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"Bruce" wrote in message
... Basil Jet wrote: On 2011\10\30 16:21, Nick Finnigan wrote: On 30/10/2011 08:03, Basil Jet wrote: At the crossroads of Exhibition Road and Cromwell Road SW7, traffic approaching from three directions is now banned from turning left or right. This is signified by the green light being a forward arrow. At other junctions where both turns are banned you would see a vertical white arrow on a blue background beneath the three traffic lights, but they have not done that here. I would expect to see 'no left turn' and 'no right turn' signs in red circles alongside or under the green arrow. After a little googling, it seems that is the norm for forced forward across a two way road (except Oxford Street, curiously), whereas the blue arrow is the norm for forced forward because both side roads are no entry. Perhaps the distinction is to help police cars etc. know that it's okay to ignore the former but you have to be bloody careful when ignoring the latter. I've always thought that there should be some distinction between banned turn because of no entry and banned turn because it's a banned turn, to help police cars driving at speed. I wonder if the problem is that the necessary Traffic Orders were not applied for in time? Traffic engineers would then be left to install the lights with green arrows and hope that people obeyed them while the Traffic Orders were obtained and the mandatory white-on-blue 'ahead only' arrows eventually added to the junction. Surely lack of Traffic Order means that the restriction cannot be applied until the TO is in effect. Incorrect or inadequate sign-posting means that the order is not legally enforceable. And I'd expect the signs at *all* banned turns to be consistent, and not to conform to different standards based on what, for most drivers, is a technicality. There is no harm in telling people essentially the same thing in more than one way (green arrow and no turn left/right signs) - there are no prizes for being minimalist and reducing the level of signage. If "redundant" signs reduce accidents and maybe even save lives, they are a good thing. |
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