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#91
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On Tue, 22 Jun 2004 19:31:22 +0100, "PeterE"
wrote in message : So do you think the roads would be, overall, safer, if all signs (say except direction signs) and lining schemes were removed? Probably depends on the location. Some roads have been made safer by doing just that. Certianly the experience where roads have been treated with lots of paint and signage has often been that drivers simply speed up and the crash rate remains unchanged. Guy -- May contain traces of irony. Contents liable to settle after posting. http://www.chapmancentral.co.uk 88% of helmet statistics are made up, 65% of them at Washington University |
#92
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In ,
Velvet typed: Just zis Guy, you know? wrote: It's not just about driving too close to the car in front, there's always the idiot that swerves into your path as an oncoming, or the one that pulls out right in front from the side junction *despite* the fact that you saw him look at (or was it *through* you)... Isn't that to say that otherwise you would have eased off the accelerator when passing the oncoming car or the mouth of the junction. That's certainly what my copy of the HMSO's /Driving/ advises as best practice. In that case you may well have swallowed or more than swallowed the benefit of the ABS in the additional speed. A |
#93
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Just zis Guy, you know? wrote:
On Tue, 22 Jun 2004 19:31:22 +0100, "PeterE" wrote in message : So do you think the roads would be, overall, safer, if all signs (say except direction signs) and lining schemes were removed? Probably depends on the location. Some roads have been made safer by doing just that. Certianly the experience where roads have been treated with lots of paint and signage has often been that drivers simply speed up and the crash rate remains unchanged. Hmm, bit of a weasel answer, that one. I suspect when put on the spot you'd find reasons for keeping most of the signs - those round white ones with a red border and black numbers on them in particular ;-) -- http://www.speedlimit.org.uk "Banning things others enjoy is the only pleasure some people get." |
#94
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Ambrose Nankivell wrote:
In , Velvet typed: Just zis Guy, you know? wrote: It's not just about driving too close to the car in front, there's always the idiot that swerves into your path as an oncoming, or the one that pulls out right in front from the side junction *despite* the fact that you saw him look at (or was it *through* you)... Isn't that to say that otherwise you would have eased off the accelerator when passing the oncoming car or the mouth of the junction. That's certainly what my copy of the HMSO's /Driving/ advises as best practice. In that case you may well have swallowed or more than swallowed the benefit of the ABS in the additional speed. A Um, no. Round here in the south east (london) if you did that at every junction or oncoming car you'd be doing a grand 0mph in very short order, unfortunately. -- Velvet |
#95
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PeterE wrote:
So do you think the roads would be, overall, safer, if all signs (say except direction signs) and lining schemes were removed? Probably depends on the location. Some roads have been made safer by doing just that. Certianly the experience where roads have been treated with lots of paint and signage has often been that drivers simply speed up and the crash rate remains unchanged. Hmm, bit of a weasel answer, that one. I suspect when put on the spot you'd find reasons for keeping most of the signs - those round white ones with a red border and black numbers on them in particular ;-) No, a straight answer. Speed limit signs are, of course, not present in the first place in the places this has been tried, being either restricted roads or NSL. -- Guy -- May contain traces of irony. Contents liable to settle after posting. http://www.chapmancentral.co.uk |
#96
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"Just zis Guy, you know?" wrote in message
Probably depends on the location. Some roads have been made safer by doing just that. Certianly the experience where roads have been treated with lots of paint and signage has often been that drivers simply speed up and the crash rate remains unchanged. DfT research would appear to suggest otherwise. A number of test villages covering 30, 40, 50 and 60 limits. A variety of signage and paint changes. Every one resulted in lower mean and 85th percentile speeds. http://www.dft.gov.uk/stellent/group...504760-02.hcsp |
#97
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"PeterE" wrote in message
... So do you think the roads would be, overall, safer, if all signs (say except direction signs) and lining schemes were removed? and height restrictions, width restrictions, weight restrictions, parking restrictions, level crossing warnings and lights.... |
#98
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In message , "Just zis Guy, you know?"
writes It is a commonly held view, and it is responsible for risk compensation behaviour which means that overall what advantage there is is consumed as a performance benefit. As ever. This is like saying "replace the airbag with a six inch steel spike." the driver will be much more careful, though I not sure any safer. -- Clive |
#99
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On Wed, 23 Jun 2004 15:31:47 +0100, Clive
wrote (more or less): In message , "Just zis Guy, you know?" writes It is a commonly held view, and it is responsible for risk compensation behaviour which means that overall what advantage there is is consumed as a performance benefit. As ever. This is like saying "replace the airbag with a six inch steel spike." the driver will be much more careful, though I not sure any safer. Depend swhat you mean by 'safer'. 'Less likely to be involved in a fatality' is different from 'less likely to die him/herself' -- Cheers, Euan Gawnsoft: http://www.gawnsoft.co.sr Symbian/Epoc wiki: http://html.dnsalias.net:1122 Smalltalk links (harvested from comp.lang.smalltalk) http://html.dnsalias.net/gawnsoft/smalltalk |
#100
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Clive wrote:
It is a commonly held view, and it is responsible for risk compensation behaviour which means that overall what advantage there is is consumed as a performance benefit. As ever. This is like saying "replace the airbag with a six inch steel spike." the driver will be much more careful, though I not sure any safer. It's more like telling someone a helmet will Save Their Life [tm] -- Guy -- May contain traces of irony. Contents liable to settle after posting. http://www.chapmancentral.co.uk |
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