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Driving through intersections when the traffic lights are out

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  • R Richard Stringer

    Is Rhode Island big enough to have an intersection ? I thought it was kinda like a place to go see leaves change color - you know a buffer zone - kinda like a National Park !!! :) Richard "He who joyfully marches in rank and file has already earned my contempt. He has been given a large brain by mistake, since for him the spinal cord would suffice. --Albert Einstein

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    Marc Clifton
    wrote on last edited by
    #4

    Richard Stringer wrote: Is Rhode Island big enough to have an intersection ? I thought it was kinda like a place to go see leaves change color - you know a buffer zone - kinda like a National Park !!! Aye! That's the problem! The place is filled with dingbat tourists!!! Marc Microsoft MVP, Visual C# MyXaml MyXaml Blog

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    • M Marc Clifton

      So, what is it with people here in Rhode Island? The lights are out, the traffic lights are out, and people zoom through intersections at 40-50 MPH!!! In CA, the rule was, treat the intersection as if it were a 4 way stop sign. Isn't that the same in all the states? Marc Microsoft MVP, Visual C# MyXaml MyXaml Blog

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      Navin
      wrote on last edited by
      #5

      That's a rule everyhwere I've ever lived or visited. IF the light is dark, then it's a 4-way stop. Why people don't stop? I don't know. Has to be one of the following: :bob: It happens so rarely, so they don't know any better. :bob: The light is dark, and people don't even see it. (That's happened to me before at night!) :bob: They don't see any traffic, so they figure, what the heck, I'll just keep going. My guess is that #1 is the predominant factor, and sometimes #2, when applicable. "Fish and guests stink in three days." - Benjamin Franlkin

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      • N nssone

        It's probably the law, but its just not the way it's done in that area. Hey, where I drive, I'm lucky if people even consider yielding on some streets.


        Who am I? Currently: A Programming Student trying to survive school with plan to go on to Univeristy of Advancing Technology to study game design. Main career interest include: Multimedia and game programming. Working on an outside project: A game for the GamePark32 (GP32) portable gaming console. My website: www.GP32US.com

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        brianwelsch
        wrote on last edited by
        #6

        It's supposed to work that way. I go through an actual 4-way stop each morning and people have trouble deciding who's turn it is to go. :sigh: How can you not remember which 3 cars where at the intersection when you got there? Then drive when they've all gone through. :~ BW The Biggest Loser


        "People look so snooty, take pills make them moody
        Automatic bazootie, zero to tutti frutti"
        -Hollywood Freaks

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        • M Marc Clifton

          So, what is it with people here in Rhode Island? The lights are out, the traffic lights are out, and people zoom through intersections at 40-50 MPH!!! In CA, the rule was, treat the intersection as if it were a 4 way stop sign. Isn't that the same in all the states? Marc Microsoft MVP, Visual C# MyXaml MyXaml Blog

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          David Crow
          wrote on last edited by
          #7

          Marc Clifton wrote: Isn't that the same in all the states? Yes. Having rules and obeying them are mutually exclusive things, unfortunately.


          "When I was born I was so surprised that I didn't talk for a year and a half." - Gracie Allen

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          • M Marc Clifton

            So, what is it with people here in Rhode Island? The lights are out, the traffic lights are out, and people zoom through intersections at 40-50 MPH!!! In CA, the rule was, treat the intersection as if it were a 4 way stop sign. Isn't that the same in all the states? Marc Microsoft MVP, Visual C# MyXaml MyXaml Blog

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            Michael A Barnhart
            wrote on last edited by
            #8

            Marc Clifton wrote: Isn't that the same in all the states? That is the rule in all states I have lived in. To bad (many? some?) people are more worried about a few seconds of their precious time than the well being of anyone around them. Here to many zoom through the intersection whether the lights work (and RED) or not. :mad: Sorry this is not the Soap Box! I do not mind getting old. It beats all the other options that can think of.

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            • R Richard Stringer

              Is Rhode Island big enough to have an intersection ? I thought it was kinda like a place to go see leaves change color - you know a buffer zone - kinda like a National Park !!! :) Richard "He who joyfully marches in rank and file has already earned my contempt. He has been given a large brain by mistake, since for him the spinal cord would suffice. --Albert Einstein

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              Kant
              wrote on last edited by
              #9

              Richard Stringer wrote: Is Rhode Island big enough to have an intersection ? ROTFL :laugh:
              Promise only what you can do. And then deliver more than what you promised.
              This signature was created by "Code Project Quoter".

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              • M Marc Clifton

                So, what is it with people here in Rhode Island? The lights are out, the traffic lights are out, and people zoom through intersections at 40-50 MPH!!! In CA, the rule was, treat the intersection as if it were a 4 way stop sign. Isn't that the same in all the states? Marc Microsoft MVP, Visual C# MyXaml MyXaml Blog

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                Diane Capewell
                wrote on last edited by
                #10

                Marc Clifton wrote: In CA, the rule was, treat the intersection as if it were a 4 way stop sign. Isn't that the same in all the states? Really? As far as I can tell, the rules in the bit of California I'm currently visiting (Marina Del Rey, near LA) are "Get really confused" and "Let the Wookiee (or biggest SUV) win". I didn't know there was an actual official rule. :) (I may never complain about Boston drivers again after this place...) -- "Half of the American people have never read a newspaper. Half never voted for President. One hopes it is the same half." Gore Vidal

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                • M Marc Clifton

                  So, what is it with people here in Rhode Island? The lights are out, the traffic lights are out, and people zoom through intersections at 40-50 MPH!!! In CA, the rule was, treat the intersection as if it were a 4 way stop sign. Isn't that the same in all the states? Marc Microsoft MVP, Visual C# MyXaml MyXaml Blog

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                  Gary R Wheeler
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #11

                  Yes. We had the situation throughout our town (Xenia, OH) last night. The thunderstorms that came through shredded the electrical grid and the traffic signal control network.


                  Software Zen: delete this;

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                  • D Diane Capewell

                    Marc Clifton wrote: In CA, the rule was, treat the intersection as if it were a 4 way stop sign. Isn't that the same in all the states? Really? As far as I can tell, the rules in the bit of California I'm currently visiting (Marina Del Rey, near LA) are "Get really confused" and "Let the Wookiee (or biggest SUV) win". I didn't know there was an actual official rule. :) (I may never complain about Boston drivers again after this place...) -- "Half of the American people have never read a newspaper. Half never voted for President. One hopes it is the same half." Gore Vidal

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                    Colin Angus Mackay
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #12

                    Diane Capewell wrote: As far as I can tell, the rules in the bit of California I'm currently visiting (Marina Del Rey, near LA) are "Get really confused" and "Let the Wookiee (or biggest SUV) win". :laugh::laugh: It kind of reminds me of a time when I hired a car in Denver. It was only the second time I'd driven in the US and the 4-way stop signs scared me the previous time, so I thought I'd ask the rental clerk what the rule was. Apparently, in Colorado at least, the rule is that the person with the biggest gun rack gets to go first. :eek:


                    "You can have everything in life you want if you will just help enough other people get what they want." --Zig Ziglar The Second EuroCPian Event will be in Brussels on the 4th of September Can't manage to P/Invoke that Win32 API in .NET? Why not do interop the wiki way!

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                    • B brianwelsch

                      It's supposed to work that way. I go through an actual 4-way stop each morning and people have trouble deciding who's turn it is to go. :sigh: How can you not remember which 3 cars where at the intersection when you got there? Then drive when they've all gone through. :~ BW The Biggest Loser


                      "People look so snooty, take pills make them moody
                      Automatic bazootie, zero to tutti frutti"
                      -Hollywood Freaks

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                      JohnnyG
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #13

                      The law or rule in most states is: Whomever gets to a four-way stop signed intersection first has the right of way. If you can't tell who got there first. The person/vehicle on the right yields to the person on the left. Meaning that the person on your left goes first. However, having said all of that I remember when I lived in Minnesota for three years that it was sort of an unwritten rule that the cars in oncoming lanes went at the same time as long as one or both weren't making left turns. This wasn't a bad method since if you have two cars in the intersection at the same time going in opposite directions, it certainly speeds things up. I've often wondered how you can get something like that started in another region of the country. Here in New Jersey, most drivers are aware that if a vehicle is making a left turn on a two lane road, that the vehicle waiting to turn left must yield to the oncoming traffic. However, they are ignorant in that it does not apply to a two-way or four-way stop signed intersection and most NJ drivers try to go ahead of a person turning left at a stop signed intersection even though that person got there first.

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                      • J JohnnyG

                        The law or rule in most states is: Whomever gets to a four-way stop signed intersection first has the right of way. If you can't tell who got there first. The person/vehicle on the right yields to the person on the left. Meaning that the person on your left goes first. However, having said all of that I remember when I lived in Minnesota for three years that it was sort of an unwritten rule that the cars in oncoming lanes went at the same time as long as one or both weren't making left turns. This wasn't a bad method since if you have two cars in the intersection at the same time going in opposite directions, it certainly speeds things up. I've often wondered how you can get something like that started in another region of the country. Here in New Jersey, most drivers are aware that if a vehicle is making a left turn on a two lane road, that the vehicle waiting to turn left must yield to the oncoming traffic. However, they are ignorant in that it does not apply to a two-way or four-way stop signed intersection and most NJ drivers try to go ahead of a person turning left at a stop signed intersection even though that person got there first.

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                        Steve Mayfield
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #14

                        I always thought that "right of way" meant that the person on the right went first :confused: (confirmed by a co-worker whos wife is a policewoman) Steve

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                        • S Steve Mayfield

                          I always thought that "right of way" meant that the person on the right went first :confused: (confirmed by a co-worker whos wife is a policewoman) Steve

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                          JohnnyG
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #15

                          Absolutely incorrect. From Dictionary.com:

                          right of way also right-of-way (rtv-w)
                          n. pl. rights of way or right of ways also rights-of-way (rts-) or right-of-ways (-wz)

                          The right to pass over property owned by another party.

                          The path or thoroughfare on which such passage is made.

                          The strip of land over which facilities such as highways, railroads, or power lines are built.

                          The customary or legal right of a person, vessel, or vehicle to pass in front of another

                          I never heard that explanation before (the one you mentioned) but I could see where that could be misunderstood to mean what you thought. Interesting. But, I always thought that "right of way" meant the "right" to do something like the "right" to go first.

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                          • J JohnnyG

                            Absolutely incorrect. From Dictionary.com:

                            right of way also right-of-way (rtv-w)
                            n. pl. rights of way or right of ways also rights-of-way (rts-) or right-of-ways (-wz)

                            The right to pass over property owned by another party.

                            The path or thoroughfare on which such passage is made.

                            The strip of land over which facilities such as highways, railroads, or power lines are built.

                            The customary or legal right of a person, vessel, or vehicle to pass in front of another

                            I never heard that explanation before (the one you mentioned) but I could see where that could be misunderstood to mean what you thought. Interesting. But, I always thought that "right of way" meant the "right" to do something like the "right" to go first.

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                            Roger Wright
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #16

                            But he is correct about who goes first. If two vehicles arrive simultaneously at the intersection, the right to proceed passes clockwise. It's a wonder that anyone remembers that, though, since so many people are not required to take driver training classes. We had to spend a semester of classroom instruction in the laws and proper behavior, then a semester of driving - first in expensive simulators, then behind the wheel with an instructor - before we were allowed to apply to take a driving test for a license. I don't know what the local kids get by way of instruction, but there's no simulators or actual driving experience involved. Too expensive, I'm told...:suss: Some people think of it as a six-pack; I consider it more of a support group.

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                            • C Colin Angus Mackay

                              Diane Capewell wrote: As far as I can tell, the rules in the bit of California I'm currently visiting (Marina Del Rey, near LA) are "Get really confused" and "Let the Wookiee (or biggest SUV) win". :laugh::laugh: It kind of reminds me of a time when I hired a car in Denver. It was only the second time I'd driven in the US and the 4-way stop signs scared me the previous time, so I thought I'd ask the rental clerk what the rule was. Apparently, in Colorado at least, the rule is that the person with the biggest gun rack gets to go first. :eek:


                              "You can have everything in life you want if you will just help enough other people get what they want." --Zig Ziglar The Second EuroCPian Event will be in Brussels on the 4th of September Can't manage to P/Invoke that Win32 API in .NET? Why not do interop the wiki way!

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                              Roger Wright
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #17

                              Colin Angus Mackay wrote: the person with the biggest gun rack gets to go first :laugh::laugh: Same here!:-D Some people think of it as a six-pack; I consider it more of a support group.

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                              • D Diane Capewell

                                Marc Clifton wrote: In CA, the rule was, treat the intersection as if it were a 4 way stop sign. Isn't that the same in all the states? Really? As far as I can tell, the rules in the bit of California I'm currently visiting (Marina Del Rey, near LA) are "Get really confused" and "Let the Wookiee (or biggest SUV) win". I didn't know there was an actual official rule. :) (I may never complain about Boston drivers again after this place...) -- "Half of the American people have never read a newspaper. Half never voted for President. One hopes it is the same half." Gore Vidal

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                                Roger Wright
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #18

                                When I was growing up in California (pre-PRC) the drivers there were among the most courteous and alert anywhere. That started changing in the early 80s, as the Left Coast became gruesomely overcrowded, and impatient people became more engrossed in beating some imaginary timeline that laws and courtesy went out the passenger window. There was also a huge influx of foreigners who were untrained in our ways, and who came from very different cultures, at the same time. Traffic laws became optional about then, though we all still maintained our tradition of driving very, very fast on wide open highways.:-D Here in Arizona, almost no one actually stops at a stop sign; they do what has long been called (incorrectly) a California stop. It's sort of a rolling gesture intended to allow the driver to make a sudden stop if he happens to spot a cop, but otherwise run the stop sign whether it's safe to do so or not. It wasn't like that in CA long ago, but now it's nearly universal - Arizonans and the tourists from the PRC alike. Some people think of it as a six-pack; I consider it more of a support group.

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                                • R Roger Wright

                                  But he is correct about who goes first. If two vehicles arrive simultaneously at the intersection, the right to proceed passes clockwise. It's a wonder that anyone remembers that, though, since so many people are not required to take driver training classes. We had to spend a semester of classroom instruction in the laws and proper behavior, then a semester of driving - first in expensive simulators, then behind the wheel with an instructor - before we were allowed to apply to take a driving test for a license. I don't know what the local kids get by way of instruction, but there's no simulators or actual driving experience involved. Too expensive, I'm told...:suss: Some people think of it as a six-pack; I consider it more of a support group.

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                                  JohnnyG
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #19

                                  Yup. You're right, I had it wrong. :-O I got my driver's license when I was 16 and I remembered it being something like "the person on the right yields to the person on the left" but actually after looking it up, it basically says "You should yield to the driver on the right if you both arrive at the same time".

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                                  • J JohnnyG

                                    Yup. You're right, I had it wrong. :-O I got my driver's license when I was 16 and I remembered it being something like "the person on the right yields to the person on the left" but actually after looking it up, it basically says "You should yield to the driver on the right if you both arrive at the same time".

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                                    Roger Wright
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #20

                                    In recent years I've found it prudent to yield to the most aggressive idiot. The general rule still applies, but there's no point in trying to win that one against a moron who is determined to run the stop. Sadly, such imbeciles seem to be becoming the majority rather than the genetic fluke they used to be.:( Some people think of it as a six-pack; I consider it more of a support group.

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                                    • R Roger Wright

                                      When I was growing up in California (pre-PRC) the drivers there were among the most courteous and alert anywhere. That started changing in the early 80s, as the Left Coast became gruesomely overcrowded, and impatient people became more engrossed in beating some imaginary timeline that laws and courtesy went out the passenger window. There was also a huge influx of foreigners who were untrained in our ways, and who came from very different cultures, at the same time. Traffic laws became optional about then, though we all still maintained our tradition of driving very, very fast on wide open highways.:-D Here in Arizona, almost no one actually stops at a stop sign; they do what has long been called (incorrectly) a California stop. It's sort of a rolling gesture intended to allow the driver to make a sudden stop if he happens to spot a cop, but otherwise run the stop sign whether it's safe to do so or not. It wasn't like that in CA long ago, but now it's nearly universal - Arizonans and the tourists from the PRC alike. Some people think of it as a six-pack; I consider it more of a support group.

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                                      JohnnyG
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #21

                                      Heh-heh. We sort of do something similar in New Jersey in regards to a rolling stop. Except we do actually stop but just for about a full second or two. If there's a cop you just keep your foot on the brake a couple of seconds longer. Not the typical (lawful) three or four seconds average. You come up on a stop sign at a faster speed than normal, hit your brakes to stop for a second, then go if it's safe. Obviously a habit designed to get you through the intersection faster. In Minnesota they go through yellow lights to red consistently so that when it turns red everyone knows to wait about two seconds if you're stopped at a light and it turns green. When I first got to New Jersey, I kept up the behavior for a while until my native New Jerseyan passengers kept complaining.

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                                      • J JohnnyG

                                        Absolutely incorrect. From Dictionary.com:

                                        right of way also right-of-way (rtv-w)
                                        n. pl. rights of way or right of ways also rights-of-way (rts-) or right-of-ways (-wz)

                                        The right to pass over property owned by another party.

                                        The path or thoroughfare on which such passage is made.

                                        The strip of land over which facilities such as highways, railroads, or power lines are built.

                                        The customary or legal right of a person, vessel, or vehicle to pass in front of another

                                        I never heard that explanation before (the one you mentioned) but I could see where that could be misunderstood to mean what you thought. Interesting. But, I always thought that "right of way" meant the "right" to do something like the "right" to go first.

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                                        Steve Mayfield
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #22

                                        This is how I associated right of way with who goes first in an intersection [^] Steve

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                                        • M Marc Clifton

                                          So, what is it with people here in Rhode Island? The lights are out, the traffic lights are out, and people zoom through intersections at 40-50 MPH!!! In CA, the rule was, treat the intersection as if it were a 4 way stop sign. Isn't that the same in all the states? Marc Microsoft MVP, Visual C# MyXaml MyXaml Blog

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                                          Steve Mayfield
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #23

                                          I came across this - maybe is helps to explain things: LAW: It is required by law that you make a loud noise when passing a car on the left. COUNTRY: USA / STATE: Rhode Island CITATION: ยง31-15-4 Overtaking on left. ACTUAL: The following rules shall govern the overtaking and passing of vehicles proceeding in the same direction, subject to those limitations, exceptions, and special rules stated in this section: (1) The driver of a vehicle overtaking another vehicle proceeding in the same direction shall give a timely, audible signal and shall pass to the left at a safe distance and shall not again drive to the right side of the roadway until safely clear of the overtaken vehicle. (2) Except when overtaking and passing on the right is permitted, the driver of the front vehicle on the audible signal of the overtaking vehicle shall give way to the right, and shall not increase speed until completely passed by the overtaking vehicle. Steve

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