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Also, I can't speak for much of Texas. But I-35 from Oklahoma to DFW is only 70. And I-40 through the panhandle is only 70 as well. Which makes absolutely no sense and is absolute torture! |
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Going 70 mph for three hours will take you 210 miles.
Going 75 mph for three hours will take you 225 miles. In four hours at 70 mph you can go 280 miles. In four hours at 75 mph you can go 300 miles. Is the 15 or 20 miles you gain in that amount of time really worth the expense of worse gas mileage and the loss of a certain amount of safety with the higher speed? When we were going only 55 mph, gas consumption improved and a whole lot fewer people were killed on the road. Like I said, what's the rush? Why not slow down and enjoy the moment, enjoy the drive? I have driven all over this country, going the speed limit. I can tell you that I enjoyed it more when the speed limit was slower. Not because I'm afraid to go faster, but because a more leisurely pace gives us time to see things, enjoy the very moment we are in. Janet |
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When most people have a 500 mile drive ahead of them their objective is to get there as fast as possible. I'd take a state highway if I wanted to enjoy the ride. Also, most people on an interstate have been on it many times so there's nothing to enjoy on the ride. It's just the same old stuff. I drive I-44 from Oklahoma City to Tulsa regularly and go as fast as possible.
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I'd still argue for a higher speed limit on most of Kansas' interstate highways. However, there is something to be said for "going off the beaten path" on its U.S. and state highways. During my trip to St. Joseph, MO this past September, I really enjoyed my counterclockwise loop trip from St. Joe to Hiawatha, then south and back east to Atchison. I was mainly going about 65 mph during it.
And I didn't need no stinkin' cell phone neither! 75 mph + yakkity-yakkin' on a cell phone = potential multi-car pileup, at least in my case. ![]() As they say, "y'all drive careful now!" |
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A bit off topic, but a somewhat related highway question.
I am planning to drive to Wichita from Phoenix soon and there are two routes to choose from once you reach eastern New Mexico. If you take US54, it cuts about 100 miles off the trip, but it looks like it is just a two lane highway with a lot of commercial traffic and small town speed traps of 20-30 mph zones. The other alternative is to continue on I40 through OK City, but that adds extra miles and maybe takes more time. If your priority was to reach Wichita as quickly as possible would you take the slower yet shorter 54 or the faster longer I40? Will it be aggravating to drive behind slow trucks/traffic on 54 and be unable to pass? Is 54 in good condition or is it a torn up rural highway? If weather is a factor, would it be safer to be on the interstate instead of rural western Kansas in terms of them clearing the road of snow/ice? |
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70 or 75 what difference does it make? Check other posts. Too many drivers make up the speed limit and drive at it. If stopped by traffic cops it’s the states fault for posting too slow a speed limit. However the speeder must not have been driving as fast as his car would go; the cop caught them. Because you are the navigator of you ship, car, you can drive around Kansas if you like. If speed is your goal planes go fast; and you don’t have to look out of the window and see the most ugly of states Kansas as you fly over.
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The areas off of I-70 are very interesting, especially in the Flint Hills region. Another favorite area of mine is the Smoky Hill region north of I-70 in NW Kansas. You encounter rugged steep terrain with a lot of buttes. It is very dry there with a semi-arid climate, and looks like a typical "western" landscape. |
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Once again, thanks for the info, Plains10!
Except for my drive in NE Kansas this past September, my only other experience driving through Kansas was on westbound I-70 back in 1986 when moving from Missouri here to CA. We didn't get to do any exploring off the interstate then.I'll have to go to Google Images and the Flickr website and check for pictures of these two areas. I've heard of the Flint Hills--looks like they're between Topeka and Salina and run from the northern to the southern border--but not the Smoky Hill region. I don't think I'd want to live in NW Kansas, but it would be an interesting visit. Here's a website from the Kansas Geological Survey that gives some good info: http://www.kgs.ku.edu/Extension/smoky/smoky.html. Looks like the region takes up much of north central Kansas. This would be a good way to spend a three- or four-day weekend once we're settled in St. Joseph, MO. ![]() |
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