TFL - Cycle Route Planner

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mr_cellophane

Legendary Member
Location
Essex
 Won't bother with that.  It gives distances in Km with no option to change to miles.


It does pick the Super Highways over more direct routes even when you chose "Fastest".  :angry:
 

peter_streetmachineGT

Über Member
Location
York
I know tfl where working on a big update to this. I'm hoping this isn't it.


I find it useful for estimates on how long the journey will take, which I've found are usually accurate for a first go at the route.

However, I find TfL's free cycle maps (with recommended routes marked on them by cyclists and cycling organisations) to be far more useful in planning routes.
 

Brains

Legendary Member
Location
Greenwich
I find it useful for estimates on how long the journey will take, which I've found are usually accurate for a first go at the route.

However, I find TfL's free cycle maps (with recommended routes marked on them by cyclists and cycling organisations) to be far more useful in planning routes.


I too find the paper maps quite good, it allows you to work out your own route

My major issues with the tfl cycle route planner are:

* No allowance is made for hills, so you have some rather silly routes for example to get from A to B where the direct route along back roads may be the shortest (or the longest) however there is a 'cycle' route that runs via C at the top of the hill. You would have to be mad to take it.

* As the routes tend to have limited or no signage, you need the ability to follow the map, however the routes are so convoluted that even a a person, such as my self, with a bar bag to mount the map, a compass, many years of experience with teaching mountain navigation, ability to use a GPS and a good knowledge of London, still makes mistakes. How is a normal semi-map illiterate expected to manage to read a map, navigate and ride a bike at the same time ?

I agree technology may be the long term solution to this, as give it a few years even the average mobile phone will have basic GPS and map technology, and I'd hope the mounting brackets become as common a bells on the handlebars

* There seems to be very little use made of alleyways, paths, back routes, parks etc. all of which it's perfectly legal to cycle on
 

Brains

Legendary Member
Location
Greenwich
This alternative route planner has been mentioned on this board before. It's rather good: http://www.cyclestreets.net/


BRILLIANT!!!!

I just had a play with it, it's waaaaay ahead of the TFL site in terms of logical routing, it takes in allowance for hills and also uses logical paths, alleyways and parks.

The bit I love is my chosen route (City of London to Greenwich) it give me three options, the fast (main road) route, the medium (mostly off the main roads) route and the easy route.

The easy route.
Go down road to Tower pier, get on fast Thames Clipper boat (cycle carriage free), get off boat in Greenwich.
A great classic bike ride !
 

jujubi

Active Member
Location
London
I find that they possibly even use alleyways etc a little too often. The few alterations I've had to make to my commuting route were to do with that. Now I just stay on the road a little longer instead of looking for some hidden path that would save me 30 metres if I could only bloody find it... The only other problem I've had was not so much caused by Cyclestreets as by the LCN or the National Cycle routes. The software incoporates them to a certain extent, but some of the streets that are part of those networks just suck (Rye Lane anyone?), when the backroads would be perfectly viable. But overall the "balanced route" is often pretty much the sensible solution that a human being hunched over a physical map would come up with.

They could also include instructions like "1st left, 2nd right" etc in their printable route descriptions.

Oh well, they're still only in the Beta phase...
 

dobo

northern monkey
Location
selby
have you looked at biketoaster.com.
you can plan routes in km/miles gives all the info you need

regards
 

taxing

Well-Known Member
I like Cyclestreets, but I find the small maps that they give you for each stage are harder to understand than Google's, so if I'm going into unfamiliar territory I'll copy the Cyclestreets route into Google Maps then print that off. I'm so bad at reading maps that I doubt anyone else has this problem though. Even after printing out the simpler map on Sunday I got most of the way to my destination, then took a wrong turn and found myself back near my house before I even realised it. Grrrr.

This is neat though, I just checked a route that I had reported as being inaccurate, and there's this message on it:

Feedback about this route was received on 22nd June, 2010. It has since been examined by the CycleStreets route reviewers.The diagnosis is: Inaccurate map data, which is explained in more detail here. Bridge missing steps, now fixed by local mapper.
 
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