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if someone didn't notice the sound/lights
My theory is that cyclists are so used to ignoring red traffic lights, this one thought she'd be perfectly safe ignoring the flashing amber lights.
Most cyclists I see on the roads, tend to ignore traffic lights and the Highway Code. They'll undertake a car which has a left turn signal on,,, overtake cars signalling a right turn. Ignore pedestrians on crossings. Swerve all over the bloody road. I think a mind reader would have a hard time figuring out just where some of these prats are going.![]()
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We can only attempt to reduce the risk to them not eliminate them. If someone is travelling on the wrong side of the road AND misses/ignores the sound/lights AND arrives at the wrong time there is very little you can do.These people are at risk whatever solution you put in place aren't they?
Well I disagree... and I don't believe you!!!
What you describe is 'potential' problems, but I bet a small fortune that you aint seen any of that this week !!
We can only attempt to reduce the risk to them not eliminate them. If someone is travelling on the wrong side of the road AND misses/ignores the sound/lights AND arrives at the wrong time there is very little you can do.These people are at risk whatever solution you put in place aren't they?
At the same time barriers are only needed to stop people who either fail to notice the sound/lights or actively ignore them. So any comparison of barrier types must be made with that in mind and from a moral point of view IMO protecting people who fail to notice the sound/lights is more important than protecting people who willfully ignore them.
If someone travelling on the correct side of the road and moving at reasonable speeds misses the sound/lights then on a half barrier or 4-barrier system they will either cross the crossing safely or hit the barrier on entering the crossing (which will hopefully do them less injury than hitting the train would)
With a full width single barrier system someone travelling on the correct side of the road and how misses/ignores the sound/lights may enter the crossing but be unable to leave it and be trapped in the crossing. That is about the worst case scenario.
Most cyclists I see on the roads, tend to ignore traffic lights and the Highway Code. They'll undertake a car which has a left turn signal on,,, overtake cars signalling a right turn. Ignore pedestrians on crossings. Swerve all over the bloody road. I think a mind reader would have a hard time figuring out just where some of these prats are going.![]()
![]()
Well I disagree... and I don't believe you!!!
What you describe is 'potential' problems, but I bet a small fortune that you aint seen any of that this week !!