Witness Terry Thelwell told ABC Radio Sydney he and his wife were only about two-metres away from where the car landed.
“My wife and I were sitting having lunch on a chair down below on the beach and heard this almighty roar and looked to our left and heard screaming,” he said.
“The car … came hurtling across the grass on the promenade at Balmoral, I don’t know how she didn’t hit anybody,”
“It hit the wall at such speed and the car somersaulted over the wall, smashed the wall completely, it’s a hundred-year-old wall, somersaulted on the beach and landed basically two-metres from us.”
Sort of. it stands for ‘probationary’. Drivers in Australia need to display “P Plates” for the first few years after they are licensed. I think “P1” is the first year and P2 the second and third years. There are additional restrictions also:
NSW (where this occurred) is the most restrictive on new drivers. P-platers must adhere to the following rules:
Thanks for a comprehensive answer!
Cheers from Norway
Provisional* https://www.nsw.gov.au/driving-boating-and-transport/driver-and-rider-licences/driver-licences/provisional-p1-licence
Amusingly enough it’s “Probationary” in Victoria… :)
https://www.vicroads.vic.gov.au/licences/your-ps/p1-and-p2-probationary-licence-restrictions
Wow! It sure is, sorry for needlessly correcting you
All good. I think it’s funny. Another stupid thing that Melbourne and Sydney evidently can’t agree on. At least they both start with “P”. It’s a small miracle that they don’t have different letters on the plates and make them change at the border.