Paul van der Hulst <[email protected]> writes: > Hi, > It seems there is some consensus about the 130 limit on the > on-ramp: https://forum.openstreetmap.org/viewtopic.php?id=70677 (in dutch > unfortunately) so apparently this should be solved in the routing algorithm.
can you translate? DO you mean "the legal speed is 130 km/h"? Do you then also mean "it is normal and reasonable to drive at that speed"? and "people typically do drive at that speed"? > I can see at least two ways to tackle this. > 1 - I don't know how normal crossings are modeled, but I assume some > assumption is made that you (sometimes?) have to slow down when you cross > other roads. A fair point. > In the Netherlands, these highways should never join with roads of lower > order. If a highway link does, that counts as a normal crossing where you > would have to assume some delay due to crossing traffic. > 2 - It is quite irresponsible to assume you can race past a point on the > map at 130km/h where the maximum speed of one of the connecting roads is > only 80. The maximum speed at any point on the map should be no higher than > the lowest of the speed limits of the connecting roads. Do they have ramp junctions, or stop signs? Sounds like maxpseed:advisory is in order. Is it really the case that the signs say 130 and nothing else? How is a driver to know that they should slow down? -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "OsmAnd" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/osmand/rmift6mc7fi.fsf%40s1.lexort.com.
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