T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
251.3 | M25 to get wider (again) | CHEST::RUTTER | Rutter the Nutter | Tue Dec 04 1990 10:42 | 23 |
| I see that the new Transport Minister has announced his intention
of spending 1 billion pounds on the M25.
The motorway will be increased to 4 lanes all-round, with some
sections increased to 5 lanes.
Extra direction signs will be put up (to avoid 10-hour marathons?).
Video Cameras will be installed to help the Police
(supposedly to catch out people who drive in the
right-hand lane when there is no need).
I wonder if it will actually happen and what it will really cost.
Also, I remember the delays involved when adding an extra lane around
the Heathrow section, only recently completed.
I would like to know if the benefit of one extra lane now was
really worth all the hassle involved during the work.
Hopefully, they would also add lanes on the motorways which join
the M25, as those junctions are always bad news.
J.R.
|
251.4 | | OVAL::SAXBYM | Teenage Ninja Mutant Teutons | Tue Dec 04 1990 10:46 | 10 |
|
John,
I think the section between the M3 and the M4 is about as bad now as
it was before the extra lane was added (ie it's at standstill in the
rush hours).
Imagine what it would be like with only 3 lanes in each direction! :^(
Mark
|
251.6 | Car-pooling for road traffic, Railways for freight ? | CHEST::RUTTER | Rutter the Nutter | Tue Dec 04 1990 11:51 | 19 |
| I feel that other solutions should be investigated,
besides (as well as) throwing money at the problem...
Perhaps some consideration should be made to 'car-pooling',
as used in the States ?
In peak traffic hours, one lane (or more?) is reserved for vehicles
which have more than one person in them.
Of course, this may make the situation worse in the 'other' lanes,
but wouldn't that then provide an incentive. I don't believe that
all traffic on the M25 comprises lorries and rep's (who would not
be expected to carry passengers), but the figures may be high enough
to negate any advantages from 'car-pool' lanes.
J.R. (if DoT can purchase the extra land to extend motorways, why not
let BR buy some and built an 'orbital railway' along a similar
route - perhaps it would then be useful for freight traffic ?)
|
251.7 | Would driver education be cheaper? | NEWOA::VANDIK::HENNEMAN | Reality? - not today thanks | Tue Dec 04 1990 12:04 | 15 |
| Rather than throw in more money to make extra lanes on our Motorways, might it
not be more cost effective to educate the Great British Motorist to make
better use of the lanes that are available?
There appears to be a lemming-like desire to get to the outside lanes at all
costs, and then stay there, leaving the inner lanes 50% deserted but bringing
everything to a crawl in the process. Under these circumstances, adding extra
lanes will not get rid of the dash-to-the-fast-lane mentality, but will simply
increase the amount of wasted space.
Unless, of course, we made undertaking legal.............
Well, that's my controversal bit for this week.
Dick
|
251.8 | Most people have trouble OVER taking! | OVAL::SAXBYM | Teenage Mutant Ninja Teutons | Tue Dec 04 1990 12:12 | 5 |
| >> Unless, of course, we made undertaking legal.............
Never has a manouevre had such an apt name! :^)
Mark
|
251.9 | | SUBURB::PARKER | GISSAJOB | Tue Dec 04 1990 12:13 | 9 |
| I read a projection at the weekend issued by a management consultancy
on a number of possible developments in life, the universe and
everything over the next ten years.
For the M25 they were suggesting a second deck. This would look a bit
naff, but would cost nowt in land acquisition costs, and would involve
known bridge technology, tried and tested on the M4.
Steve
|
251.10 | Motorbikes could avoid congestion | CHEST::RUTTER | Rutter the Nutter | Tue Dec 04 1990 12:30 | 12 |
| � known bridge technology, tried and tested on the M4.
Technology that cannot be used when the wind blows ?
How about a motorbike lane ?
That would carry more people in less space (using less fuel?)
Oh, I forgot, people are not allowed to ride bikes
unless they have been on ten-year training courses first !
J.R.
|
251.11 | Lane discipline? Don't make me laugh. | SUPER7::BROWN | Just another statistic | Tue Dec 04 1990 15:47 | 7 |
| Ideas:
1. Make it illegal to be passed on the inside.
2. Close all slip roads ON except those from major roads (M'ways and
major 'A' roads).
Laurie.
|
251.12 | Dunno if this is official but... | VOGON::BALL | Maggie, Maggie, Maggie *IS* out, out, out... | Wed Dec 05 1990 14:43 | 11 |
| There was a transport expert on LBC last night who was saying that on some
sections the Government won't be able to buy the land at the side of the M25 and
will make it into 4 lanes each way just by shrinking the lane width and hard
shoulder. This will be accompanied by speed limits on these sections of 50mph.
This would be a major pain outside rush hour when you can normally bomb round
the M25 fairly fast and particularly at night when it is deserted and you can
use highly illegal speeds. A reduction of 20mph in the speed limit would change
these into even more highly illegal speeds and interest the boys in blue.
Jon
|
251.13 | And what about lorries/wide trailers, etc | VOGON::MITCHELLE | ......<o-' '42>.... oops.!!! | Wed Dec 05 1990 16:01 | 7 |
|
Reducing lane widths sounds dangerous to me - enough people seem to
have trouble with the widths currently available!
Has anyone noticed how a lorry in the middle lane seems to prevent some
drivers from overtaking? Just think how many more would not move past
if the lane was narrower.
|
251.14 | | BRABAM::PHILPOTT | Col I F 'Tsingtao Dhum' Philpott | Wed Dec 05 1990 16:03 | 7 |
|
what about them - they ought to be banned (at least during peak traffic
hours)
/. Ian .\
PS peak traffic on the M25 is 0500-2200 Monday to Saturday inclusive.
|
251.15 | | SHAPES::FIDDLERM | | Wed Dec 05 1990 16:10 | 6 |
| I also read about 'limiters' - sensors, which once traffic reaches a
certain volume, close off entrances to the Mway, so no more can get on.
I believe a test scheme of this sort has been in operation on the M6
near Brum. Anyone know any more?
Mikef
|
251.16 | | YUPPY::HEWITTG | Bring back Broken Biscuit Tins | Wed Dec 05 1990 16:50 | 19 |
| An earlier note about extra lanes was right about it not helping the
situation.
It takes one lorry doing 40 for all vehicles that do 41 and above to
move over. Take this to its logical conclusion and 30 lanes would not
be enough.
I believe the idea of restricting access to only the 8 motorways and
the A1 (I think that's the right number) is a good solution. This
means that only users who are on a long trip and want to get AROUND
London would use it, and the short trip drivers would be forced back to
their own local routes.
Graham
PS A serious idea put forward some time back was to make the entire 6
lanes one way, ie. all anti clockwise or vicecersa.
Not bad for some..........
|
251.17 | M25 would always reach 'certain volume' of traffic | CRATE::RUTTER | Rutter the Nutter | Wed Dec 05 1990 16:56 | 10 |
| � certain volume, close off entrances to the Mway, so no more can get on.
Sounds even worse !
Does the logic for this go 'if the M25 has a problem, make sure that
all connecting motorways have a problem too' ?
What does the driver do, carry on regardless ?
J.R.
|
251.18 | 2p | DOOZER::JENKINS | Quote......unquotE | Wed Dec 05 1990 18:27 | 58 |
|
I agree with a number of previous notes that said or implied that
the M25 has too many entrances and exits. The section from the A3
probably as far round as the Dartford Tunnel is full of cars
crossing lanes... you know what I mean:
On entering a motorway....
One should get to the fast lane as quickly as possible.
On preparing to exit a motorway....
Do nothing until its too late.
As drivers enter motorways and force their way into the outer lanes,
it invariably causes those already in the outer lanes to take evasive
action.
Most motorists also seem to believe it is their god-given right to
stay in the outer lanes until they are only a couple of hundred yards from
their exit junction and then force their way across however many lanes
of traffic they need to to get off. This sort of driving also causes
other motorists to take avoiding action.
Of the two evils though, I think that entrances cause much greater
problems than exits. By their very nature, entrances pour more traffic
into an already congested area.
I would like to see the M25 widened to five (or even six) lanes
and in essence, create two parallel roads running side by side.
The outermost lanes (2 but preferrably 3) would be used by all the
current entrances and exits. Access would be unrestricted.
The inner lanes (3) would only be connected by junctions to the outer
lanes at six or seven points along its entire length. These would
be new junctions - not revamps of existing ones - and not where
major roads intersected. The inner lanes would become a "super-route"
and the new junctions would only connect the outer road with the
"super-route".
Each exit junction from the "super-route" would cover the next (3/4/5)
existing junctions, while entry onto the "super-route" would only
be available for those not requiring the next (3/4/5) existing
junctions. Local traffic would therefor never get onto the "super-route".
This would probably not improve the outer road much which would
probably be as bad as the existing road is today or even worse. But I
think it would help those who were using the "super-route" and become
probably what the M25 was supposed to be - a motorway that connected
the major trunk routes into and out of London.
Richard.
|
251.19 | | FORTY2::QUICK | 17 hands, now that's more like it | Wed Dec 05 1990 18:38 | 10 |
|
� I would like to see the M25 widened to five (or even six) lanes
Surely a better idea would be to quadruple the tax on petrol,
increase the Road Tax to �500 or so, and make the MOT and driving
tests considerably harder? The object should be to reduce the number
of cars on the road, not increase the size of the roads. The UK
isn't big enough to be covered with 6-lane motorways.
Jonathan.
|
251.20 | A world fit for company car drivers | DOOZER::JENKINS | Quote......unquotE | Thu Dec 06 1990 13:06 | 16 |
|
Re: < Note 251.19 by FORTY2::QUICK "17 hands, now that's more like it" >
�� I would like to see the M25 widened to five (or even six) lanes
� Surely a better idea would be to quadruple the tax on petrol,
� increase the Road Tax to �500 or so, and make the MOT and driving
� tests considerably harder? The object should be to reduce the number
� of cars on the road, not increase the size of the roads. The UK
� isn't big enough to be covered with 6-lane motorways.
I thought we were talking about what to do with the M25?
|
251.21 | | FORTY2::QUICK | 17 hands, now that's more like it | Thu Dec 06 1990 14:31 | 9 |
|
I was... the idea is to reduce the number of cars on it, and to
do nothing to the road itself - cheaper and environmentally more
sound than doubling it's number of lanes. They could also try
making all motorways, especially the M25, toll-paying like those
in France. Keep as many people off them as possible and make them
self-maintaining (financially).
Jonathan.
|
251.22 | | NEEPS::IRVINE | Business the American Way | Thu Dec 06 1990 16:11 | 6 |
| In the case of the M25... All your solution would do is cause the
majority of road users to use `A' class roads... surely this would
be more environmentally UNFRIENDLY...
Bob
|
251.23 | The M25 without lorries - sheer Heaven! | MANWRK::SMITHM | I'm a Libran thinker, I think. | Mon Dec 10 1990 16:25 | 15 |
| .15�I believe a test scheme of this sort has been in operation on the M6
.15�near Brum. Anyone know any more?
Don't know about any test scheme, but during my recent travels through
this neck of the woods, I have noticed that most slip roads onto the
M6 have traffic lights above each lane. I haven't yet seen any of them
in operation, as I try and get through Brum outside of the rush hours.
Rather than spend billions on making the M25 wider, I believe the gov-
ernment ought to provide incentives for lorries to be carried on spec-
ial railway `trailers' from key terminals around the country - in the
same way as we use "Motorail". The Swiss use this concept. They also
ban the movement of lorries over the weekends.
Martin.
|
251.24 | | NEEPS::IRVINE | Ne Te Confundant Iligitimi | Mon Dec 10 1990 16:45 | 11 |
| .23
Your suggestion is one of the best that I have heard... BUT...
With investment in BR being what it is... and the outlook for
privitisation of BR, I think it unlikely with our present government,
or economic climate!
Pity
Bob
|
251.25 | | MARVIN::RUSLING | Hastings Upper Layers | Mon Dec 10 1990 17:01 | 15 |
|
Actually, if you could swing it, it would make sense...
a. Ban all lorries from roads at weekends, license lorries for particular
routes and then only if rail transport is not available.
b. Privatise the railways.
a gives a hell of a boost to demand and causes b to become a profitable
investment.
Of course, the same could be said of passenger transport, but that
would be political suicide.
Dave
|
251.26 | | NEARLY::GOODENOUGH | | Tue Dec 11 1990 11:29 | 8 |
| > With investment in BR being what it is...
> I think it unlikely with our present government,
In effect, we have a new government. This administration looks a lot
more predisposed towards the railways, and I expect more investment in
that area (cf. channel tunnel high speed link now looking likely).
Jeff.
|
251.27 | | NEEPS::IRVINE | Ne Te Confundant Iligitimi | Tue Dec 11 1990 16:15 | 9 |
| I agree with the new PM there *may* be some improvement in investment
in BR... but from experience (I was a signals & telecommunications
engineer with BR for 7 years), I have my doubts. There is very
little likelyhood of private money being invested in this sort of
venture unlike the Chunnel.
Just my opinion
Bob
|
251.28 | There are problems | JANUS::BARKER | Jeremy Barker - T&N/CBN Diag. Eng. - Reading, UK | Tue Dec 11 1990 20:15 | 11 |
| > Rather than spend billions on making the M25 wider, I believe the gov-
> ernment ought to provide incentives for lorries to be carried on spec-
> ial railway `trailers' from key terminals around the country - in the
> same way as we use "Motorail". The Swiss use this concept. They also
> ban the movement of lorries over the weekends.
Private money is being invested in this sort of thing, the biggest problem
is that the BR loading guage doesn't allow a full-size box trailer to be
put on a rail wagon.
jb
|
251.29 | First Tuesday - M25 the magic roundabout | KERNEL::SHELLEYR | Adios, amoeba _m_���_m_ | Wed Jan 02 1991 10:16 | 27 |
| Did anyone see this last night ?
It was basically about the sort of incidents that occur on the m25 that
the police have to deal with.
I thought that the officers were particularly sarcastic and self
righteous in their attitude to the mororists they talked to.
Favourite incidents were -
o The guy doing 70 down the hard shoulder (he had to get to heathrow
airport). Also the one that was driving on the hard shoulder because
he thought he was low on petrol.
o The guy that got stopped for not wearing a seat belt, reading a paper
on the steering wheel and talking on a car phone.
o What about the guy that was taking a nap on the hard shoulder.
Any comments on the apparent stupidity on motorway users and the
attitude of the police ?
After seeing the fatal accident with the lorry driver and hearing about
the one on the M27 the other day, I was more than usually alert this
morning going up the M3.
- Roy
|
251.30 | M25 Madness | IOSG::MARSHALL | Waterloo Sunset | Wed Jan 02 1991 10:28 | 13 |
| I didn't find the police sarcastic, so much as unusually and
unrealistically "nice" to the dirvers, obviously because they were on
camera...
Wouldn't surprise me if they were sarcastic. They must get really
pi***d off seeing all the stupidity on that road, and the horrors it
can lead to, and the complete failure of most motorists to realise
this...
Scott, who doesn't use the M25 if there's an alternative route, 'cos he
wants to live to read this conference another day...
|
251.31 | | VOGON::BALL | ...and a Happy New Year to the lot of you! | Wed Jan 02 1991 12:05 | 11 |
| I didn't see the programme Roy is talking about in .29 but one thing that occurs
to me is that the 'guy that was taking a nap on the hard shoulder' may have been
doing the right thing. If he felt so tired that he was liable to fall asleep at
the wheel before the next junction, that risk would be greater than the risk of
someone shunting into him on the hard shoulder.
I've never been so tired I couldn't keep myself awake until the next services
with a blast of full speed cold air and a loud tape on the stereo...
Jon
|
251.32 | | COMICS::FISCHER | I've got a special purpose | Wed Jan 02 1991 12:13 | 6 |
| It can be a long way to the next services on the M25
Ian
|
251.33 | Pull Over | CRATE::WATSON | Back to mono | Wed Jan 02 1991 12:24 | 6 |
| Always pull over if you feel like a rest ... My Dad didn't and managed
to write off his Jowett (sp) Jupiter in the back of a lorry ... He was
very lucky ... and I almost wasn't.
It was a soft top Jupiter so you'd think it would be difficult to nod
off - but apparently not. (Even at 80+)
|
251.34 | Crying on his shoulder | IOSG::MARSHALL | Waterloo Sunset | Wed Jan 02 1991 12:33 | 5 |
| If you feel like a rest, leave at the next junction and stop somewhere
off the motorway. The majority of motorway accidents are hard-shoulder
shunts. Don't stop there unless you have to!
Scott
|
251.35 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Wed Jan 02 1991 13:00 | 14 |
|
Yup, I saw the program, I thought the motorists that were stopped were
terrible - how many more like that?
Did the guy going along the hard shoulder with 2 gallons of petrol
still in his tank really think he was out of petrol - what good driving
on the hard shoulder - get off at the next exit, or stop at the yellow
phone.
They all sounded as if they thought they had had proper excuses for
doing the things they were, and didn't expect to be told off, let
alone being booked.
Heather
|
251.36 | Anyone got a video of it? | VOGON::MITCHELLE | Beware of the green meanie | Wed Jan 02 1991 13:27 | 8 |
|
I didn't see the program, but it sounds like it ought to have been a
good 'educational' excercise for motorists - or perhaps the only people
who watch programs like that are people who already have an interest in
motoring and motoring safety.
The more people who are forced to realise that driving with a phone in
their hand (etc) is an offence, the better!
|
251.37 | | SIEVAX::CORNE | Of a pigs tail, you can never make a good shaft! | Wed Jan 02 1991 14:09 | 8 |
| I thought that they were a bit mean not to give the woman who claimed to
have been left on the M25 "not intentionally" a lift to the next exit - they
would have to go there anyway. Instead, they insisted she climbed the bank
and walked through the fields....friendly??
...but 70 on the hard shoulder deserved the ticket, plane or no plane.
Jc
|
251.38 | | HEWIE::RUSSELL | Meeeeerrrrry Christmas, Ho, Ho, Ho. | Wed Jan 02 1991 14:30 | 17 |
| Hmm,
I wonder how "balanced" the program was, as the fatal accident they showed
in great detail didn't happen on the M25, but on the M1....
I wonder if they had to show a "fatal", and this was the only one
they could find!
However, it did re-inforce just how many stupid people there are driving
on the roads today.
It's funny they didn't mention the two senior police officers who were
stopped last summer on that stretch, for driving at speed on the hard
shoulder, 'cos they had a plane to catch at Heathrow as well....
Peter (who is very pleased his 110 mile commute along M1/M25/M3/M27 is
now down to 3 miles, and I'm sure my blood pressure is down as well!)
|
251.39 | No accidents. Only mistakes! | DOOZER::JENKINS | Quote......unquotE | Wed Jan 02 1991 14:50 | 6 |
|
I thought it was an interesting and informative program. I particularly
liked the lack of a "voice-over commentary".
Richard.
|
251.40 | | SIEVAX::CORNE | Of a pigs tail, you can never make a good shaft! | Wed Jan 02 1991 14:54 | 9 |
| Something else I liked....
Lots of shots of cars going past on the other carriageway with drivers looking
directly at the "action". One guy was actually watching back over his shoulder
while driving past. I hope each of these were watching the program last night
and reallise that it is THEM that cause the holdups on the motorway!!!
Jc, who would prefer the commute to Newbury anyday, but the job moved
without asking my permission :-(
|
251.41 | I'd call it good observation | IOSG::MARSHALL | Waterloo Sunset | Wed Jan 02 1991 15:43 | 18 |
| While I was watching the program, someone with me commented on the guy
looking over his shoulder, to which my reply was, and still is:
It was a slow motion shot. He was looking over his shoulder for about
12 frames (ie half a second) as he was about to pull out from the slip
road onto the main carriageway. This is perfectly correct and is
exactly what he should have been doing, particularly as he was in a van
with limited visibility.
It just *looked* like he was doing the wrong thing because of the
slow-motion film.
Likewise, the drivers who looked sideways at the roadside camera as they
drove past only glanced for a fraction of a second. About the same
time as it takes you to look in your mirror. Maybe the camera
crew should have been booked for distracting the drivers' attention...?
Scott
|
251.42 | Video anyone? | XNOGOV::LISA | Give quiche a chance | Wed Jan 02 1991 16:07 | 6 |
| Did anyone video this program? Can I borrow the tape please :-}
Thanks,
Lisa.
|
251.43 | | BAHTAT::FORCE4::hilton | How's it going royal ugly dudes? | Wed Jan 02 1991 16:09 | 15 |
| I thought the small bit I saw was VERY funny.
The guy who was running out of petrol ;^)
He had every excuse under the book and when the policeman told him he
could either get an "on-the-spot" or got to court he replied "Which
would be more leniant"!!
Also his classic "I don't normally do this, officer"
How about the guy who was late for his plane, I think the policeman was
very nice and made sure he didn't miss the plane - do you think it
would have been the same story if the camera's weren't there?
Greg
|
251.44 | | SIEVAX::CORNE | Sometimes you get the Elevator, sometimes the Shaft | Thu Jan 03 1991 14:06 | 6 |
| re .41,
Well, I stand by what I said. Watch the jaw drop as they gaped...
Jc
|
251.45 | | COMICS::MILLAR | No Porn please I'm Graphic | Thu Jan 03 1991 14:27 | 7 |
| Lisa
I've got it on VHS if you like. I am in the Basingstoke CSC..
Regards
Bruce
|
251.46 | all pigs are equal??? | KIRKTN::LDICKHOFF | | Fri Jan 04 1991 12:37 | 26 |
| The police must have been nice 'cause the camera's were there, or the
police in Edinburgh are just plain b****.
On the New Years Eve (my birthday of all days) I got done for speeding;
44mph in a 30mph zone (although some stretches are 40mph). This 30mph zone
happens to be the Queensferry Road, which is in real life a dual carriage
way into Edinburgh where, if you do 30mph, drivers flash lights, hoot and
overtake you pointing at their head. I saw the police car, checked my speed
(40mph) and as I *thought* I was in the "40mph bit" didnot slow down and
subsequently got done. Nothing of the 'let's be nice to the driver who
is sober'. They were probably annoyed that I was not drunk.....(they
didnot even breathalize me) But then again, at 20.30 they must have been
bored or getting warmed up for later.............
On the BBC news there were items showing the police stopping people for
dangerous driving, no lights on etc all in an effort to breathalize
people, and ofcoarse NOBODY get charged for there offences.
Can I book a BBC crew somewhere?????????????????/
Well, this is enough moanin' for today...............
Flying Dutchman
|
251.47 | | COMICS::FISCHER | I've got a special purpose | Fri Jan 04 1991 12:42 | 7 |
| Why do people get so annoyed when caught speeding? The police
are just doing their job and the more law-breakers they catch the
better!
Ian
|
251.48 | | DOOZER::JENKINS | Quote......unquotE | Fri Jan 04 1991 14:06 | 9 |
|
Re .41
I thought the slo-mo was of other drivers passing the accident?
Re .47
And a Happy New Year to you too. I hope you forgot the :-)
|
251.49 | DON'T DO IT...... stop on the Motorway, that is. | CHEFS::CLEMENTSD | Public Sector and Telecomms | Fri Jan 04 1991 14:09 | 22 |
| Re several back...... Don't ever ever ever stoip for as quick cat nap
beside the M(anything). It'll cost you an endorsement. Afew years back
I was trying to drive with a migraine (I know, prettty stupid thing to
do, but I did it) and got to the stage where I could either see 6 lanes
or three bridges at any one time: pulled over and must have passed out
or something..... next thing I knew, Mr. Plod's bashing on the window.
"Are we alright, Sir?" "I am now" says I. "Do you mind if I get in the
car" he says and gets in. First thing he did was to satisfy himself
that I hadn't been drinking (all he had to do was ask me) and then he
listened when I explained that I had stopped 'cos I thought I was a
danger to myself and other road users in the condition I felt and had
pulled over 'cos I was too young and hansome to die. "Very good sir" he
says, "proceed if you feel able". No warnings, no "I am going to book
you etc..... just a plain brown envelope a few weeks later informing me
of the court hearing. I call the AA legal dept who laugh at the event
and tell me to p**s off and plead innocent and call them when I have a
**REAL** problem for them to solve. I did just that and the hanging
judge in St Albans court gave me a 3 point loss and stuffed me with a
�55 fine (and this is 1978).....
Stopping on the motorway in anything other than an emergency is the
only non-moving violation that can cost you an endorsement.
|
251.50 | Emergency/Dangerous Situation - what does the law say ? | CHEST::RUTTER | Rut The Nut | Fri Jan 04 1991 14:17 | 6 |
| � Stopping on the motorway in anything other than an emergency is the
� only non-moving violation that can cost you an endorsement.
So, what is the legal-speak smallprint description of an 'emergency' ?
J.R.
|
251.51 | | OVAL::SAXBYM | Contentious?Moi?Rides again! | Fri Jan 04 1991 14:19 | 29 |
| Re .48
Why do people get annoyed when caught speeding?
OK, the one time I was stopped I got let off with a 'be careful sir,
there are a lot people who have been drinking out tonight', but the
law IS the law. Maybe it's ok for someone to rape your wife or steal
your TV?
Speed limits are legally enforcable and it falls to the Police to
enforce them. As someone said earlier they are the ones who have to
scrape corpses off the roads.
Virtually everyone speeds at sometime, but to imagine that drivers
have some god-given right to ignore the law is foolish. If you exceed
a speed limit you are breaking the law and you take a chance. If you
get away with it you were lucky, if you don't it's your own fault.
The comment in .46 seems to suggest that the driver pays to much
attention to fellow road users. If the limit was 30 mph and the road
is a dual-carriageway, why bother if some drunken imbecile wants to
make faces at you instead of concentrating on his driving. If you
did he'd be the one who was nicked and not you. You were speeding,
you got caught (only mitigation being that you thought you were in
a 40 mph zone, but then again the law would say you should be more
observant I suspect), you'll pay the penalty (which in fact is pretty
miniscule).
Mark
|
251.52 | Punish one, punish all. | DOOZER::JENKINS | Quote......unquotE | Fri Jan 04 1991 14:43 | 20 |
|
Re .51
� Why do people get annoyed when caught speeding?
� OK, the one time I was stopped I got let off with a 'be careful sir,
� there are a lot people who have been drinking out tonight', but the
� law IS the law.
Yes it is. But why should *you* be let off and someone else prosecuted
for the same offence? You broke the law, were caught and should
be prosecuted. There is a need for consistency.
� Maybe it's ok for someone to rape your wife or steal
� your TV?
No. And I would expect offenders to be prosecuted - not let off!
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251.53 | Does anyone WANT to punished? | OVAL::SAXBYM | Contentious?Moi?Rides again! | Fri Jan 04 1991 14:45 | 7 |
|
Re .52
I have no arguement with that, but I doubt anyone here would turn down
a chance to escape punishment.
Mark
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251.54 | Does anyone WANT to be caught? | CHEST::RUTTER | Rut The Nut | Fri Jan 04 1991 15:04 | 1 |
| � -< Does anyone WANT to punished? >-
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251.55 | minor car faults - emergencies? | VOGON::MITCHELLE | Beware of the green meanie | Fri Jan 04 1991 15:25 | 10 |
|
re a few back, and the definition of an emergeny. I have often wondered
what the 'small print' says. I would have thought an inability to see
where you were driving (as in the 'migrane' note) is an emergeny. It
could be argued that te journey should never have been started, but
illness can come on suddenly, and in some places it can be a long way
between junctions. If ever I felt I _had_ to stop due to tiredness, I
think I would open the bonnet and check the loose plug lead. Not only
would this get you out of the car and into fresh air it would hopefully wake
you up enough to get to the next junction.
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251.56 | You can't win | CRATE::WATSON | Back to mono | Fri Jan 04 1991 15:46 | 21 |
| Re. .49
I also suffer from migraine which (as any one who get them will agree)
come on very quickly (5 minutes or less).
So consider the scenario.
On a M-way 10 miles from the next exit I feel a migraine
comming on what do I do ?
a) Drive on regardless at considerable risk to all concerned - illegal
b) Speed to next exit at 120 MPH - illegal
c) Pull over and stop - illegal
d) There is no plan D.
Ideas ?
Rik
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251.57 | | NEWOA::MACMILLAN | So many roads, so little time | Fri Jan 04 1991 16:23 | 6 |
| re -1
e) Pull over - ring up on one of the phones and ask to be towed away as
you are mechanically broken down :-)
Rob
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251.58 | How do you sleep with a migraine? | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Fri Jan 04 1991 16:24 | 19 |
|
I'd have to stop after 5 minutes, because I wouldn't be able to see.
Lights trigger my migraines, and the thing that does it most(apart from
flourescent lights) is driving next to those cones for roadworks -
they're really awful.
(crash barriers with cars , headlights on, coming the other way
trigger them, so do those yellow lines designed to slow you down at
junctions).
There are rose-tinted glasses being manufactured towards the end of this
year, which cut down these effects (there was even a report on this in
Connect a few months ago).
I'd say it was an emergency - did the judge understand that migraines
can badly affect sight? there are many people who don't.
Heather
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251.60 | | SUBURB::PARKER | GISSAJOB | Fri Jan 04 1991 16:49 | 12 |
| If you are subject to a medical condition which renders you unfit to
drive at short notice, you are arguably not medically fit to drive at
all. It is certainly arguable that since it is reasonably foreseeable
that such unfitness may come upon you in such circumstances that you
are unable to reach a safe or lawful place to stop, you should not
drive on roads such as motorways.
Certainly epileptics are not permitted to drive unless their condition
is controlled to certain standards. Migraine is certainly milder, but
can incapacitate.
Steve
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251.61 | Re my migraine story of aeons ago..... | CHEFS::CLEMENTSD | Public Sector and Telecomms | Fri Jan 04 1991 16:56 | 1 |
| Not bad eh, First day back and a class 1 rathole developed!
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251.62 | Pull off to the grass bank, throw up, then faint ! | CHEST::RUTTER | Rut The Nut | Fri Jan 04 1991 16:56 | 14 |
| � is controlled to certain standards. Migraine is certainly milder, but
� can incapacitate.
It has been agreed (I think) that migraine can incapacitate, and that
it can 'come on' quite quickly, but not with the sudden effect that an
epileptic fit may do. I can see your argument, but don't entirely agree.
Plan D) Drive off the hard shoulder and onto the grass bank !
The coppers on the 'Magic Roundabout' documentary did not
complain about people or cars being there. (At least the
driver of the Volvo made sure his circumstance WAS an emergency)
J.R. (grateful that I don't get migraines)
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251.63 | Drinken Druving! | OVAL::SAXBYM | Contentious?Moi?Rides again! | Fri Jan 04 1991 17:15 | 6 |
|
>> -< Pull off to the grass bank, throw up, then faint ! >-
When I get into this state I make sure I'm not driving! :^)
Mark
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251.64 | | VOGON::BALL | ...and a Happy New Year to the lot of you! | Fri Jan 04 1991 17:45 | 13 |
| In an attempt to start a *different* rathole from note .49,
> Stopping on the motorway in anything other than an emergency is the
> only non-moving violation that can cost you an endorsement.
I have heard of someone getting penalty points for parking on the zig-zag lines
before a pedestrian crossing. I remembered this as I have zig-zag lines outside
my house so it made me very careful to park before the start of them.
Apart from these two cases, I don't know of any other non-moving penalty point
offences. Unless you know different...
Jon
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251.65 | some are more equal... | KIRKTN::LDICKHOFF | | Fri Jan 04 1991 18:43 | 8 |
| RE me getting done:
I'm not denying fault and will pay the fine; only it appears that not
all pigs are equal....
Cheers,
Flying Dutchman
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251.66 | to see, or not to see | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Mon Jan 07 1991 13:51 | 39 |
| Yup, parking on hatches which are edged by white lines.
\#"$%& holiday makers.
And migraines, why ask for painkillers, it's the lack of vision that
causes the problem, and they have no effect on the vision.
Also, any painkiller that is going to touch the headache that comes
with a migraine, has the "drowsyness" warning - ie, don't drive when you
take these!
From the first instant I notice my sight going, I have approx 5 minutes
before I am unable to see properly to drive. This means I can get to
saftey - even if it is the hard shoulder. This is considered a
reasonable amount of time, and not licence-threatening.
I have no pain whatsoever at this stage, in fact the lights are quite
pretty, like a kiddies keliedascope. After about 20 minutes of lights,
they go. I upchuck, and then I have the headache - it's like a person
inside your head with a huge hammer - banging on alternate sides.
It's much worse than any hangovers I've had, and I've had a few,
being partial to scrumpy and large bloody marys.
I can drive like this, but it is not nice, so at the next service
station et al, take my megralief, and wait for about 3-4 hours.
I've only had to do stop at a service station once, as on other
occaisions I have been close enough to my home or destinaition to get
there in 10 minutes, or within about 20 minutes of my sight returning
to normal.
What really gets me is that the department of transport commisioned a
study into the effect of the yellow stopping lines, and cones, and
have produced a report which states that they bring on migraines in
migraine sufferers who are triggerd by lights (rather than chocolate/
cheese/red wine etc.)
BUT they have not done a thing about it!
Heather
Who is REALLY grateful that food/drink is not a trigger for her!
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251.67 | Why the M25? | AYOV27::ISMITH | Careless lives cost talk | Wed Jan 09 1991 11:39 | 8 |
| Perhaps a bit late, but I saw the documentary and although I thought
it was very interesting I did wonder what it had to do with the
M25? It could have been any one of a number of motorways. I had
thought when I read about the program beforehand that it would relate
to the particular traffic problems of the M25, but...
Ian.
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251.68 | Why not ? | KERNEL::SHELLEYR | Adios, amoeba _m_���_m_ | Wed Jan 09 1991 11:53 | 13 |
| Re; .-1
I thought that too Ian, especially as a caller from an emergency 'phone
said he was on the M1.
I guess the police car that the camera crew were with had a wide area
and covered the bottom part on the M1.
With the very high volume of traffic on the M25 you would see a lot
more and varied incidents than perhaps on other m'ways.
- Roy
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251.69 | | ESBS01::RUTTER | Rut The Nut | Thu Aug 27 1992 10:39 | 7 |
| My Wife told me last night that she heard there are to be roadworks
on the M25 which will mean that the section from Heathrow to Gatwick
will be closed for about 6 weeks !!!
Anyone know any details on this ?
J.R.
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251.70 | | UPROAR::EVANSG | Gwyn Evans @ IME - Open DECtrade -> DTN 769-8108 | Thu Aug 27 1992 12:12 | 7 |
| Well, the only things that I know about is that there's currently
plans by the DoT to expand the area between J15 (M4) and J12? to have
two new dual-carrigeways parallel to the existing roads. That's at
present in 'consultations' but is the only major work that I know
that's anticipated for that stretch.
Gwyn (commuting J13 <-> J16 each day)
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251.71 | Seems likely | MINNIE::COSGROVE | Paul Cosgrove @RKA 830-4090 | Thu Aug 27 1992 13:58 | 8 |
| My mole at the DoT has said something similar to -1.
Mind you he also talked about 7 lanes around Heathrow. Anyone heard about that
one?
I will try for more details.
PaulC
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251.72 | A marathon | WOTVAX::MACDONALDI | Stalybridge Celtic | Thu Aug 27 1992 14:26 | 10 |
|
RE -1
>>" Seven lanes aound Heathrow"
Sounds like a bid from The London Olympic Committee to me.
mac
I see your team won at last yesterday...:)
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251.73 | | UPROAR::EVANSG | Gwyn Evans @ IME - Open DECtrade -> DTN 769-8108 | Thu Aug 27 1992 16:33 | 13 |
| .71�Mind you he also talked about 7 lanes around Heathrow.
He meant 7 lanes in each direction. It's already got 4 each way
between the M4 & the M3, although the left-hand one becomes a filter
lane at each junction. I think the new plan is to add an extra road at
each side to add another three lanes with the new roads connected to
the existing M25 only at a few places.
It's being strongy opposed on a number of counts, one of which is
that it's felt that there'll be huge problems at these points. For
example, as currently envisaged, all the traffic that currently joins
the M25 between J11 and J15 and want's to go north of the M4 will have
to join the M25 at one point.
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251.74 | They do work | IOSG::SHOVE | Dave Shove -- REO-D/3C | Thu Aug 27 1992 17:55 | 18 |
| These "double roads" with one 3 lane carriageway for "local" traffic
outside another 3 lanes for "express" traffic are quite common in the
U.S. and Canada (Northern end of the New Jersey Turnpike, Highway 401
round Toronto.)
It seems to work (well, the NJ Pike does - claims to be the "safest road
in the world" - presumably in releation to the traffic volume. 401 gets
jammed, but I think that's just too much traffic in total).
They're certainly preferable to the "tarmac plains" - 7 or 8 lanes each
way, all together - favo(u)red in California.
The junctions get VERY complicated though, and take up an emormous
amount of space (with ramps leaving the centre lanes and going over the
outer lanes etc). I can see the environmental folk getting very upset
when they see the detailed plans.
D.
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251.75 | | UPROAR::EVANSG | Gwyn Evans @ IME - Open DECtrade -> DTN 769-8108 | Thu Aug 27 1992 20:19 | 13 |
| .74� amount of space (with ramps leaving the centre lanes and going over the
.74� outer lanes etc).
I don't think that they're planning any ramps that go over the outer
lanes but rather work it that if you want to get off at J12 - J15
you'll have to get filter onto the side roads at the start. The basis
that they seem to be working on is that most of the traffic joining
northbound between J12 & J15 will want to go onto the M4 rather than
the M25 and are thus concentrating on the section south of the M4
rather than the western sector as a whole. (The major delays are
around J16 southbound in the morning and where the M4 traffic joins
northbound in the evening, neither of which will be addressed by this
specific plan!)
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