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#61
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Ed Banger wrote:
In message , Tony Dragon writes I hope you will still be able to cycle with your damaged foot, the one you just shot yourself in. That's Doug 'Colander Foot' Bollen you're talking to. Who now sinks when he tries to walk on water! -- Moving things in still pictures! |
#62
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Richard J. wrote:
Steve Firth wrote: John Rowland wrote: Steve Firth wrote: John Rowland wrote: Steve Firth wrote: Doug wrote: Road congestion is primarily caused by too many cars and if left to its own devices would be self-limiting. The experience within Birmingham, when the entire traffic light system failed, shows that if it were truly lef to its own devices that the traffic would flow better than it does at present. Where "traffic" doesn't include pedestrians or cyclists... And? You were implying traffic lights serve no useful purpose... No I wasn't. But you actually went on to say ... the evidence is that traffic lights make things worse So, if they make things worse, what do you think their useful purpose is? To create congestion and pollution, thus providing a big stick to beat the motorist with for his or her wicked ways. It's also a good excuse to justify further taxation of the motorist because of the said pollution and congestion they cause. It's nothing to do with the possibility that someone involved with the planning side of things is in cahoots with the people who make traffic lights. -- Moving things in still pictures! |
#63
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Richard J. wrote:
But you actually went on to say ... the evidence is that traffic lights make things worse So, if they make things worse, what do you think their useful purpose is? Traffic lights can, if used sensibly, alleviate problems at some interchanges and serve a useful function in ramp metering. They are not a universal panacea but that is how they have been treated by the lazy and incompetent. |
#64
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Brimstone wrote:
The Hanger Lane underpass long predates the gyratory which sits on top of it. The underpass is shown on a very early 60s A-Z map of London. Was it lengthened when the gyratory was put in? It seems too long to have been built just to go under a crossroads. |
#65
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On 17 Aug, 21:53, (Steve Firth) wrote:
Richard J. wrote: But you actually went on to say ... the evidence is that traffic lights make things worse So, if they make things worse, what do you think their useful purpose is? Traffic lights can, if used sensibly, alleviate problems at some interchanges and serve a useful function in ramp metering. They are not a universal panacea but that is how they have been treated by the lazy and incompetent. I find them useful because they make motorists drive in convoys with gaps between the convoys where people can cross the road without fear of being killed. The alternative seems to be an endless stream of traffic which makes crossing the road virtually impossible or else means waiting a long, long time. -- World Carfree Network http://www.worldcarfree.net/ Help for your car-addicted friends in the U.K. |
#66
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Doug gurgled happily, sounding much like they were
saying: (Of traffic lights) I find them useful because they make motorists drive in convoys with gaps between the convoys where people can cross the road without fear of being killed. The alternative seems to be an endless stream of traffic which makes crossing the road virtually impossible or else means waiting a long, long time. Aren't cyclists "traffic", then? |
#67
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John Rowland wrote:
Brimstone wrote: The Hanger Lane underpass long predates the gyratory which sits on top of it. The underpass is shown on a very early 60s A-Z map of London. Was it lengthened when the gyratory was put in? It seems too long to have been built just to go under a crossroads. Nope, it is as it has always been. If you look at a plan view of the gyratory, you'll see that it is to the north of the A40 and its underpass. Even before the gyratory was built, the junction was a large one. |
#68
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John Rowland wrote:
Brimstone wrote: The Hanger Lane underpass long predates the gyratory which sits on top of it. The underpass is shown on a very early 60s A-Z map of London. Was it lengthened when the gyratory was put in? It seems too long to have been built just to go under a crossroads. It is as long as it is due to the need for its depth to be greater than normal because it passes under "the built environment" (ie, it is more of a tunnel than a cut and cover underpass) and because of the need to keep the approach gradients as low as possible. |
#69
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In message , JNugent
writes "University Way" (part of the A206), which is inside the M25, but which is not in London. The new-build part (which is now about ten years old anyway) is in Dartford, Kent. I am not aware of any other significant highway building inside the M25 (whether inside or outside London) in the last 20 years, let alone 10. There's the Thamesmead-Erith spine road (Bronze Way), opened in 1997, but the A23 Coulsdon By-bass, opened about 18 months ago, is the only one built in the last decade that I recall. -- Paul Terry |
#70
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Doug wrote:
I find them useful because they make motorists drive in convoys Oh indeed we all know that your concept is that anything that inconveniences the motorist must be a good thing. |
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