apc wrote: » Short answer is NO you cannot break the red light as to do so would cause you to break the law. An emergency vehicle should bully people into breaking a red light. The correct procedure for the emergency vehicle is to wait behind the traffic with its blues on and sirens off until the light goes green then it can proceed as before.
Parapara2017 wrote: » Its always if safe to do so... If you're trying to cross a busy fast moving junction and no one is stopping nothing you can do but try make room on either side. But i mean usually a big loud flashing car people would see it trying to cross their path and stop then you can go out. If you hit someone by breaking the rules of the road you're still at fault just like any of the emergency light vehicles.
ezra_ wrote: » Hello, If you are at a cross roads that has traffic lights, and an Fire engine / ambulance / garda car has the lights on and is coming up behind you, are you meant to break the lights (if safe to do so) and move out of the way? Or do you wait?
timmywex wrote: » Most often depends on the seriousness of the call and seconds can mean life/death difference
Tigger wrote: » I drove a coronary resuscitation car and I had permissions given sometimes to. Break lights or the speed limit if safe to do so I don't think emergency vehicles are breaking the law they are on permissions Also yeah move for ambulances if they are trying to push through then it's important The cops will move you if they need to
apc wrote: » What does "I had permissions given sometimes" mean if you mind me asking
Tigger wrote: » Also yeah move for ambulances if they are trying to push through then it's important
The cops will move you if they need to
NASlad wrote: » What I'm more interested in knowing is what a "coronary resuscitation car" is? Just sounds a bit mad Not always. The most bull**** of calls can be given bravo codes which warrants blues if the driver decides they want to. Even delta responses can be utter bull**** but they controller just gives you what the computer tells them to. There's no common sense used. Good look getting gards to do that here unless you have plenty of time to arrange it or they just happen to be on scene and its serious enough.
sjb25 wrote: » +1 WTF is a coronary resuscitation car And on the AMPDs iv been to lots of delta bulsh1ts and then you get the AS2s that are pre alerts for resus
NASlad wrote: » AMPDS wrecks my head. Great in theory but in reality it's implemented badly. +1 for the as2's turning out to be serious as well.
flazio wrote: » I have literally no clue what is being said here.
Titanucd wrote: » Does anybody know what AS even stands for??
NASlad wrote: » Ambulance Service
sjb25 wrote: » AS2= doctors call so patient has been seen by GP who wants patient into hospital by ambulance but is not time critical So what I said was some of these AS2 calls can be a lot sicker than a delta AS1 call
NASlad wrote: » AMPDS is the dispatch code system. Omega through Echo. i.e 10-delta-1 is chest pain. As2's are non urgent GP calls. Usually for things like UTI's after a GP has reviewed the patient. Does anybody know what AS even stands for??
[Deleted User] wrote: » Out of general nosiness/ignorance, if a GP decides you need to go hospital, but it's not time sensitive, why is an ambulance being roped into it?
Deleted User wrote: » Out of general nosiness/ignorance, if a GP decides you need to go hospital, but it's not time sensitive, why is an ambulance being roped into it?
ectoraige wrote: » Just curious, are AS2 calls all coded 33-Alpha-1/2/3?
highdef wrote: » Thread gone completely off-topic. New thread to continue discussions????
mikeecho wrote: » Are you trying to say that it's taken the wrong turn (at the cross road)