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I have travelled the roundabout in Long Beach, though. Bought a 914 from the Porsche dealer in 1974. (GF was going to school in Long Beach. , Christie Brinkley was in the dorm room next to her. Her BF drove a Toyota 2000GT, one of only 350 or so imported into the USA. Probably worth upwards of $2.5M these days. My GF's roommate was dating Bill Withers. We even got to spend time on John Wayne's boat, the Wild Goose. Thinking about the Long Beach Rotary brings back memories of my misspent youth!) |
Aggressive driving rules the day in MA rotaries
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Mass Highway made a decision about 10-15 years ago, that roundabout were safer and improved traffic flow and their intent was to eliminate all "rotaries" on state roads. The famous Concord Rotary on Rt. 2 was changed to a roundabout a few years ago. Traveling that rotary 10 times a day for 40 years, I've had my share of accidents, right there in front of the old Concord Prison. I have to admit, the new roundabout works way better. On another front, MHD (now MA DOT) had been battling the Town of Littleton for years. They wanted to replace the rotary with a roundabout and the town and local business owners fought it, tooth and nail. |
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MASS girl here
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Not sure what the poster was talking about when they stated that we have rotaries and other states have roundabouts because rotaries don’t have solid lines. Our roundabouts have solid white lines on quite a few, and the handicapped drivers that drive them cross the solid white lines to continue driving wrong in the roundabout. For example, go east on meggison from Hawkins toward Morse and the Morse roundabout has a solid white line so anybody in the right lane of the roundabout has to continue going east on meggison but you will see that cars in the right lane cross the solid white line to go north on Morse. There are many other “roundabouts” in the southern area that have solid white lines.
But, every sign going into any roundabout is the same no matter where it’s at or what the round circle is called: Right lane can’t take a 2nd left, the left lane can’t make a 1st right. The left lane is the ‘only’ lane that can turn left after the 2nd right or go completely around the circle if needed. The solid white lines in some roundabouts keep the right lane right at the 1st exit whereas normally the right lane can take the 2nd exit, like the Morse / Meggison roundabout. You are taught when you are 16 never to cross a solid white line no matter where it’s at |
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There is no right, so straght on is only option. If you wanted third exit, you should have entered roundabout into left hand lane. I see nothing conflicting, |
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