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by JoeAltmaier
2780 days ago
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We don't do them that way. In my area, roundabouts are put in where traffic occasionally bursts from one direction, and where traffic levels are low. Because they quit working once traffic increases, because it can be impossible to get on if there's continuous flow from another direction. Maybe the lights reported are because the roundabout has outlived its usefulness? A stopgap before ripping it out. |
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Also the timidness of drivers to enter a circle kills the flow and causes a backup that takes time to clear.
I hit 4 different traffic circles on my 40 mile trip home, two of them are 1 lane wide and only about 100 feet wide, the other two are a lot larger and have 2-3 lanes.
The narrow ones [1] back up much quicker during rush hour(s) especially when you have non-commuters using them (you can tell who they are).
The one that is 3 lanes wide [2] usually has a protected lane for only going to the first exit (on then off), then a middle lane that circles the entire roundabout and a middle lane that allows you to exit at any of the exits whenever you want. It works very well. I have never seen a backup on it.
The one that is only two lanes [3] backs up quite a bit during rush hour, when there is a West Point football game or because someone is too scared to enter. The backup clears relatively quickly, but I feel it wouldn't back up at all if there was protected on-ramp.
1: https://www.google.com/maps/@41.324487,-73.8829004,106m/data...
2: https://www.google.com/maps/@41.2981376,-73.935245,212m/data...
3: https://www.google.com/maps/@41.3202891,-73.9909974,212m/dat...