ndp wrote:
Guidance, and democracy being what it is, influence from the public, pressure groups and politicians.
...who know how much about road safety?
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You haven't specified the nature of the road, traffic speeds, alignment, sightlines, traffic volumes and turning/crossing counts, accident record etc
I did say what the accident record was. the road is straight and wide - it used to be a three-lane road until about 10 years back. It's the A38, BTW.
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Not far from where I live is a major 'A' road which, until about a year ago, was NSL. This road had no history of accidents,
How do you know?
I know. I've lived near there for years and travel that road every day - and all accidents are reported in the local press, even minor ones.
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except at one notorious junction where several accidents occurred on dark, rainy mornings because of poor visibility.
How do you know?
Once again...
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They solved the visibility problem by cutting back overgrown vegetation near the junction.
Did that solve the accident problem?
Most definitely.
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Did it create a new accident problem?
Emphatically not.
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Maybe the signals are gating traffic and relieving traffic a some point further along that may be more critical?
Nothing like that at all.
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Maybe the signals didn't solve the accident problem.
The accident problem was solved before the signals were put in place.
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Maybe the sightlines or geometery couldn't be provided for 60mph approaches.
The lights are easily visible from at least a half a mile.
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Maybe the speed limit was wrong in the first place.
Maybe idiot drivers were just managing to crash in completely unfathomable circumstances, and so reducing speeds was an attempt to reduce the consequences when people did manage to drive into each other.
Nonsense.
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Also no history of accidents,
How do you know?
FFS, I've lived within spitting distance of it for years.
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What were the circumstances?
The drunk just stumbled into the road. The woman who hit him said she didn't even see him - and, according to the police, her speed was 25-30mph.
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Maybe there was an accident problem. Maybe the 40 limit was too fast.
Read my lips - there was
no accident problem.
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We now have serious congestion, where the traffic used to flow reasonably smoothly.
How do you propose the speed limit changes were responsible for this?
The traffic now bunches up. Work it out for yourself.
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So you consider a van parked half-hidden in a layby alongside a dual-carriageway to be a hazard then?
Potentially, yes.
Do you assume it won't pull out?
And if it's half hidden, there may be something I can't see in the layby which may wish to pull out.
When it's a long layby, separated from the carriageway, and the exit is clearly visible - and still a quarter mile away, what potential hazards are there?
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And since when do you look for hazards several hundred metres ahead?
On motorways Roadcraft suggests looking at least 1/2 mile ahead.
'Suggests'. A lot of the time the traffic much closer to you is far more of a concern. At 70mph it takes you nearly half a minute to cover that distance - and you can stop within around four seconds. (or the distance you cover in two seconds at that speed)
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Again, you've missed my point. See my reply to Peter.
No I haven't, but you seem to keep on missing mine.
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It seems you have already prejudged the motivation for the changes you have described.
How, precisely?
BTW it's late, and I'm now going to bed.