In Georgia, (almost?) all state roads are signed with the state outline and the 
highway number, but no "GA" or "Georgia" text with it. Occasionally you might 
see "State Road" or "State Route" printed on the sign in addition to the state 
outline. In some very rural areas, I think there might still be a few un-logoed 
signs, but probably not many. 

-jack

On November 30, 2014 5:58:53 PM EST, Minh Nguyen <[email protected]> 
wrote:
>On 2014-11-30 10:41, stevea wrote:
>> My two cents:  I must say that here in California, I've made it a
>habit
>> to remove the "County Route" designation (CR) which precedes a ref
>> number in our County Route system.  For example, NE2 (a
>banned-from-OSM
>> former contributor for those unfamiliar with that history) entered
>ref
>> tags for many G2, N1... county routes as "CR G2" and "CR N1."  That,
>in
>> my opinion, is so redundant (as G and N and A and S... are well-known
>> multi-county/regional-within-California county highway networks) as
>to
>> be true clutter.  People in California do know (and routing software,
>> renderers... SHOULD know) that A1, G2, N4 and S16 are county routes
>in a
>> lettered system where each letter represents a cluster of
>counties...at
>> least in California.
>
>Some northwest Ohio counties post shields along section line roads that
>
>say A, B, C, etc. So far I've been tagging them like "CR A", even
>though 
>you'd be hard-pressed to find that style anywhere outside of OSM. 
>Instead of reducing ambiguity, I wonder if the "CR" may cause very mild
>
>confusion, for example when a router tells its user to turn onto "CR
>R".
>
>> Also, while "SR" (for "State Route" in California and other states)
>is
>> still legally correct, I still might change for consistency's sake
>any
>> "SR" prefix I see in a highway route relation ref tag to be "CA"
>> instead.  So, while "SR 17" is correct, I much prefer "CA 17" and
>will
>> change it to that if I see SR in a California highway route relation
>ref
>> tag.
>
>Yes, usage is different in California. I've only ever seen "SR" on 
>signage a few times, in rather obscure places. But in Ohio, it's
>ubiquitous.
>
>> I agree with what we (as OSM volunteers entering/editing data in our
>> map) now do, as well as what map styles/renderers and routing engines
>> do, as Minh notes above:  "recognize the state abbreviation, SR or
>SH."
>> Yes, Michigan still has its M- routes, and I think OSM (both its
>human
>> editors and software components) should just learn to cope with that
>> (plus perhaps a few other states) as exceptions to this largely
>(though
>> not completely) applicable rule.  I believe we are pretty much there,
>> but we still have edge cases, data in the map and newer contributors
>who
>> are not completely familiar with these conventions in the USA.
>> Discussing it here helps, though wiki documentation and taginfo data
>> which are consistent across the fifty states is better.
>
>My response to anyone who wants more consistency is that route
>relations 
>are the way forward. They may be painful now but they make the data a 
>lot less subject to interpretation.
>
>-- 
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>
>
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Typos courtesy of fancy auto-spell technology. 
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