They are usually used as marker point by traffic police when recording a motorists speed using Vascar equipment. Can sometimes also be used by Police Helicopter crew for the same purpose.
I'm pretty sure they're sensors to detect stationary traffic - part of the traffic management system used to monitor the motorway network. But I'm willing to be corrected.
sproggy wrote:I'm pretty sure they're sensors to detect stationary traffic - part of the traffic management system used to monitor the motorway network. But I'm willing to be corrected.
Now I'm confused! Can you explain a little better....which white squares?
Honda VFR750 FV 1997 Red and dirty, 130K miles.
Honda VFR800 Xf Crossrunner 2016 White and dirty, 120K miles.
sproggy wrote:I'm pretty sure they're sensors to detect stationary traffic - part of the traffic management system used to monitor the motorway network. But I'm willing to be corrected.
Now I'm confused! Can you explain a little better....which white squares?
They're not white squares. They're rectangular outlines of over-banding - basically 'they' grind grooves in the road surface in a rectangular pattern, put wires in the groves and then cover them over with over-banding tar. Easy to miss in the dry, not so easy to miss in the wet......
Stevie wrote:I'm gonna kill that BlackAl. He told me they were guidance instrumentation for alien kidnap flights.
The voices told me that's what they were
They are panels cut in the road, by the company "Trafficmasters" and they can register the speed a car or commercial vehicle is doing. You will notice a grey box at the side of the road in line with them.
I don't think that's right BlackAl. The loop/grey box combination is operated by Amey (in Scotland anyway) and is there purely to detect traffic flow. In Scotland they are linked into the TrafficScotland data centre (used to be Nadics) which identifies and disseminates congestion information in central Scotland.
The Trafficmaster system uses ANPR boxes which are mast mounted, and coloured blue to avoid confusion with ANPR speed enforcement systems.
Stevie wrote:The Trafficmaster system uses ANPR boxes which are mast mounted, and coloured blue to avoid confusion with ANPR speed enforcement systems.
Errr, I don't think that's right - Trafficmaster doesn't use ANPR but simply monitors traffic speed. What would they need with ANPR? Or is Big Brother really watching us in that respect? I hope you're wrong.
As I understand it, Trafficmaster were given a licence to use ANPR for traffic flow monitoring. I understand that the conditions of licence were that the number plate information is not to stored or made available to anyone else.
The UK company Trafficmaster has used ANPR since 1998 to estimate average traffic speeds on non-motorway roads without the results being skewed by local fluctuations caused by traffic lights and similar. The company now operates a network of over 4000 ANPR cameras [10], but claims that only the four most central digits are identified, and no numberplate data is retained [11].