Pete317 wrote:
ndp wrote:
How long have you been traffic engineering?
If you're a traffic engineer then perhaps you can enlighten us on how limits are worked out.
Guidance, and democracy being what it is, influence from the public, pressure groups and politicians.
You don't need to be a traffic engineer to work that out.
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And perhaps you can explain the logic behind the following:
Of course I can't. You haven't specified the nature of the road, traffic speeds, alignment, sightlines, traffic volumes and turning/crossing counts, accident record etc, and as you haven't so much as specified the road I have no way of finding out any of that.
I can point out some of the possible flaws in your argument though.
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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?
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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?
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They solved the visibility problem by cutting back overgrown vegetation near the junction.
Did that solve the accident problem?
Did it create a new accident problem?
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Then they put up traffic lights - which now cause mile-long tailbacks, where none existed before.
Maybe improving visibility didn't solve the accident problem?
Maybe the signals are gating traffic and relieving traffic a some point further along that may be more critical?
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Not content with these measures, they then reduced the speed limit to 40mph for about two to three miles either side of the junction.
Maybe the signals didn't solve the accident problem.
Maybe the sightlines or geometery couldn't be provided for 60mph approaches.
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.
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Another road near me is also a major route into town. It was NSL until a few years ago when they reduced it to 40.
Maybe the speed limit was too low in the first place?
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Also no history of accidents,
How do you know?
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except for one drunk who got killed crossing the road from a pub late one rainy night.
What were the circumstances?
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Admittedly, people did have a problem crossing the road - but that was down to the sheer volume of traffic in the morinings and evenings. So they put up a pelican crossing. Problem solved - or so we thought. A few months later the limit was reduced to 30 - not just in the vicinity of the crossing, but for the entire length of the road.
Maybe there was an accident problem. Maybe the 40 limit was too fast.
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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?
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HTF are drivers supposed to work out if a hazard is real or not if the don't look for and see all hazards so they can assess if they are "real" or not?
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.
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Or one parked on a motorway bridge?
Granted
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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.
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But at those sort of distances, they've already nicked you - even if you haven't yet been able to make out what colour the van is.
Again, you've missed my point. See my reply to Peter.
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Only when ideology, prejudice and dogma are set aside does the truth emerge - Kepler
It seems you have already prejudged the motivation for the changes you have described.