Amsterdam is one large section control, which in turn consists of a lot of smaller section controls. But what happens if you speed in multiple sections of the speed check – do you get multiple fines? And what if you drive too fast during the entire trajectory control?
Every ramp and every exit is the beginning or the end of a section. So at the Breukelen slip road, a section starts that runs to the Vinkeveen exit. There is a small section between exit Vinkeveen and exit Vinkeveen. Then the section Vinkeveen to Abcoude starts. Other section checks in the Netherlands also have several sections, for example those on the parallel track of the A12 near Utrecht.
Multiple sections too hard is one fine
The good news is that you won’t get multiple fines if you get caught in multiple sections. If you drive too fast from Utrecht to Amsterdam in one zip, you will receive one fine at home. The section with the highest measured speed will issue the fine. Are you speeding within a multi-section speed control? Then a fine will only be imposed for the highest speed violation.” Prosecution†
Why don’t they look at the average speed of the entire trajectory control?
Why do you actually get a fine for the speed over one section and not over the entire section control? The Public Prosecution Service says the following about this: ‘Suppose someone drives into the first section at too high a speed and chooses the first exit. A second car drives through the first section at the same speed and brakes heavily in the other sections. If the system were to calculate the average, the second driver would receive a lower fine than the first. Yet both drivers committed the same speed violation.’
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