Lorries and spray

Author
Discussion

smeagol

Original Poster:

1,947 posts

292 months

Tuesday 30th April 2002
quotequote all
I heard long time ago tha lorries were going to have to fit spray reducers (in the form of covers I believe)to their wheels. Having driven in appaling conditions I noticed that all the spray/mist was coming from lorries. Does anyone know when the laws regarding this actually come into place? or have they been scrapped 'cos there's not money in it?

nmlowe

1,666 posts

275 months

Tuesday 30th April 2002
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Don't know the law, but I have found them quite useful when my washer fluid runs out. Just drive behing and get a good soaking.

Roadrunner

2,690 posts

275 months

Tuesday 30th April 2002
quotequote all
I've heard there is a new law being passed at the moment that will ban any water from Motorways during peak travelling hours.

CarZee

13,382 posts

275 months

Tuesday 30th April 2002
quotequote all
No need to ban it - just make it pay road tax like everyone else..

nmlowe

1,666 posts

275 months

Tuesday 30th April 2002
quotequote all
quote:

I've heard there is a new law being passed at the moment that will ban any water from Motorways during peak travelling hours.



How?

tvradict

3,829 posts

282 months

Tuesday 30th April 2002
quotequote all
quote:

quote:

I've heard there is a new law being passed at the moment that will ban any water from Motorways during peak travelling hours.



How?



I believe it's a new invention that road designers have yet to get to grips with!

Drains!

nmlowe

1,666 posts

275 months

Tuesday 30th April 2002
quotequote all
quote:

quote:

quote:

I've heard there is a new law being passed at the moment that will ban any water from Motorways during peak travelling hours.



How?



I believe it's a new invention that road designers have yet to get to grips with!

Drains!



So, the drains only work at 'peak travelling' hours then?

CarZee

13,382 posts

275 months

Tuesday 30th April 2002
quotequote all
Or that porous top surface seen in some places.. very good stuff.

(For the benefit of those waiting for the inevitable comment, this won't happen because it'll cost money, rather than raise money, in the name of safety.)

tvradict

3,829 posts

282 months

Tuesday 30th April 2002
quotequote all
quote:

quote:

quote:

quote:

I've heard there is a new law being passed at the moment that will ban any water from Motorways during peak travelling hours.



How?



I believe it's a new invention that road designers have yet to get to grips with!

Drains!



So, the drains only work at 'peak travelling' hours then?




Well this government can't afford to employ drains 24hrs a day...

bob the planner

4,695 posts

277 months

Tuesday 30th April 2002
quotequote all
quote:

Or that porous top surface seen in some places.. very good stuff.

(For the benefit of those waiting for the inevitable comment, this won't happen because it'll cost money, rather than raise money, in the name of safety.)



The even newer idea for a porous top surface appears to be potholes. Coming soon to a road near you. (Just what do they spend our road tax on ?)

Bob

gnomesmith

2,458 posts

284 months

Tuesday 30th April 2002
quotequote all
Is Richard Branson taking over those drains, I'm sure I heard a news item about Vigin Drains tonight.

manek

2,977 posts

292 months

Wednesday 1st May 2002
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quote:

Or that porous top surface seen in some places.. very good stuff.

[snip]



Think there's some of that on the M25. I was heading anti-clockwise from the M4 to the M23 on Friday, filthy weather, spray everywhere, except on one 1-2 mile stretch. No spray at all -- amazing stuff.

Now why can't they use it everywhere?

Fatboy

8,089 posts

280 months

Wednesday 1st May 2002
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quote:
Well this government can't afford to employ drains 24hrs a day...


John Prescott's Employed for 5 years at a time

smeagol

Original Poster:

1,947 posts

292 months

Wednesday 1st May 2002
quotequote all
quote:

Now why can't they use it everywhere?


Well it would reduce accidents without using "safety cameras" how would that look on the statistics and revenue generation? I'm all for this kind of surface on all our Mways yesturday there were definately sections (two lorries overtaking at 0.00001mph) that I was "using the force" to see what was ahead.

A cheaper government option (well we wouldn't want to spend road tax on the roads, we give it to some unemployed-fast-breeder lazy c*nt) Would be for lorries to have these side skirts. I think they're a requirement in europe as the lorries from the contenant certainly weren't as bad.

mondeoman

11,430 posts

274 months

Wednesday 1st May 2002
quotequote all
quote:

Is Richard Branson taking over those drains, I'm sure I heard a news item about Vigin Drains tonight.



LMAO!!!

What happens if its the "wrong kind of rain" ie water??

daved

234 posts

292 months

Friday 3rd May 2002
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The new stuff is spread thinly and forms a honeycombe like surface. It absorbs water - and noise - alot more than the old stuff. Why don't they use more of it? No prizes for guessing - it costs more - typically 2-3 times as much. So with all the money being pumped into public transport, there's obviously not enough left in the kitty. Right.

JohnLow

1,763 posts

273 months

Friday 3rd May 2002
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It also doesn't last as long as the traditional stuff under heavy traffic - so roadworks again sooner it it's used.

kevinday

12,314 posts

288 months

Friday 3rd May 2002
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Perhaps B-liar should apply more 'spin' to the problem, then the rain will not stay on the surface anyway!