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Traffic light experiment in India - John Boy

Link to newspaper page with a video report:

tinyurl.com/uavtcka

Traffic light experiment in India - Zippy123

Good idea.

Should also be based on speed. The faster you approach, the longer the extra delay.

Edited by Zippy123 on 01/02/2020 at 22:57

Traffic light experiment in India - John Boy

My sister, who lives in India, sent me the link. I wondered if it might be an elaborate joke, but she insists it isn't. There's a better explanation in this link:

www.ndtv.com/offbeat/honk-more-wait-more-how-mumba...3

Traffic light experiment in India - ExA35Owner

Good idea.

Should also be based on speed. The faster you approach, the longer the extra delay.

There used to be a system in parts of Germany - Gruene Welle - which displayed the speed to maintain so that you met green lights all the way. Boy racers would get in front of the greens and of course meet the red; those driving as advised would catch them up and sail past......

Traffic light experiment in India - HGV ~ P Valentine

Brilliant.

Traffic light experiment in India - daveyjp

Portugal has speed cameras incorporated into pedestrian into crossings - you speed they turn red even if no one is waiting to cross.

Traffic light experiment in India - stan10

" Should also be based on speed. The faster you approach ..."

Like the one in Slough in the - IIRC - 1970's, (and may be still there) on the A4 past the Trading Estate, limit was 30mph so if you could reign yourself back on what is a longish straight road it allowed you to sail along.

I just put "Gruene Welle" into Wiki to see if it pre-dated Sluff, but wasn't recognised - maybe spelling ?, whatever it's a good idea, thought of long ago, and with modern technology (you can't beat an 'ology' !) should be simple to implement Shirley ?

Of course if people don't speed, fines drop orf so .....

Traffic light experiment in India - John Boy

In the 70s/80s you could go down London's Marylebone Road without stopping if you hit the first light as it went green and then kept to the speed limit. I knew a traffic expert at the time and he said it was set up that way.

Traffic light experiment in India - ExA35Owner

Try Grüne Welle - I used the spelling without umlaut because I couldn't face digging the ü out of my keyboard!

Traffic light experiment in India - Stackman II

Presumably if set up for 30mph it would also work at 60mph or 90 or 120...

Traffic light experiment in India - stan10

" Try Grüne Welle "

Yes that works thanks, and very interesting, but why does this bit - (copied from Wiki) not surprise me !!

".. In the UK, in 2009, it was revealed that the Department for Transport had previously discouraged green waves as they reduced fuel usage, and thus less revenue was raised from fuel taxes..."

My fastest time (and most economical mpg) journey from Reading area to Manchester area was a couple of years ago when the majority of the motorway sections were limited to 50mph due roadworks - and it was crowded.

Everyday mpg from my diesel car at the time was 44+, that journey usually took mpg up to 48+, this time i recorded 58+ Figures taken from a physical brim to brim, couldn't believe them, so re-checked twice ! From their point of view DfT might have a point ?

Traffic light experiment in India - HGV ~ P Valentine

If you scrolled down the video was pretty good, even after people figured out what was happening they still tooted their horn.

Traffic light experiment in India - Bilboman

Cynical moi often wonders why so many roundabouts are "landscaped" and "pruned" in such a way (i.e. not at all) as to make it nigh on impossible to see if there's any traffic already going round without actually stopping on the line. It utterly defeats the purpose of a roundabout in the first place, but of course all the unnecessary braking increases fuel consumption.
And don't get me started on traffic lights! Most of the ones on major roads where I live default to flashing amber at night time and off peak hours, so it's "proceed with caution" and mostly common sense takes over.