I was trying to offer a universal model that would accommodate both "true"
roundabouts and mini-roundabouts.
In the UK you are expected to make an effort to drive around the "dustbin lid"
(painted circle) in the middle of the mini-roundabout, but that only makes
sense for smaller vehicles. Lar
On 28 January 2023 23:47:38 GMT, Peter Elderson wrote:
>The mini-roundabout just adds priority on the MR to the general keep left
>rule, that is my understanding.
They are to give equal priority to all roads at a junction, usually where
traffic flow would block traffic from side roads.
They
The mini-roundabout just adds priority on the MR to the general keep left rule,
that is my understanding.
Peter Elderson
> Op 29 jan. 2023 om 00:37 heeft Florian Lohoff het volgende
> geschreven:
>
> On Sat, Jan 28, 2023 at 09:12:11PM +, Philip Barnes wrote:
>> Diameter implies there is
On 28 January 2023 23:17:59 GMT, Peter Elderson wrote:
>Op za 28 jan. 2023 om 23:38 schreef Colin Smale :
>
>> A form of roundabout common in the Netherlands has an inner ring which is
>> often distinctly coloured and slightly raised, thus making it clear that
>> traffic is intended to avoid it
On Sat, Jan 28, 2023 at 09:12:11PM +, Philip Barnes wrote:
> Diameter implies there is something circular. The paint is often
> round, not always, but most are just former T junctions or cross-roads
> where there is nothing to measure the diameter of .
Thats exactly the point. The mini_roundab
Op za 28 jan. 2023 om 23:38 schreef Colin Smale :
> A form of roundabout common in the Netherlands has an inner ring which is
> often distinctly coloured and slightly raised, thus making it clear that
> traffic is intended to avoid it and use the outer ring, while keeping it
> perfectly usable by
Generalising for all roundabouts, I propose a model in which there are three
diameters:
D1) outer diameter, where the outer kerb is
D2) "guide" inner diameter, the outer diameter of the inner ring intended to
"discourage" traffic
D3) inner diameter, where the inner kerb or wall is (not traversa
On 27 January 2023 21:29:49 GMT, Florian Lohoff wrote:
>Hi,
>
>On Wed, Jan 25, 2023 at 09:25:32PM +0100, Volker Schmidt wrote:
>> I see that I was not precise with my question: I am after a way to tag the
>> overall diameter of the round surface composed of the mini-roundabout road
>> surface p
Diameter implies there is something circular. The paint is often round, not
always, but most are just former T junctions or cross-roads where there is
nothing to measure the diameter of .
Phil (trigpoint)
On 25 January 2023 17:50:54 GMT, Volker Schmidt wrote:
>Is there an established way to ta
I think the point was that the units are explicitly tagged in meters,
whereas in other cases (like ele), the unit assumed to be meters and you
can just put a number by itself.
On Sat, Jan 28, 2023, 3:14 PM stevea wrote:
> Using mm (millimeters) as a unit for this makes no sense. Meters are much
Using mm (millimeters) as a unit for this makes no sense. Meters are much
better in my opinion. I understand water tubes and pipe threads might be
well-stated in mm (for "household" and "everyday" use, not hydrology engineers
and sewerage architects), but water tubes and pipe threads are not r
On Sat, 2023-01-28 at 09:44 +0100, Volker Schmidt wrote:
> The mm is because it's intended do describe water tubes and pipe threads,
> and not roads. That is why I have doubts using it for the mini-roundabout.
The Wiki-page for diameter explicitly mentions the use for turning_circle
and turning_lo
The mm is because it's intended do describe water tubes and pipe threads,
and not roads. That is why I have doubts using it for the mini-roundabout.
On Sat, 28 Jan 2023, 09:20 Mark Reidel, wrote:
> On Sat, 2023-01-28 at 00:53 +0100, Volker Schmidt wrote:
> > What I am after is tagging the dimens
On Sat, 2023-01-28 at 00:53 +0100, Volker Schmidt wrote:
> What I am after is tagging the dimension of mini-roundabouts. This seems
> to be useful information for longer vehicles. The specific mini-roundabout
> that triggered the question is this one, and it has a diameter of about
> 12m, and, yes,
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