Pete317 wrote:
ndp wrote:
To throw your analogy back at you, you wouldn't claim to be able to do a heart surgeon's job on the basis of what you've read in the paper and how you percieve the state of your health - so why do you think you can do a traffic engineer's job on the basis of your perception and what you read in the paper?
I'm starting to find your tone quite offensive.
Diddums.
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You presume that, just because someone has not had formal training in a particular discipline, they are ignorant fools who know nothing.
You presume the same of traffic engineers. You think you know best, but I think I'd be right in guessing that you're not privvy to all the data, you haven't performed as much as a single site visit, discussed it with other traffic / traffic signals engineers and so on. Yet they do appear to have solved an accident problem, which is more than you've done.
I wouldn't come along and suggest the product of your work is rubbish on the grounds I've done a bit of soldering and own a TV - so why is it OK when its the other way round?
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Well I qualified as an electronic engineer before you were even thought of,
So what?
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and after decades of driving, observing and analysing what I've observed, I think I'm well qualified to form a valid opinion.
Perhaps thats the problem.
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If you want to debate the issues, then by all means do so. But I strongly suggest that you get off your high-horse - you might even learn a thing or two.
Speak for yourself.
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So that will explain the signals (which drivers approach with more caution, and allow for protected (and thus safer) right turns) and the lower speed limit
How do they justify four miles of reduced speed limit for one junction?
Possible issues would include, but not be limited to, accident record on the stretch of road in question, siting of signs, ensuring limit changes occur at changes in the nature of the road, consistancy, parking considerations, preventing see-through, etc, etc.
Maybe the speed limit was too high before.
And thats before possible political pressure from people who, like you, think they know best.
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..and counters drivers tendancy to
underestimate the speed of oncoming traffic
A few calculations will show that that's only a problem if they grossly underestimate either the speed of the traffic or the time it will take for them to get clear. Or they expect oncoming traffic to brake for them, together with underestimating its speed.
Maybe so, but from the evidence you have supplied it seems apparant that there was a problem, regardless of how improbable it may seem from your unstated calculations. And, touch wood, the changes appear have dramatically reduced this.
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Then how does it happen?
When speed limits are properly set, very few people really mind driving a few mph below the limit - if that's the speed of the traffic. Most tend to settle down to the flow.
Yes
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But when they perceive the limit to be too low, many tend to drive right up to the limit
And more often well beyond. They don't obey the limits of course - they don't perceive the risk of prosecution to be great enough to be of concern.
And as discussed elsewhere, drivers preception of the limit doesn't necessarily reflect the reality.
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and are less tolerant of people who don't - so they tend to drive too closely.
And they don't do that most of the time anyway?
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Also, when speeds are low, many tend to be quicker to slow down and not so quick to speed up again - after all, they're not going anywhere very fast.
But as there is more time to react, drivers generally slow down early and and smoothly, reducing the stop-start effect which causes more bunching as people have to faff around to get going again.
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And, assuming a 30 limit, you only need about 15 people to slow down by 2mph relative to the car in front of them for the traffic to grind to a halt.
And wheres that come from?
And you haven't provided any evidence to back up your claim the limit is respsonsible, beyond arbitrarily declaring the signal timings issue as "nonsense", with (again) nothing to back it up.
Aside from all that, safety trumps congestion. It appears the measures have resulted in a substantial reduction in accidents at a site with an accident problem. You having to queue is of little consequence in that context.
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You don't dismiss hazards simply because no action is apparantly required at a given time.
Of course not. But you don't give them as much attention as you give to things going on much closer to you. If you're trying to scrutinise something happening a half a mile ahead you might miss noticing that the car in the next lane is about to carve you up, for example.
But OTH if you're concentrating whats happening under your nose, then you'll simply plough into the traffic in front which is grinding to a halt due to congestion or whatever.
Its not one or the other, its both as appropriate. If you need to spend so much time looking near that you can't look far, then you need to slow down.
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Indeed - but if you've got that many hazards close by, shouldn't you be slowing down?
Depends on the number, intensity and nature of the potential hazards. One car in an adjacent lane is a potential hazard, but not necessarily a real hazard - you just need to keep a wary eye.
Not really enough to prevent you from looking ahead then, surely?
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I disagree. If you think about the ball bouncing into the road some distance ahead, you can deal with it. If you leave it until you're on top of it, you hit the child that was following the ball. If you think about the ball early, it may provide you with the time to infer and anticipate the potential child, thus avoiding an accident if the child does indeed follow.
There's a huge gulf between being a half a mile away and being right on top of something.
Except the fact that a hazard half a mile ahead may well cause a hazard imminently.