Apologies for dragging up an old thread.

“Let’s say you turn into a rural road (from some driveway, but you know you are outside a built-up area). How do you know if you can drive 80 or 100 without having seen a speed limit sign?” - well, how did you get there? You will normally know what route you arrived on. If you don’t know, stick to 80 km/h until you see a speed limit sign or route number sign, which are quite frequent. All national routes are numbered N1-50 (M1-50 if a particular part is a motorway) and all the others are R101-999 or L1001-99999. National routes represent about 5% of the road network.

With the exception of motorways, note that Irish roads and in OSM throughout the world, categorises of roads are based on the route hierarchy - how to get from A to B, and NOT what the road looks like (width, dual carriageway, grade separation, hard shoulders, junctions, etc.). So you can have a minor route that is technically a dual carriageway ‘just because’ and a more important route that is only 5 metres wide.

Motorroads do exist in places, e.g. the Cork and Limerick tunnels and certain motorway-like roads. However, they simply ban pedestrians and cyclists (and potentially other categories), they are NOT a designated type of road. The use of motorroad=* has been disputed on OSM, with some users applying them to in conjunction with highway=trunk, which may or may not be correct. https://forum.openstreetmap.org/viewtopic.php?id=72572

Note that “default” speed limits are merely a legal starting point - there are thousands of pages of bye-law documents specifying different limits for specific roads. You can see them here: https://www.speedlimits.ie/adopted-current-bye-laws (some out of date) https://www.dublincity.ie/sites/default/files/2021-04/30kp-speed-limit-review-2020_map.pdf and https://dttassupportoffice.sharepoint.com/sites/DTTASSupportOffice/Speed%20Limits/Forms/AllItems.aspx?id=%2Fsites%2FDTTASSupportOffice%2FSpeed%20Limits%2FWebsite%20Documents%2FAdopted%20Bye%2Dlaws%2FSDCC%2FSpeed%2DLimit%2DBy%2DLaw%2DReview%2D2016%2DMar%2D10%2D2017%2Epdf&parent=%2Fsites%2FDTTASSupportOffice%2FSpeed%20Limits%2FWebsite%20Documents%2FAdopted%20Bye%2Dlaws%2FSDCC&p=true&ga=1 are useful, as they are mapped fully.