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The speed limit is the top speed that is legally allowed. If it is exceeded, you are breaking the law.
No faster than the posted legal limit!!
drive faster than the posted/maximum speed limit
Of course it is, as long as you are observing the posted speed limit and carrying proper insurance and drivers license.
what is the legal limit on scooters to drive with a revoked license.
Always
65. If the legally posted limit is 65 the limit is 65. Just because other drivers are going 70 only means they are breaking the law. There is no law that says you can go 10 mph above the posted limit before a ticket can be issued. You can get a ticket for going 1 mph faster than the posted limit. Most policy will not issue a citation for a small amount but legally they can.
The penal code VC122349B in California, dictates the maximum speed limit laws. It basically states that a person cannot drive faster than the speed limit signs posted.
It is never legal to go above the posted limit. Even when passing a vehicle. That's called an absolute speed law. Only emergency vehicles responding to an emergency may exceed the limit and then only when "reasonable".
A motorist is expected not to drive faster than the speed limit on the sign until the school has been passed.
I don't know the answer you'd get from an insurance agent, a police officer, a lawyer, or a judge. My experience has been: -- If you exceed the posted limit and keep up with traffic, you can be picked out of the crowd and ticketed for speeding, and there's nothing you can do about it. -- If you drive at the posted limit while everybody else passes you like you're in reverse, you can be picked out of the crowd and ticketed for obstructing traffic, and there's nothing you can do about it.
When you drive with some alcohol in your system but not above the legal limit. You are "buzzed" but still technically legal to drive.