Well, actually, you're all wrong with your answers.
GPSR's that have been introduced in the last year or so - this includes the whole SP 26xx family, as well as other new models - actually "learn" what your average speeds are on the different classes of roads. In other words, if you took two identical GPSR's out of the box, and asked them to calculate a "fastest" route, they would give you the same result. But, if you asked them to calculate the same "fastest" route 2 months later, the one that had been used by a more lead-footed driver would probably calculate a slightly different route that would return a shorter predicted time.
The difference in routing would depend on whether the driver was, for example, very obedient of the speed limit in cities, but lead-footed on higher speed class roads, or lead-footed all the time. FYI, there are about 5 different speed classes of roads that the GPSR itself evaluates as it is building an "actual speed travelled" reference for the owner.
Last week, I did a lot of riding in Germany - from Zurich up to Dresden and back - and I was moving at warp speed along the autobahns. For the next few hundred miles (once I left Germany), if I asked the GPSR to calculate a "fastest" route, it would send me quite a distance out of my way to find the highest speed class road (an expressway), because it figured I would do my usual 110 MPH+ on an expressway. After a few hundred miles of experiencing me drive slowly on expressways (Swiss ones are limited to 110 km/h, French ones to 130 km/h), it settled back down again.
You can't modify these "learned speeds", and you can't look them up, either (unless you put the GPSR into diagnostic mode). But, they exist within the GPSR, and are used to return more accurate routings and more accurate enroute time projections when you ask the GPSR to calculate a "fastest" route. Older GPSRs - such as the GPS V, SP III, etc. - did not have this capability, so, they didn't offer to recalculate when you activated an uploaded route.
So there - y'all learned something today.
PanEuropean