Are there statistics of the real speed (and accidents) of cars in German autobahns? [closed]

Are there statistics of the real speed (and accidents) of cars in German autobahns? [closed] - Speedometer Gauge Reading at Zero

Many highways in Germany (autobahns) do not to have speed limit.

The Wikipedia says:

In 2015 70.4% of the autobahn network had only the advisory speed limit (130 km/h), 6.2% had temporary speed limits due to weather or traffic conditions, and 23.4% had permanent speed limits. Measurements from the German State of Brandemburg in 2006 showed average speeds of 142 km/h on a 6-lane section of autobahn in free-flowing conditions.

I would like to know not just the the legal maximum but also find some statistics about the real speed people drive on the Autobahn, but I haven't been able to get it. - distribution of measured speed of cars on the autobahn. - statistics of the number of accidents and deceased as a function of the speed.

I've just found very old data saying the average speed in 1992 was 120.4km/h and the 85th percentile 148.2km/h. And in 2006 in 6 lanes areas the average was 141.8km/h.

What percentage of cars exceed 200 km/h?






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Are there statistics of the real speed (and accidents) of cars in German autobahns? [closed] - Black Side Mirror
Are there statistics of the real speed (and accidents) of cars in German autobahns? [closed] - Blue and White Racing Car on Race Track
Are there statistics of the real speed (and accidents) of cars in German autobahns? [closed] - Close-up of a Gear Shifter in a Car



Are there less crashes on the Autobahn?

Research by the Federal Highway Research Institute states that the Autobahn experiences fewer vehicle-related fatalities than the U.S. This means this German highway experiences fewer deaths per billion miles traveled than American highways.

Is there really no speed limit in Germany?

Germany, with its well-constructed autobahns, is the only industrialized Western country without a general speed limit. However, there are many stretches of highway where drivers do have to slow down.

Are there more accidents in Germany?

If you want to drive in Germany you need to be dedicated, which makes for better drivers. And better drivers means fewer accidents, fewer accidents means fewer deaths: Germany has far fewer motor vehicle-related fatalities (per 100,000 people) than the US.



Car crash with 240 km/h caught on GoPro (German Autobahn)




Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

Images: Pixabay, Mike B, Mat Sheard, Yan Krukov