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The question is when can you *legally* start accelerating? You make it sound so simple when in fact it really isn't, at least when you look at through the eyes of the law. Even zulu is having a tough time with this. In reality of course everyone just starts speeding up right away. |
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The two merge lanes come off of a road with 50kph and 60kph limits. That's right - if you were obeying the last posted limit, the two merge lanes come together at different speeds. It isn't until after the two lanes come together that you are now on the merge lane for HWY17. And the police do ticket people for doing 80kph in the merge lane. So if we apply the Millstream/TCH logic to the McKenzie/HWY17 merge lanes, no, you can't speed up as soon as you round the bend and start driving parallel to HWY17. This is why I am hoping that there is a LEGAL standard as to where one may begin to accelerate to HWY speed. |
I don't believe that it was ever intended to have you drive at 50k till the end of the merge lane and then magically warp to the Hwy speed in a couple of metres. It would create major problems for merging and would be dangerous and physically impossible for all but RS members vehicles! :) ( hitting NOz switch and being thrust backwards into the Recarro knock-off seat's back.) |
"And the police do ticket people for doing 80kph in the merge lane." So they are ticketing people who are on the merge lane accelerating up to the posted 80kmh speed of the TCH...and there is no posted merge lane signs? I would love to be in court to hear how the Crown would prosecute that VT? At the very least there could be reasonable doubt on the part of the motorist as to the fact that he presumed that he was obeying the legal 80 k limit on the TCH after he left the lower posted 50/60 signs on Mc Kenzie Rd. From what I can remember from my travels thru that intersection, the dotted line at the end of the emerge lane is way less than 100m and this would mean drivers had only this short distance to go from 50 to 80k and merge safely into traffic behind them that was going 30 k faster than them. Unless there is some sort of Municipal bylaw that says that this is prohibited I can't see how someone could be convicted. Have the people that you obviously know got ticketed for this, as you brought them up, told you what the Crown said in order to convict them? I am very interested to hear the rationale. |
In the last two photos I posted, you can see where the green and yellow lines run almost parallel to eachother and HWY17. The green and yellow merge lanes are seperated from HWY17 by a concrete median, but are at grade with HWY17. Police have ticketed people for accelerating to 80kph in this section. As for reasonable doubt on the part of the motorist - I thought speeding was an absolute offence, not one where there could be reasonable doubt. Unfortunately I severed all ties I had with these lawless law-breakers, so I can't ask them what came of their tickets ;) Again, I'm not looking for specifics with regards to this particular merge lane, but rather simply where one can expect to be legally allowed to accelerate up to the speed of the HWY they are merging onto. |
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As for reasonable doubt on the part of the motorist - I thought speeding was an absolute offence, not one where there could be reasonable doubt. It is an absolute liability offence but if the disputant can convince the JP that he honestly believed that he was in an 80/90 zone and there was no posted lower speed limit where he was driving, then I can't see how Crown could get a conviction? If a "reasonable man" could believe that the speed limit on the section of roadway where he was driving, was 80/90k, then I believe that the JP would be hard pressed to convict. It would depend on the charge laid...speed against Hwy sign requires you to prove an actual sign governing that particular section of road, Speed outside a municipality assumes 80 k unless otherwise posted and speed in a Municipality assumes 50 k unless otherwise posted. Crown would have to prove a 50k sign the governed this section of the TCH and that it was visible to the driver. So far you have not given us any such indication? Again, I'm not looking for specifics with regards to this particular merge lane, but rather simply where one can expect to be legally allowed to accelerate up to the speed of the HWY they are merging onto.[/QUOTE] And that is what we have been discussing. There would need to be specific signs dealing with specific locations to give you an exact opinion. My advice has been to drive the posted speed limit for the road on which you are driving. Can't get more specific unless there are more specifics with which I am famliar. Sorry. Thus endeth the lesson. |
While always interested in constructive discussions... Who on earth actually does any of this? I always thought on ramps are a place just to get to highway speed regardless? And again, wouldn't it be unsafe if cars with poorer acceleration can only begin to speed up at a certain point and merge in against traffic that is moving more quickly? I cant count the amount of times in West Van where cars travelling below 90kmh dart in and everyone slams on the brakes, and I cant count the amount of times I see 911's fly in at well over 180kmh either. I know zulu right now will be wishing to be the one to hand these drivers a excessive speeding fine:fullofwin: The idiots who drive down the merging lane, get to the end, then stop with their car half hanging in 90 kmh traffic should have an instant 7 day impound. They have people swerving around them on the highway, and a bunch of people behind them checking blind spots and speeding up into their rear end:fuuuuu: I remember talking to a guy who had an SL65 AMG, told me the only time he got to mash his foot down was when he was merging into the highway ahah, and that was the sole purpose of him getting the car |
To quote from pages 55 and 56 of ICBC's "developing your smart driving skills"... "A highway entrance gives you a short distance to match your speed with vehicles already on the highway....the acceleration lane is divided from the rest of the highway by a solid white line. Use this lane to match your speed to the speed of traffic on the freeway". As I have already said, and they also say, you accelerate to highway speed in these lanes, not stay at the posted speed of the road that you have left. |
Think of it like any other corner - at some point you make the transition from one street to the other... this one is just more gradual, but eventually you ARE on that new street. Now at some point, your car is on both streets... you can think of this as being Schroedinger's Car. |
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1 Attachment(s) ^ too bad that's not the case (line changing colours to clearly define where the highway begins) for a lot of highways anyway from the discussion in this thread and the quote from ICBC it seems the acceleration lane officially beings when the lane you're in is separated from the highway by a solid white line. I will take this to also mean solid white painted island as well: So in this picture, you are still in the 50 zone where the line is red (median to your left), and may accelerate when the line is green (solid painted island to the left). |
You'd be surprised... every highway merge I've ever cared to look... the yellow changes to white. Neat stuff. |
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And the odd tricycle. I mean really, who wants to drive at the absolute maximum safe speed all the time? Better play it safe ;) |
Merge lanes are for speeding up to the highway speedlimit... I've never seen an officer ticketing someone for speeding up to highway speeds on a merge lane. Young drivers even teaches you to floor the car on shorter merge lanes to get up to speed! It's more dangerous to be at 50km/h merging in than would it be to be at highway speeds. The same pretty much goes for coming off the highway, even though there's yellow signs of 50km/h, it's only the recommended and you're supposed to start slowing down safely. The only people I can see getting ticketed are the people that go beyond the highway speed limit while merging in, and people who are going too fast for conditions coming off the highway. |
Yes, we can speed up in the merge lane, but where is the official start to the merge lane? I tried the "wait until the yellow line turns white before you speed up" thing yesterday. I was almost smoked by one car merging behind me and another passing me on the right to get around me. |
Maybe if you had read my post # 38 this would not have been a problem? Optiblue is correct and as a YD instructor, that is what I teach. Why volunteer to be a problem when you don't have to be? What sort of a point are you proving? |
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