h a l f b a k e r yPoof of concept
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When I lived in Edmonton they began placing these sorts of signs around the city. The signs were in the shape of a black coffin and had FATALITY written across the center. |
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They were very effective as I recall because a new one would be erected for each death. When there gets to be a small grove of these things all around one corner or intersection, people bloody well slow down. |
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exactly. I'm tired of crosses and flowers which you can usually only see too late to be of any help. Real warning of the fatal danger needs to come when the driver can do somthing about it. |
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This must also include roads with very bad (not necessarily dead) drivers. And people backing out onto the highway, blind curves, pot holes, etc. If emergency services dont arrive quickly, people may die, so that road is dangerous. When I can evade an accident (and neither of us is killed), that road is statistically safe, even when the collision would have been a disaster. |
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I drive Uber-defensively, which makes bad roads safer, but only as I pass by, and a bad driver survives this day (and no doubt becomes cockier). If this idea includes areas of the hazardous drivers, its a good idea, if "post a sign" counts as an idea. I can easily identify which roads those are, so anybody can. Im hoping the intent is to stop the fatalities, not to merely catalog them. |
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The idea is that statistics allows us to ignore the non-incidents and focus on what we can measure: casualties. If the lack of services is associated with an accident then the sign indicating that the road is remote should bear the diamond. Many roads that seem like they would be dangerous are actually quite safe and many fatalities happen in that spot where it seems safe but there is a hidden danger INDICATED BY A SIGN. Same goes for multilane highways you never know which stretches are really dangerous. |
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I like it because it's sportier and less gloomy than looking out and seeing crosses, and maybe it will encourage the novices to stay off the road :) |
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I'd give you multiple buns here if I had 'em. Also, maybe some streets could be considered "Black Diamonds by Night" because of drunks getting out of the bars. |
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"Beware of drunken drivers" sign with numerous slots for diamonds. This would work to motivate the city to clean up their act and really keep people safe (especially the drunk people). Hightened enforcement to try to keep diamonds off the signs where they would reduce property values. |
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Car/Ped fatalities would be indicated on "watch for peds" signs. A caution to drivers and people on the street. |
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Divide the deaths into categories. The highway signs would bear eight BIG diamonds to indicate deca-deaths and the individual signs would bear the balance of the deaths. Advice about avoiding sleep driving would have diamonds for the number of sleep related fatalities, road condition signs would relate fatalities due to loss of control,Etc. |
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You could even include a black flag on the mile marker where an unexplained fatality occurred keeping drivers wits about them on those long straight stretches. |
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Some roads in UK (I'm thinking specifically of the A361 between Daventry and Swindon - I forget which side of Banbury) have signs such as "7 fatalities in the past 12 months on this stretch". The implication appears to be "We know the road is dangerous, but we're not going to fix it".
[UB]; we have similar signs on our motorways, particularly those used as holiday routes, ie by people who probably rarely drive long distances ("long" in UK terms meaning a few hundred miles). |
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I think this is an excellent idea. [+] |
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Alread exists, although we call them 'accident blackspots' |
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Basically, you want to keep score? That's not really the point of roadside memorials. |
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As angel says, fatality count signs exist in the UK. Often they are erected by the local council with a view to causing enough bad publicity to force central government to improve the roads. |
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// 2000km in length and claims 60-80 lives per year // |
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On average, that's .04 deaths per kilometre per year. How does that compare with other highways ? |
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How about if each road had a rating based on fatalities ? Multiply up the .04 and get a "Category 4 road". The bigger the number, the more deaths per kiolmeter per year. Then stick it on the SatNav maps and make them change the road colour according to the rating. |
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//How does that compare with other highways?//
It compares pretty favourably with the A361, but you need to factor in the number of vehicles for the comparison to be meaningful. If only one person died but there were only twenty or so users, that may give you a hint. One fatality out of a couple of million users might be acceptable. |
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A recent road safety campaign near where I live, had black life size (including child size) silhouettes on poles mounted at the appropriate point representing each death in the last five years on a stretch of road (N201 between Geneva and Annecy). It was quite chilling, and certainly had the required effect on me. Didn't seem to make any difference to the hooligans in their clapped out 206 GTis. |
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Busy single carraigeway roads are always going to be the most dangerous - a moment's bad judgement or lapse of concentration can easily bring about a collision where closing speeds are almost certain to prove fatal. If signs can concentrate the mind, then I'm all for them, but I have a feeling they are largely preaching to the converted. |
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I'm curious as to how people continued to hit the same power pole. Was it IN the intersection? |
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On-topic: I think I prefer the diamonds to any other symbol (coffins, dead babies, richard nixon masks) simply because it's an easily-recognized but meaningless symbol. |
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Also, it allows for an expansion of the sign (pull a slide-out section to add another diamond?) whereas putting up individual coffin signs requires greater expense. |
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Another cost-saving measure: have it be based on three-year averages, with new measurements calculated every summer. |
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// I prefer the diamonds // |
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When I'm on a Sunday Drive, it is disturbing to see crosses and richard nixon. But black diamonds [Link] are for daring, experienced skiers who crave the thrill and challenge of a dangerous course. |
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