Quizzes & Puzzles57 mins ago
Red road markings at Roundabouts
12 Answers
Now this is interesting, for months I have been banging on about the apparent stupidity of the red markings in the right hand lane of some (usually mini ) roundabouts. To my mind they are a source of potential danger.
Now my local council at Selby have removed them at one roundabout, near the town, and replaced them with the normal right hand lane markings and colour.
Is it finally sinking in that they are potentially dangerous?
Now my local council at Selby have removed them at one roundabout, near the town, and replaced them with the normal right hand lane markings and colour.
Is it finally sinking in that they are potentially dangerous?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by denis567. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.On this type of roundabout, remember it is usually a mini-roundabout, what would normally be the right lane is surfaced in red tarmac. Therefore a vehicle turning right would keep off this red area (although there are no signs saying they must do this). This then makes them move over into the left lane which could well be occupied by vehicles turning left, or going straight ahead. Surely this is not only potentially dangerous but also slows down the flow of traffic. Remember, if you are approaching one of these roundabouts, unless you know the road, you have already taken up a position in the right lane, for the right turn and it is not until you reach the mouth of the roundabout that you see this red section, so you have to move over to the left lane to complete your turn.
I have certainly seen the ones Panic Button is referring to where there is a dropped kerb and it does not look like a lane, but the ones I am referring to (and not only in Selby) have a lane which is red tarmac, and as R1Geezer states, there are no signs to say you should not drive on the red tarmac, the fact that it is red makes drivers automatically keep off it, hence my original statement that it is a potentially dangerous situation
Here's one Chazza, not the best example:
http://maps.google.co.uk/maps?hl=en&q=driver%2 0number%20calculator&cr=countryUK|countryGB&um =1&ie=UTF-8&sa=N&tab=wl
http://maps.google.co.uk/maps?hl=en&q=driver%2 0number%20calculator&cr=countryUK|countryGB&um =1&ie=UTF-8&sa=N&tab=wl