Getting a print from Germany is always a bit more fun than one made locally. Firstly, because the amount is always slightly more favorable and because it often includes a photo, including your knack. Nice for on the wall. But have you ever considered that motorcycles do not have a front number plate and that speed cameras in certain countries (such as Germany) only flash from the front? If you as a motorcyclist are flashed from the front, do you get a fine at home?
If a motorcyclist is flashed from the front, will he be fined?
In short: no, not always. That confirms the German bus money catalog. If the speed camera flashes from the front, there is indeed no license plate of a motorcycle. If you accidentally drive your motorcycle too fast past a speed camera in Germany, there is therefore a chance that the fine will never fall on the mat. It is true that there are now poles in Germany that flash from behind, partly to be able to fine motorcyclists.
You could be fined
A speed camera flashing from the front is not a license for motorcycles to speed past it every day. The police have their ways of detecting motorcycles. For example, by checking the type of motorcycle with the number of registrations in the area or even looking at the engine cover with a house search. If a certain motorcyclist is repeatedly flashed from the front, they investigate.
The driver is unrecognizable
The fact that the German speed cameras photograph your face is not because they like to help you with your scrapbook. They would like to identify the driver. But how do you identify a helmeted driver? You would therefore think that by definition you cannot get a German fine with a helmet. That is not true. According to Bussgeldrechner a judge in Germany can examine on a case-by-case basis whether the fine is valid.
It doesn’t work against a local speed trap
So don’t imagine yourself immortal as a motorcyclist. Besides the fact that there are speed cameras in Germany that capture the back, there are also (just like in other countries) plenty of mobile speed cameras. As a driver, you will be picked off the road and a fine will be issued on the spot.
Getting a print from Germany is always a bit more fun than one made locally. Firstly, because the amount is always slightly more favorable and because it often includes a photo, including your knack. Nice for on the wall. But have you ever considered that motorcycles do not have a front number plate and that speed cameras in certain countries (such as Germany) only flash from the front? If you as a motorcyclist are flashed from the front, do you get a fine at home?
If a motorcyclist is flashed from the front, will he be fined?
In short: no, not always. That confirms the German bus money catalog. If the speed camera flashes from the front, there is indeed no license plate of a motorcycle. If you accidentally drive your motorcycle too fast past a speed camera in Germany, there is therefore a chance that the fine will never fall on the mat. It is true that there are now poles in Germany that flash from behind, partly to be able to fine motorcyclists.
You could be fined
A speed camera flashing from the front is not a license for motorcycles to speed past it every day. The police have their ways of detecting motorcycles. For example, by checking the type of motorcycle with the number of registrations in the area or even looking at the engine cover with a house search. If a certain motorcyclist is repeatedly flashed from the front, they investigate.
The driver is unrecognizable
The fact that the German speed cameras photograph your face is not because they like to help you with your scrapbook. They would like to identify the driver. But how do you identify a helmeted driver? You would therefore think that by definition you cannot get a German fine with a helmet. That is not true. According to Bussgeldrechner a judge in Germany can examine on a case-by-case basis whether the fine is valid.
It doesn’t work against a local speed trap
So don’t imagine yourself immortal as a motorcyclist. Besides the fact that there are speed cameras in Germany that capture the back, there are also (just like in other countries) plenty of mobile speed cameras. As a driver, you will be picked off the road and a fine will be issued on the spot.
Getting a print from Germany is always a bit more fun than one made locally. Firstly, because the amount is always slightly more favorable and because it often includes a photo, including your knack. Nice for on the wall. But have you ever considered that motorcycles do not have a front number plate and that speed cameras in certain countries (such as Germany) only flash from the front? If you as a motorcyclist are flashed from the front, do you get a fine at home?
If a motorcyclist is flashed from the front, will he be fined?
In short: no, not always. That confirms the German bus money catalog. If the speed camera flashes from the front, there is indeed no license plate of a motorcycle. If you accidentally drive your motorcycle too fast past a speed camera in Germany, there is therefore a chance that the fine will never fall on the mat. It is true that there are now poles in Germany that flash from behind, partly to be able to fine motorcyclists.
You could be fined
A speed camera flashing from the front is not a license for motorcycles to speed past it every day. The police have their ways of detecting motorcycles. For example, by checking the type of motorcycle with the number of registrations in the area or even looking at the engine cover with a house search. If a certain motorcyclist is repeatedly flashed from the front, they investigate.
The driver is unrecognizable
The fact that the German speed cameras photograph your face is not because they like to help you with your scrapbook. They would like to identify the driver. But how do you identify a helmeted driver? You would therefore think that by definition you cannot get a German fine with a helmet. That is not true. According to Bussgeldrechner a judge in Germany can examine on a case-by-case basis whether the fine is valid.
It doesn’t work against a local speed trap
So don’t imagine yourself immortal as a motorcyclist. Besides the fact that there are speed cameras in Germany that capture the back, there are also (just like in other countries) plenty of mobile speed cameras. As a driver, you will be picked off the road and a fine will be issued on the spot.
Getting a print from Germany is always a bit more fun than one made locally. Firstly, because the amount is always slightly more favorable and because it often includes a photo, including your knack. Nice for on the wall. But have you ever considered that motorcycles do not have a front number plate and that speed cameras in certain countries (such as Germany) only flash from the front? If you as a motorcyclist are flashed from the front, do you get a fine at home?
If a motorcyclist is flashed from the front, will he be fined?
In short: no, not always. That confirms the German bus money catalog. If the speed camera flashes from the front, there is indeed no license plate of a motorcycle. If you accidentally drive your motorcycle too fast past a speed camera in Germany, there is therefore a chance that the fine will never fall on the mat. It is true that there are now poles in Germany that flash from behind, partly to be able to fine motorcyclists.
You could be fined
A speed camera flashing from the front is not a license for motorcycles to speed past it every day. The police have their ways of detecting motorcycles. For example, by checking the type of motorcycle with the number of registrations in the area or even looking at the engine cover with a house search. If a certain motorcyclist is repeatedly flashed from the front, they investigate.
The driver is unrecognizable
The fact that the German speed cameras photograph your face is not because they like to help you with your scrapbook. They would like to identify the driver. But how do you identify a helmeted driver? You would therefore think that by definition you cannot get a German fine with a helmet. That is not true. According to Bussgeldrechner a judge in Germany can examine on a case-by-case basis whether the fine is valid.
It doesn’t work against a local speed trap
So don’t imagine yourself immortal as a motorcyclist. Besides the fact that there are speed cameras in Germany that capture the back, there are also (just like in other countries) plenty of mobile speed cameras. As a driver, you will be picked off the road and a fine will be issued on the spot.