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#111
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"Tom Anderson" wrote in message
h.li... On Thu, 20 Nov 2008, Neil Williams wrote: 1. Allowing the bus the option to overtake and turn at traffic lights (this is one of the best features of Dutch and German bus lanes - basically the bus gets its own signal so it can pass in the bus lane then turn right (left) across traffic). Their left, our right, i take it? This sounds like a rather good idea. I haven't heard of own signals for busses, but I have heard over the years that they are working on a system that would give priority to busses at traffic signals. It seems only to be talk, however, as I have never heard or seen anything like that in actual practice. |
#112
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Neil Williams wrote:
I've seen bus overtaking lanes installed in a few places, including in Milton Keynes, bizarrely with one of them being installed where there is no actual bus route! (Presumably for future expansion as the road works were being done anyway). However I've not seen an overtake-and-turn-right, despite there being *loads* of places in London where this would be easy to implement and very useful. There is one in Bloomsbury Street approximately opposite Bedford Avenue. From here on the bus lane is on the right side, ready for the turn into New Oxford Street. I think it used to work okay before the bendies, but bendies usually end up stretching across all three lanes here. |
#113
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On 23 Nov, 12:23, wrote:
I haven't heard of own signals for busses, but I have heard over the years that they are working on a system that would give priority to busses at traffic signals. It seems only to be talk, however, as I have never heard or seen anything like that in actual practice. The system is called "extended green" and keeps the lights from changing in the face of an approaching bus. There's no visible indication a set of lights has it. U |
#115
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John Rowland wrote:
There are numerous places in Greater London where traffic lights give buses (usually taxis too) priority over other traffic. They generally take the form of a traffic light on a short island between the bus lane and the traffic lanes(s), with no stop line in the bus lane, and they occur just before a traffic light controlled junction and are synchronised with it. For most of the time that the main traffic lights are red, only bus lane traffic can get to the main junction, then when the main junction is about to turn green, all traffic is allowed to reach the main lights. So conceptually it's the same as advanced stop lines for cycles. Actually, I've just realised what a clever device these are. They give the bus the equivalent of a bus lane right up to the lights, but with the added ability to potentially turn right, while they don't reduce the capacity of the junction for other traffic one iota in the way a bus lane right up to the lights would. Here's one in Seven Sisters Road on the northbound approach to Fonthill Rd... http://maps.live.com/default.aspx?v=...cl=1&encType=1 Here's one in South Lambeth Road just before you hit the Vauxhall one way system. http://maps.live.com/default.aspx?v=...cl=1&encType=1 Here's one in Harrow.... http://maps.live.com/default.aspx?v=...cl=1&encType=1 Here's one near the Ironbridge in Hanwell/Southall http://maps.live.com/default.aspx?v=...cl=1&encType=1 This looks like another version even closer to the Ironbridge, although I've never noticed this one on the ground, I found it now when I was looking for a map of the other. http://maps.live.com/default.aspx?v=...cl=1&encType=1 I think there are some in Walworth Rd and Camberwell Road, but they might be too new to be on the photos. This is nowhere near an exhaustive list. |
#116
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![]() "Neil Williams" wrote in message ... On Thu, 20 Nov 2008 06:45:53 -0800 (PST), Mizter T 2. Giving the bus the right to change traffic lights in its favour. TfL did a lot of experimenting with this, and I'm not sure what happened. Where I work did some tests too and while they worked it was never rolled out for some reason. The Microwave sources on the tops of the lights, and now little boxes with aerials are linked back into the local control unit, when a vaild coded signal is recieved it triggers a cycle in favour of the lamp recieving the signal. 6. Removing known-problem zebra crossings and replacing with signalised crossings. In the height of the peak, you'd cut 5 minutes at least off a journey on the 15 if that crossing at St Pauls was to be removed and replaced with a proper crossing. Yes! in the days of having to use the 26 when there was no WL&C line it was the single biggest delay on the route most mornings... 9. Better enforcement - having a wheel in the bus lane should be considered an offence, as that's normally enough to delay the bus. Enforcement is quite good, but only where you have CCTV enforcement - and there is always going to be someone who has been 'pushed' over the line by a truck or something. I'll let others debate enforcement ![]() |
#117
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![]() I haven't heard of own signals for busses, but I have heard over the years that they are working on a system that would give priority to busses at traffic signals. It seems only to be talk, however, as I have never heard or seen anything like that in actual practice. London buses were for donkeys' years fitted with transponders that the signal loops pick up and could give priority to an approaching bus by extending the green phase or cutting short the red period. Didn't help much when there was another similarly equipped bus approaching on the other arm of the junction though, nor was it capable of distinguishing between a bus running late and one running early, so a bit crude. The system was getting long in the tooth and other cleverer systems were in development by the early 2000's. Peter |
#118
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On 23 Nov, 14:33, Peter Heather wrote:
London buses were for donkeys' years fitted with transponders that the signal loops pick up and could give priority to an approaching bus by extending the green phase or cutting short the red period. Didn't help much when there was another similarly equipped bus approaching on the other arm of the junction though, nor was it capable of distinguishing between a bus running late and one running early, so a bit crude. The system was getting long in the tooth and other cleverer systems were in development by the early 2000's. No, it still seems to be the current preffered method, although I'm guessing the technology's changed: http://www.tfl.gov.uk/assets/downloa...s-priority.pdf U |
#119
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#120
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On Sun, 23 Nov 2008 05:09:43 -0800 (PST), Mr Thant
wrote: The system is called "extended green" and keeps the lights from changing in the face of an approaching bus. There's no visible indication a set of lights has it. Does anyone tell the bus drivers? It'd save them feeling compelled to accelerate towards the green to make sure they get through. How prevalent is it? Neil -- Neil Williams Put my first name before the at to reply. |
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