T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2442.1 | | YUPPY::BUSH | Alive and Kicking | Tue Aug 15 1995 13:13 | 9 |
|
That's been happening for some while now.
I've made it from Southend to Cornwall without touching a motorway, but
it is very difficult, the planners will always use signs to try and get
traffic onto a motorway and off of the A & B roads, especially through
towns.
Tony B.
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2442.2 | Method behind the madness? | BRUMMY::MARTIN::BELL | Martin Bell, M&U PSC, @BBP | Tue Aug 15 1995 14:46 | 4 |
| ... and this will become more and more common if Motorway tolls are
introduced!!!!
mb
|
2442.3 | | COMICS::PARRY | Trevor Parry | Tue Aug 15 1995 15:32 | 9 |
| I thought the A33 WAS the M3 from just above Winchester, to just below
where the M27 branches off. Unless the A33 is the road that goes
parallel to the motorway.
I think there's just too many roads nowadays. It took me 2 years to
figure out the difference between the A33 and the A30 between
Basingstoke and Winchester and I live just off the main road :-)
tmp
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2442.4 | | COMICS::CORNEJ | | Wed Aug 16 1995 21:56 | 13 |
| The A33 from Basingstoke to Winchester does indeed run very close to
the M3 all the way. After that, I think the road changes when they
built the new piece of M3 destroyed bits of the A33 (well, it looks
like this from the M3).
They did the same thing when the M11 was built. The old A11 became the
B something or other (1130?) and it was only possible to follow it
if you remembered it before the number change. I also expect that when
motorways become toll roads, all road signs will mysteriously forget
the local routes (so Basingstoke to Reading becomes M3/M25/M4 :-)
Jc
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2442.5 | | CBHVAX::CBH | Lager Lout | Thu Aug 17 1995 09:34 | 7 |
| > They did the same thing when the M11 was built. The old A11 became the
> B something or other (1130?) and it was only possible to follow it
between Harlow and Bishop's Stortford it's the A1184, I don't know about
the rest of it, though!
Chris.
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2442.6 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | Tyro-Delphi-hacker | Thu Aug 17 1995 09:38 | 5 |
| If the signs do disappear, and motorway tolls start, rest assured that
some enterprising soul will start producing maps of alternative routes.
It's a free-market remember.
Cheers, Laurie.
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2442.7 | Just use a map | IOSG::MITCHELLE | Pigs all fed and watered, and ready to fly | Thu Aug 17 1995 09:51 | 7 |
| I don't find it a problem when we're in the car - as it's then easy to read the
map, and follow the the signs to smaller towns/villages - (Although it amazes me
the number of people who travel round without a road atlas!) The problem is
when on the motorbike - and you can't have the map open on your knee! On long
trips we write out a route plan, but if someone has inconsiderately built a
bypass you often need the names of the smaller places to re-find your chosen
route. :-)
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2442.8 | | CHEFS::GEORGEM | I|c|e|l|a|n|d | Thu Aug 17 1995 10:51 | 7 |
| re .0 and .7
As you appear to realise, the point of motorways is to keep people off the A
and B roads. THe MOT/DOT/whatever only see the need to signpost you to the
motorway, so that once you are on the motorway, you can head to your
destination. They don't understand why anyone would not want to use the
motorways.
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2442.9 | | COMICS::PARRY | Trevor Parry | Thu Aug 17 1995 12:30 | 10 |
| re.8
On the news I get the impression they want the motorways used by people
travelling long distances. They want to deter people who use them for
hopping just along 1 or 2 junctions. This didn't make sense to me, cos
I use the M3 as a Basingstoke bypass. I take offence that the powers
that be now want me to clog up Basingstoke even more by driving through
it, using more petrol etc.
tmp
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2442.10 | & why not use A roads ? | CMOTEC::JASPER | Stuck on the Flypaper of Life | Tue Aug 29 1995 14:05 | 21 |
|
I normally travel outbound on motorways & homebound on A roads. The
time differences are minimal if one keeps to legal speed limits.
In fact some routes are even quicker by A road. Why do I do this ?
I like to relax & travel home without hurrying. With lower speed, the
radio is more audible & I can actually enjoy the journey.
& I **HATE** motorway service areas. I'd rather go hungry.
Some of my most enjoyable mobile lunches have been spent in village pubs
beside A & sometimes b roads.
The standard of motorway food is appauling, I have taken packed lunches
on occasions where I have had to use motorways.
So, Elaine, I guess you will have to write your route down before you
go. I use a crib-sheet & compass to get around. I have recently
returned from a circular European tour using a minimum of Autoroutes
etc., I didnt read the map for hours at a time. Does a compass work
reliably on a bike ?
Tony.
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2442.11 | Albert & Doris fix the world. | CMOTEC::JASPER | Stuck on the Flypaper of Life | Tue Aug 29 1995 14:19 | 16 |
|
Oh, & I had a conversation with 2 retired local people at the weekend.
They were complaining bitterly that "we" should not have motorways at
all. They took the view that everyone would dash out & buy 8 cars if a
new section opened, & then thrash up & down it all day & night. I asked
them how much more driving they did when the M4 opened.
They enjoyed pottering on their local A-roads. "How much road would you
actually have left if we abandoned Motorways" I asked."In all
probability, you would not be able to even get near the main road".
"The problem is, there's too much car ownership today"
was the reply from the couple who owned a car each, & whose children all
had cars.
"So" said I, "Who's to sell their cars first, you or me !"
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2442.12 | | UNTADI::SAXBY | An Englishman in Munich | Tue Aug 29 1995 14:23 | 8 |
|
I had relatives call Albert and Doris and they NEVER owned a car
between them, although they were keen travellers (Europe/Canada/etc).
No point really, but it just reminded me - not all Doris and Alberts
are the same :^)
Mark
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2442.13 | map stops :-) | IOSG::MITCHELLE | Pigs all fed and watered, and ready to fly | Tue Aug 29 1995 15:06 | 9 |
| re: does a compass work on a bike -
I don't know, we'll have to give it a try! - We used our GPS (global positioning
system - more usually used when we are sailing) a couple of weeks ago, and found
the pub we were looking for - no problem!
What seems to work not too badly is to fold the map to the right area, and put
it in a polythene bag - the problem with that is that we always seem to be
travelling on the join! We have to have a 'map stop' for me to refold it!
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2442.14 | Motorways => 0 mph | BBPBV1::WALLACE | Casper the friendly merchandising opportunity | Wed Aug 30 1995 09:57 | 5 |
| You can hint to Autoroute that you don't want it to suggest motorways
at all, by setting the Preferences/Speeds/Motorways (?) option to zero
or thereabouts. Actually, on days like yesterday, with the first real
rain for weeks, and cr*p visibility, zero sounded about right for the
M6, which is why I did Brum->Manchester via A roads.
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2442.15 | ...and another thing... | IOSG::MITCHELLE | Pigs all fed and watered, and ready to fly | Tue Sep 05 1995 16:33 | 11 |
|
Over the summer I have done quite a lot of A-road motoring on roads I used to
travel quite frequently - many of them used to be quite fun, bendy, with a few
straights for overtaking, and it was quite easy to maintain the 60mph speed
limit. Many of these roads now have continuous double white lines, a 50mph
speed limit, _and_ camera signs! (No evidence of actual cameras) I'm fed up of
having my judgement on speed/overtaking taken away from me - just because
someone (presumably) has made a wrong decision and had an accident! I know that
probaly sounds callous and over the top - but where does it all end? - 30mph on
all roads... - no overtaking anywhere.... bring back the man with the red
flag.... I'm going on a bit now aren't I :-)
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