Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#391
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Some roads...especially interstates and some other high-level roads...may have slightly wider lanes, but that does not make Morse and Buena Vista substandard. Morse and Buena Vista are arterial roads, most likely considered minor arterial roads compared to urban areas. And their cross-section...lane widths, shoulders, etc....easily meet and exceed minimum standards. Minimum lane width to meet the three-feet-of-clearance criterion is roughly... * Width for operation of a bicycle = 4 feet (FDOT NHWA) * Width of average full size sedan = ~6.5 feet (Some are wider) * Safe clearance criterion = 3 feet * Total = 13.5 feet minimum lane width Few roads satisfy this requirement. Roads do not have to be 13.5 feet to be considered standard by any accepted road design measure. Twelve (12) feet is a very standard lane width for arterial roads, with lanes down to 10 feet considered standard under many conditions. While I haven't measured them, I'm confident Morse and Buena Vista easily meet these requirements. Last edited by Polar Bear; 09-23-2015 at 09:59 PM. |
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#392
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2. It is about the money!
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The difference between genius and stupidity is genius has its limits - Albert Einstein |
#393
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#394
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Morse, Buena Vista, El Cameno, Stillwater have been measured and the lane is only 11 feet wide. Substandard in Florida.
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#395
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All the great things are simple, and many can be expressed in a single word: freedom, justice, honor, duty, mercy, hope. Winston Churchill |
#396
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Reread my post. I referenced the width. "Substandard" does not refer to the condition of the road, only the width.
Last edited by biker1; 09-24-2015 at 06:32 AM. |
#397
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Actually BV and Morse are substandard with regard to width. A car and a bike, with the required 3 feet of clearance, cannot coexist in the same lane.
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#398
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Reread Polar Bear's post above. I'll rely on the expertise of a professional engineer, thank you.
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All the great things are simple, and many can be expressed in a single word: freedom, justice, honor, duty, mercy, hope. Winston Churchill |
#399
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The term is "owning the lane", not "owning the road". This is necessary under some circumstances to prevent a car from squeezing you into the curb. The classic example is when riding on a 2-lane road with a double solid line on a curve. Some people will try to pass you if they think they squeeze into the lane with you as opposed to swinging out into the other lane. This is a dangerous situation and is typically avoided by moving left so anyone attempting to pass you has to move into the other lane - something they will hopefully not do on a curve with a double solid line. Riding to the extreme right of the lane is a dangerous way to ride under certain circumstances.
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Last edited by biker1; 09-24-2015 at 07:03 AM. |
#400
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Call law enforcement and ask whether those roads are substandard with regard to width and whether a car, a bike, and the required 3 feet of clearance can coexist in the same lane. Here is a hint: they can't.
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#401
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#402
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Reminder....topic is striping of Villages multimodal paths. Please stay on topic and do not post personal comments directed at other members.
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#403
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#404
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#405
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I replied to Bullit's post which was #3 by copying Village Chickens response which was #4. It seemed like the groundhog thing to do at the time. We're up to #435. |
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