HLaB said:They do work well but unfortunately in other countries.
I thought there was a successful experiment down in London?
HLaB said:They do work well but unfortunately in other countries.
magnatom said:I thought there was a successful experiment down in London?
ChrisKH said:Actually I'm not so sure. It works quite well in certain States in the US.
FatFellaFromFelixstowe said:Thats what I thought. I actually think that this idea could work. It seems to in the States.
Hmm.thomas said:... as long as people only turn left when sensible.
John the Monkey said:Hmm.
Judging by the stunts I see people pulling on my commute already, I don't hold out much hope.
marinyork said:I can only see it working well on the straight on T junction (or pseudo T junction) red such as supermarkets and things where it's very fashionable to slot in a set of lights on a main road. Some lefts might work, some might not.
thomas said:You can have "no left on red" signs when it just isn't suitable.
marinyork said:I think that's a bit naughty magnatom. There are plenty of occasions to argue about red lights that are nothing to do with long queues of traffic, it's trying to take this thread the same direction as the other one.
The sort of T junctions I've described have very little to do with queues of traffic, although interestingly enough one way round it is to introduce cycle lanes that bypass the lights or use them in an unconventional manner. I used to go through a set of lights that was permanently on green for cyclists and buses and you rejoined giving way with the rest of the road a short time later.
magnatom said:Answer me this;
Is it safer to filter to the very front of a queue (and risk problems if the lights change), or is it safer to filter and slot in a few cars back from the front of the queue?