Speeding in Unknown Location — LS15 WPZ

Documented report from the reported area, submitted for public road-safety awareness on June 17, 2025.

LS15 WPZ
Renault
Speeding incident in reported area involving LS15 WPZ

Location

Location not specified

Date

June 17, 2025

Country

GB

Type

Speeding

Original report (as submitted)

Driving along Titchfield Road into Stubbington, Hampshire, being tailgated by some tosser in a black Renault people carrier. I was observing a 40 mph limit, and slowed down to 30 mph as I entered Stubbington. The delightful gentleman behind me had tailgated for approx 2 miles as I clearly wasn t going fast enough for him. As we approached a straight bit of road he roared past me, doing about 55 mph in a 30 limit. To point out the error of his ways I flashed him, whereupon the single-eyebrowed driver slammed on his brakes and proceeded to give me a generous and furious display of his middle digit. Clearly a great example to set the trainee chavs who were sitting in the back of his car. --- Context --- Type: Speeding Location: Unknown Vehicle: Renault Registration: LS15 WPZ Date reported: 2025-06-16 --- Safety takeaway --- Reduce speed early in mixed traffic and near junctions.

Additional incident context

This entry records a speeding report in this area, dated June 17, 2025. Incident pages like this are kept as factual records so local drivers can spot repeat patterns over time and build a clearer picture of risk in specific places. In this case, the report references vehicle LS15 WPZ (Renault) and describes behaviour that may affect nearby road users if repeated under similar traffic conditions.

The original submission notes: “Driving along Titchfield Road into Stubbington, Hampshire, being tailgated by some tosser in a black Renault people carrier. I was observing a 40 mph limit, and slowed down to 30 mph as I entered Stubbington. The delightful gentleman behind me had tailgated for approx 2 miles as I clearly wasn t going fast enough for him. As we approached a straight bit of road he roared past me, doing about 55 mph in a 30 limit. To point out the error of his ways I flashed him, whereupon the single-eyebrowed driver slammed on his brakes and proceeded to give me a generous and furious display of his middle digit. Clearly a great example to set the trainee chavs who were sitting in the back of his car. --- Context --- Type: Speeding Location: Unknown Vehicle: Renault Registration: LS15 WPZ Date reported: 2025-06-16 --- Safety takeaway --- Reduce speed early in mixed traffic and near junctions.” Keeping this first-hand wording matters because it preserves how the event was experienced at the time of reporting. As more reports are logged from the same area, small details such as overtaking style, lane movement, junction pressure, or recurring time windows can reveal whether this is an isolated event or part of a broader local trend.

This incident is best read alongside nearby reports to understand whether the behaviour is occasional or recurring. Comparing reports by location and incident type helps surface trends that are more actionable than any single account on its own.

Road safety context

This specific report documents Speeding on June 17, 2025. The purpose of keeping this page indexed is to help drivers, campaigners, and local communities compare individual incidents with wider reporting patterns and identify repeated risk factors.

Reviewing multiple incidents from the same area can reveal whether this report reflects a one-off event or part of an ongoing trend.

  • Note repeat speeding behaviour in this area, especially around busy times and merge points.
  • Keep lane discipline and leave extra following distance when a vehicle is rapidly closing from behind.
  • If reporting similar behaviour, include approximate speed differences and road conditions.
UK location overview
British Isles county map
No county match found (showing UK only)
Map © Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0)

Help Improve Road Safety

Have you witnessed similar dangerous driving? Share your experience to help make roads safer for everyone.