80 mph? Top speed up here is 120kmh /74.5 mph and I am the guy who travels in the slow lane at 55-60 mph pushing less air out of the way. Now I have to wait for 2-3 weeks to take it out for a drive at highway speeds due to a minimal dusting of snow and ludicrous drivers who are just a danger to be around .
75 MPH briefly, yeah. A short stretch of road (about a mile) that had a speed limit of 70 MPH, and I usually do 5 MPH over.
Except when we went camping in Ontario. Speed limit was 100 kph the entire way on highway 61 from the border crossing in NE Minnisota up through Thunder Bay, even though it was a well maintained 4 lane divided highway. I didn't want to get a speeding ticket in Canada so I was towing our camper at 100 kph, and all the Canadians were flying by me in the left lane. The slowest Canadian I saw was probably doing 120 kph. 🤣 Never did see any cops but did have to slow down for a bear crossing the road at one point on the way back to the US.
BTW, easiest border crossing ever. My first and only land border crossing. I've been to Mexico and three Caribbean Islands by plane for vacation. Pull up on a Thursday to go into Canada with our 24' hardside travel trailer. It's raining and nobody is in front of us at the border crossing. The border agent asked for our passports, which we had ready. Asked which state we were from (they have a mirror, but my license plate was partially blocked on the state because of that stupid dealer plate frame I hadn't taken off yet). She then asked if we had any guns, stun guns, tasers, etc (you guys must think we are gun nuts over here

), asked where we were going and how long (Kakabaka Falls and Sleeping Giant Provincial Park), then handed back the passports and said enjoy your trip. Total time, about 1.5 minutes. I'm here used to waiting an hour or more at tropical tourist traps in airports, so this was fantastic!
She was friendly, the US border guards on the other hand came off with a dickish attitude. Pull up on Saturday to go back into the US, only a couple cars in front of us (but now tons of people with boats heading into Canada, so glad we headed up on a Thursday and came down Saturday). As we pull up, a second border agent steps across the road in front of us to stand on the passenger side front of the vehicle, like he's preparing to search our camper or something. The border agent on my side in the booth asks with an aggressive, almost mean voice "Where did you go? How long were you there? Where do you live? Why did you go to Canada? Did you buy anything there?" I replied "some toilet paper, bread, and beer." It was several minutes of questions, very aggressive, way longer than going into Canada and I'm a US citizen returning to the US! I can't imagine how some or most non-US citizens get treated trying to enter the US. I feel like (and I think I've read) the US Border agents are trained to act aggressively to try to get people to let known anything they may be trying to do that's not honest, but I'm not certain how effective it is. It's really annoying though. This trend of friendly vs aggressive held, in general, for the majority of the US and non-US border agents who have questioned me on my trips to and from Mexico and the Caribbean too.