SK53
(SK53)
5
As someone who has recently driven in Ireland, I concur with rorym’s comments.
Even in quite sparsely populated parts of the country main roads are likely to have regularly changing explicit speed limits: perhaps stepping through 50, 60, 80 and 100 kmh as one gets further from towns/villages. The 60 limit may apply for quite a distance from the a local centre (e.g., R238 from Moville to Greencastle is this speed most of the way, probably because it is well used by pedestrians even where there are no pavements). Additionally speed limits may drop for junctions and stretches of road with many curves.
Outside of main towns and cities, Ireland’s population is in general much more dispersed than one gets in the nucleated settlements familiar elsewhere in Western Europe, and this creates different needs in terms of speed limits. Furthermore as Ireland relatively recently moved from imperial to metric units for road signs, I would have expected that this transition was used as an opportunity to revisit some of the standards.
Certainly my impression driving on predominately secondary & tertiary roads in Monaghan, Cavan and Donegal was that speed limits change quite frequently and pure 100 kph sections of road are relatively rare for these road classes. (Note also that speed limit signs are one of the most obvious markers of the international boundary).
@rorym: the motorroad tags more or less exclusively refer to the West Link in Belfast. I’ve removed one approaching Moira as I know that one is completely spurious. I’d expect the one just N of Limerick is too. @westnordost: I think you can ignore motoroad in the Republic of Ireland, with the single Belfast case in Northern Ireland.