Hi! In Portugal, Spain and surely a little all around, unpaved gravel roads are 
common, even on urban neighbourhoods.
These are quite drivable and they will often be the only way to get to some 
places. They are also suitable to all vehicles, even if they will get covered 
in dirt.
There are also a lot of paths going through sand (forest roads) and these will 
unsuitable to most vehicles (even a lot of 4x4s), regardless of their width. 

I find that while driving, the real issue will be the road conditions and 
width. Will the unpaved road be wide enough for a car or light truck? Will it 
have deep tracks due to soil erosion? Will the surface be solid enough to drive 
in a regular car?

So, in real world GPS usage, I would like unpaved to mean “narrow, earth 
roads”, while paved would mean any road suitable to all regular vehicles.
Example: due to wind farms being built in a lot of hill ranges, large, unpaved 
roads were built. These are gravel, wide roads, and often are a better option 
to the paved, sinuous mountain roads that go around every nook and cranny in 
the valleys.

So, I think that fine_gravel, salt and ice should still be “paved”.

Nuno Pedrosa.

PS: Sorry to “butt in” the talk. I’m usually silent in this list, though I read 
most of the discussions. Your work is amazing and I find that I can add little 
to what is being discussed, so I try to keep my “noise” to a minimum!


> On 7 Feb 2017, at 09:40, lig fietser <ligfiet...@hotmail.com> wrote:
> 
> I'd call that semi-paved but Garmin doesn't have such category unfortunately. 
> Since the default style main focus is on motor vehicles I'd suggest to add 
> surfaces like fine_gravel, salt, ice to the unpaved list. And please add soil 
> to it, it seems a quite popular tag.
> 
> Gerd wrote
> This "raining" part is probably what paved/unpaved is about: The surface of a 
> paved road should not change when it's raining
> and your vehicle will not be covered with dirt when traveling on a paved road 
> while it is raining (at least not from dirt which was part of the surface).
> 
> Do you agree on that (last sentence)?
> 
> Gerd
> 
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