magicbastarder wrote: Speeding is easy, it's a quantitative measurement. But a lot of the bad driving would be qualitative, surely? Would need a human watching the camera to spot the idiocy and flag it?
First Up wrote: » If you took a few lessons or paid attention to the RSA tv ads you might even learn how to avoid accidents. Breakdowns happen but a hefty fine and towing charge would discourage people with clapped out bangers from taking them on the M50. I await your solution for the congestion. In the meantime, why not minimise the problem by an education and enforcement campaign to change the behaviour that causes accidents?
First Up wrote: » And I'm sure you will be happy to pay the higher taxes needed to pay for it. We could also encourage improved driver behaviour for almost no cost but I suppose that is much too hard.
tom1ie wrote: It's not one or the other, which you are implying, it's education and providing an alternative.
magicbastarder wrote: » Speeding is easy, it's a quantitative measurement. But a lot of the bad driving would be qualitative, surely? Would need a human watching the camera to spot the idiocy and flag it?
MJohnston wrote: Breaking too early when the car in front slows? Not enforceable.
MJohnston wrote: Merging without being at full speed? Not enforceable.
MJohnston wrote: Middle lane hogging? Mostly unenforceable, usually not even close to illegal. Definitely not enforceable with fixed cameras.
First Up wrote: » No, but running into the rear of the car in front is. The responsibility is with the car behind, same as everywhere else. The speed of merging is a judgement call. I've heard of cops on bikes pulling lane hoggers over but its rare unfortunately. Its an education thing mostly; RSA run a TV ad but not often enough obviously!
MJohnston wrote: But my point is that these things are likely causing the vast majority of congestion on the M50, or at least the congestion that isn’t caused by congestion on exit routes.
First Up wrote: » But we could greatly improve the effectiveness of the current infrastructure by using it properly. I'm curious why such a straightforward point arouses such hostility.
cdaly_ wrote: » *Interestingly, I pretty much never see people stopped in the yellow boxes at railway crossings. I wonder why? Maybe it's because they know there are consequences...
First Up wrote: » I described two recent journeys; one to Clondalkin that took 25 minutes and one to Lucan that took one hour 45. Same time of evening (6.30), same amount of traffic. Only difference was accidents on one and none on the other. There will always be congestion at peak times but gridlock only occurs with accidents.
MJohnston wrote: How do you know that was the only difference? From the one difference that you yourself witnessed? That's not enough to state that it's the *only* difference.
First Up wrote: » Because the accidents were both reported on the radio. Nothing else was.
Rubberchikken wrote: » maybe planners will need/be able to design roads with a lane only for vehicles with more than 1 occupant. the number if single occupant cars is a symptom of of dire public transport/unwillingness of many to engage with the one we already have/and a desire to seal ourselves away from the world behind our car doors.
MJohnston wrote: 18:30 is a bit late in the day to be using as anecdotal evidence of M50 peak operation.
MJohnston wrote: And the specific peak is sometime around 5pm, as you'd expect. Traffic after 1800 drops significantly from that peak.
First Up wrote: » So what accounted for the one hour + tailbacks I've endured 18.30 -19.00?
MJohnston wrote: Traffic.
trellheim wrote: No, he was referring to the hard data gathered by the NRA/TII as linked above
First Up wrote: » Which says there is less traffic after 18.30 which is fair enough. This was offered to explain why I was able to make a journey in 35 minutes last evening. But when I described the same journey at the same hour and same volume of cars taking 90-115 minutes, the explanation offered was "traffic".
MJohnston wrote: » I'm not sure what's tricky about this? There's lots of traffic at 1830. There's even more traffic at 1700.
First Up wrote: » You seem to be finding it tricky to explain what changes a journey from 35 minutes to 115 under the same time, road and traffic volume conditions.
MJohnston wrote: No, what's tricky is you seem to think it could only be caused by a single thing.
magicbastarder wrote: it's not that accidents cause congestion, and that's the end of it. accidents cause congestion, but congestion causes accidents. of course the traffic was more free flowing when there were no accidents, that's a trivial statement. it's just that an accident will cause congestion, no question about it, but congestion causing accidents is more of a probability than a definite.
First Up wrote: » How does congestion cause accidents?