Brimstone
rubberneckers screenedAt long last the Highways Agency is doing something about rubberneckers. (Pity they can't simply be taken to the side of the road and shot, such is the price of living in a democracy.) Screen...
Of course you do. If its a load unloading only road, then when you pbutt that road you know that you are free to drive on any road you like and not just one that leads directly to your 'destination'. I seem to remember that inside such a limit, you have to drive the shortest distance possible inside the limited area, even if it means when driving between two locations inside the area that you actually have to come out of the zone and then come in via a different route. I might be getting confused with the Greater London Night and Weekend lorry ban, but I suspect the principle is the same. The example is: Going to 2 shops within a restricted area. Say they are on the same road, but maybe 4 miles apart. The ban starts .5 mile from the shop. You can obviously drive into the ban area to make the 1st drop.(using the shortest route etc.) But for the second drop,you should drive back out of the ban area and then enter from the other end so that you don't do more distance than needed in the ban zone. So despite it being simpler to drive from shop A) to Shop b) in a 'straight' line you need to drive out of the zone and around on an unrestricted road and back in. In these cases it would certainly be usefull to know when the restrictions do not apply anymore.
NSL Sign 1056Perhaps. There is a better example though; The traffic merges from the left (or right) sign; The one that you usually see on DCs before a slip road joins and at...
OT "it can't happen to meA wonderful example of the clbuttic "it can't happen to me" head in the sand (resulting in sand in the head) atbreastude that demonstrates the stupidity of...