Mandatory Speed Limiters Could Price Us Out Of Interesting Older Cars

All the talk in the wake of the EU’s provisional decision to make active speed limiters compulsory has been about how the tech could fail, but there’s something else to consider…
Mandatory Speed Limiters Could Price Us Out Of Interesting Older Cars

There was only ever one topic that this weekend’s blog was going to cover. The EU’s decision to impose mandatory and active speed limiters upon the whole continent from 2022, albeit on new cars only (for now), got you talking.

Whatever you think of the idea, or the potential for random, incalculable failures of the technology like those we already see today (speed limit recognition right now is patchy at best, after all), that’s not what we want to talk about right now. There’s another issue centred around ‘sporty’ cars.

Mandatory Speed Limiters Could Price Us Out Of Interesting Older Cars

Cars with a decent slug of power, say, from 200 ponies upwards, allow more freedom on the open road. They make overtaking easier, they make quick getaways from the traffic lights – useful where lanes merge soon afterwards – safer and they usually pack better brakes, grippier tyres and generally communicate better with drivers.

On the other hand, breaking the speed limit in such cars can be an inevitability. Whether it’s in order to safely get past traffic moving at 10mph under the speed limit, or simply enjoying the car on a quiet country road, these things happen. To arbitrarily say that any and all instances of speeding are inherently unsafe isn’t true, and there’s precisely zero evidence to support any such sweeping statement.

Mandatory Speed Limiters Could Price Us Out Of Interesting Older Cars

Speed limiters will club powerful cars over the head harder than it will hit ordinary biffabouts. A limiter will act as a leash, holding the car back and canning that sense of freedom that many people buy more powerful cars for. At that point, the question will arise: why bother buying one at all? People will be able to buy a stylish car with a basic engine for a lot less, if they’ll all do the same speeds.

It’s very possible that this will cause a lot of headaches at Porsche, Aston Martin, Ferrari, McLaren, Lamborghini and anywhere else that power and/or freedom are integral parts of the image. Even the more attainable options like the Golf GTI, the Hyundai i30 N and the BMW M135i may suddenly become about as desirable as foot rot. What would you be paying the extra for, really?

Mandatory Speed Limiters Could Price Us Out Of Interesting Older Cars

Instead, heads will turn to the classifieds, where dwell cars without the speed nannies. People who want performance will look to these older examples, built before 2022. New sales of interesting models could collapse as demand skyrockets for a selection of limiter-less cars that will only ever get smaller.

Since those models aren’t always all that common anyway, prices would rise. A lot, in some cases. Even left totally standard they’ll be worth much more. Then there’s the restomod scene: as Millennials get older and some of us get rich enough, we’ll look with lust at these interesting and unrestricted cars and will pay whatever it costs to bring one up to 2020s or 2030s spec, in the same way as luxury specialist David Brown Automotive brings the classic Mini into the 2010s.

Mandatory Speed Limiters Could Price Us Out Of Interesting Older Cars

The restomod scene is likely to grow over the next few decades as people cling to greater freedoms gone by, and with it the available supply of standard, older, interesting cars will dwindle even further. That will drive prices so high that those of us with normal jobs can’t even dream about ownership any more. You only have to look at MkIV Supra, Sierra Cosworth or E30 M3 prices to know how painfully likely this is.

The dawn of the mandatory speed limiter will have two effects: killing interest in powerful new cars and driving up prices of their predecessors. Will we still be able to enjoy them? You’d better plan to buy in the next couple of years, if you’re ever going to.

Comments

Anonymous

EU should be stopped. This is some dystopia type of stuff.

03/30/2019 - 13:32 |
178 | 10
CannedRex24

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

i think brexits not so bad after all

03/30/2019 - 14:12 |
94 | 14
Martin Burns

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

I do believe Orwell warned us…

03/30/2019 - 15:29 |
44 | 2
Anonymous

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

yep !
they now say that they want to make a EU army
(they don’t want the NATO anymore because other country’s out side of EU have a say,influence in NATO)

this is some NWO shit !

03/30/2019 - 19:27 |
12 | 6
Chewbacca_buddy (McLaren squad)(VW GTI Clubsport)(McLaren 60

You better get them now before prices go through the roof

03/30/2019 - 13:40 |
4 | 0
London

Sound thinking 👏🏽 In one way, my 2018 M140i 6cyl will end up being a bit of a classic and maybe more desirable👍🏽

03/30/2019 - 13:44 |
12 | 2
ᴶᵘˢᵗᴬᴿᵃⁿᵈᵒá

Skyneeeet

03/30/2019 - 13:47 |
42 | 0
Samuel Prendergast

I am studying automotive engineering to build interesting cars…f*cking EU is destroying my future

03/30/2019 - 14:01 |
98 | 4

same, the future seems like its gonna suck

03/30/2019 - 15:52 |
12 | 0

You could help us car guys if you made the limiter easy to remove.

03/30/2019 - 23:12 |
16 | 0

And that’s why I want to study design or restoration

04/02/2019 - 01:18 |
0 | 0

And this is why I’m depressed and learned programming instead of anything cars… :C fxck this world honestly

04/05/2019 - 05:25 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

People seem to be forgetting that yes it will have a speed limiter but put your foot down and the car will break through the limiter, as a safety feature

03/30/2019 - 14:12 |
8 | 4
Ali Mahfooz

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

I think this feature could be exploited further by the government. If you do break the limit, it’ll likely trigger a protocol that’ll send info that the vehicle driving on so and so road has put the foot down to break the limit. I mean even cars makers these days tend to spy on their customers listening to their conversations, knowing where they go, their destinations, preference of driving, what radio channels they listen to and even possibly what air conditioning settings they choose on what day and time. All these would just be a bad idea for owners as they’re already tracked for info meaning the new limiters could potentially end up penalizing people more often than usual.

03/31/2019 - 14:04 |
2 | 0
Anonymous

What about the autobahn? 🤔

03/30/2019 - 14:30 |
2 | 0
Anonymous

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

since no speed limit applies on most of it, the system will propably just turn off until a limited section comes up

03/30/2019 - 16:31 |
4 | 0
Ieuan Jenkins

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

I heard they were going to get rid of the de-restricted parts.

03/30/2019 - 18:16 |
4 | 0
Anonymous

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

It’s about to get limits

03/30/2019 - 20:04 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

Did the bit about a hard press of the throttle disnegaging the limiter go over everyone’s heads then?

03/30/2019 - 14:51 |
14 | 4
Anonymous

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

Sure, sure.
Like Janith said: “The duck is the point then?”
To make it seem normal and then go to non-overridable limiters.

03/30/2019 - 20:04 |
10 | 0
ParPar Parmesan (Parmesano)

I wonder how the aftermarket will deal with this. Assuming this is under a chipset of some sort or software, someone will come up with a backdoor of some sorts. Interesting they want to limit speeds on cars like that. I dont think companies will be too happy on dealing with that sort of rules. Let alone other convoluted rules like Article 13 and such. But I am an outsider looking in, I wonder what others will think of this!

03/30/2019 - 15:09 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

This speed limiter stuff is crap. But its not the end of the world- you can delete it, just as many people remove the 155mph limiter on their fast German cars.

03/30/2019 - 15:27 |
0 | 0

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