War on cars
-
- Posts: 970
- Joined: Sun Jun 24, 2018 5:45 pm
Re: War on cars
Postby opik_bidin » Sun Apr 21, 2019 5:18 pm
1. Drivers tell cyclists to pay and get out from their space, as they pay so much
2. Cyclists look up how much they pay
3. Cyclists look up how much society pays
4. Cyclists look up how the money is distributed
5. Cyclists look up how the space is distributed
6. Turns out it's the drivers getting the lion share of money and space
7. Turns out the drivers aren't paying their fair share.
If utility bills must be paid, (an we know gas, water and electricity are essential) why not use the same logic for road space? why must it be free? why the one damaging and using its space for so much get it for free?
For the space, lets look at each vehicle dimension
For the damage, let's look at the vehicle weight and speed.
Then get the pay rate accordingly.
If a space in a building has it's own rate, which we know is true as there is demand for building spaces and a garage is expensive, why are road spaces free? if water, electricity and gas is billed, then why not road space too?
unrelated puic
https://twitter.com/edwardlamb/status/1 ... 2801667072
-
- Posts: 970
- Joined: Sun Jun 24, 2018 5:45 pm
Re: War on cars
Postby opik_bidin » Sun Apr 21, 2019 5:51 pm
- Thoglette
- Posts: 6729
- Joined: Thu Feb 19, 2009 1:01 pm
Re: War on cars
Postby Thoglette » Sun Apr 21, 2019 6:35 pm
(sorry, no reviews, too sick to do anything but cross post and/or snark)
"People are worthy of respect, ideas are not." Peter Ellerton, UQ
-
- Posts: 970
- Joined: Sun Jun 24, 2018 5:45 pm
Re: War on cars
Postby opik_bidin » Mon Apr 22, 2019 4:47 pm
Already use less energy for being an ebike, it also use less electricity by using a solar panel. Looks like we can finally have a cycle that can replace cars.
Patrick Perret, from Switzerland, decided to combine making a statement and do a grand adventure together with his children Yoann and Emilie. He says:
I think it is necessary to realize that moving with a clean vehicle is essential if we want to provide a healthy life for our children. Currently 80% of cars move with only one person in them. Why move 1 ton of scrap to transport 80 kg? 90% of the energy consumed is used to move the car and maximum 10% for the person inside.
For everyday journeys, for example to get to work, it is quite possible to use a 4-wheeled, 80 kg vehicle in which one is safe, operating with clean energy. In addition, it brings considerable benefits regarding cost and parking.
We couldn't agree more! He continues:
Of course, the icing on the cake of the demonstration of the clean vehicle is the Adventure.
The Silk Road is an amazing journey for my children and myself with great emotions and memories.
In addition to the daily school education that I will strive to give them, my children will enjoy this journey for an education and an open mind that will give them a different vision of life.
-
- Posts: 2105
- Joined: Fri Sep 27, 2013 10:52 pm
- Location: Albury NSW on the mighty Murray River
Re: War on cars
Postby brumby33 » Mon Apr 22, 2019 6:48 pm
Being a Bus driver in the Sydney CBD you get to experience many things, you get to notice many things and one I shall call the new menace on the roads are Uber Drivers, if swarms of cabs weren't enough to deal with, we have these unregistered (meaning they don't need an Authority card like a cabbie) people movers, And they are getting very cheeky mainly because they are still cabbies doing other work in their own cars or are former cabbies...they are every damn where and parking in bus stops and No Stopping zones...I think the cops should really crack down on these people.....
It's Hard to know what they'll do with buses once the light rail begins because as it is now, it's very unsatisfactory in peak time with all buses fighting for space in Elizabeth street.
But having electric vehicles or bikes running around could also place a drain on our already stressed power grid...it doesn't have to cope yet for electric car charging but you can imagine the electric power that may be needed when people get home after a hard days work...park their electric cars or bikes in the Garage....then they need to cook some dinner...all of a sudden...massive power hikes.
Now sure...people can wait till later to charge their vehicle...but will they.
Theres a report from Germany I read yesterday that electric vehicle create more CO2's due to the need of coal fired power that Europe still relies on for it's baseline power.
But getting back to Sydney or Melbourne and other capitols around Australia, if the Government wants to be serious....start with what they have first with e-bikes and ordinary bikes and work from there, hopefully by the time the electric car networks are affordable, many people will have learnt the virtue for cycling or e-biking and City people will be healthier for it. It's gotta be good for the medicare levies.
brumby33
VWR Patagonia 2017
2003 Diamondback Sorrento Sport MTB
-
- Posts: 376
- Joined: Sat Feb 18, 2012 7:06 am
Re: War on cars
Postby hunch » Mon Apr 22, 2019 8:17 pm
In light of current election campaign, sounds a bit minerals council or lnp inspired copy! Sure there's brown and black coal generation in the mix, presently the Eu is just under 20% from that source declining about 5% in 10 years. Renewables account for about a third, gas and nuke the bulk of the remainder.brumby33 wrote:Theres a report from Germany I read yesterday that electric vehicle create more CO2's due to the need of coal fired power that Europe still relies on for it's baseline power.
There's vast differences in "Europe" over what CO2 is generated by an electric vehicle, last figures I've seen for high emission Germany, including cost of manufacture, was ~ 230g/km, Norway on the other hand was somewhere around 70~80g/km, presumably from hydro. The Aussie vehicle fleet averages around 240g/km just in fuel burn, before manufacturing the vehicle, transporting both it and fuel, refining O/S, etc, are taken into account....then there's the intangibles of health effects.
-
- Posts: 970
- Joined: Sun Jun 24, 2018 5:45 pm
Re: War on cars
Postby opik_bidin » Tue Apr 23, 2019 9:54 pm
https://www.facebook.com/groups/whatwou ... 574945428/
James Rowlands
The side effects of this are that the driver is both time and money poor. They have less time for exercise. Less time for healthier and cheaper food options.
Which all compound into making them more dependent on their boss, and less independent within the economy.
Also, the perception of range, makes workers apply for jobs in distant areas, creating competition among workers, which puts a downward pressure on wages, and incentivises the ruling class to focus on car infrastructure, rather than public transport.
Adding more time to the most disadvantaged worker's commutes, which essentially constitutes unpaid labour, since it's the bosses benefiting, not the worker.
Here is your Australian Car Cost Calculator
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/ ... edit#gid=0
-
- Posts: 970
- Joined: Sun Jun 24, 2018 5:45 pm
Re: War on cars
Postby opik_bidin » Wed Apr 24, 2019 4:56 pm
Many say, faster is better, not only you get there faster, but also good for the environment as you use less fuel, but is it true?
first. look at this graph from https://www.qld.gov.au/transport/safety ... -distances:
remember :
In an emergency, the average driver takes about 1.5 seconds to react. Stopping distances increase exponentially the faster you go.
Question is, on a 10 km straight road with good condition How much "average car it can accomodate, if the speed is:
1. 40 km/h
2. 50 km/h
3. 60 km/h
4. 70 km/h
5. 80 km/h
6. 90 km/h
7. 100 km/h
8. 110 km/h
???
This is something not thought about, a road with 40 km/h speed accomodate more cars than the 110 km/h
-
- Posts: 6331
- Joined: Sat Aug 30, 2014 12:06 pm
- Location: Mill Park
Re: War on cars
Postby fat and old » Wed Apr 24, 2019 8:31 pm
Ahhhh! So it’s all a giant Illuminati conspiracy. So desu.....I look forward to the entry on Surplus Labour.opik_bidin wrote:What car Commutes do, from the FB comment
https://www.facebook.com/groups/whatwou ... 574945428/
James Rowlands
The side effects of this are that the driver is both time and money poor. They have less time for exercise. Less time for healthier and cheaper food options.
Which all compound into making them more dependent on their boss, and less independent within the economy.
Also, the perception of range, makes workers apply for jobs in distant areas, creating competition among workers, which puts a downward pressure on wages, and incentivises the ruling class to focus on car infrastructure, rather than public transport.
Adding more time to the most disadvantaged worker's commutes, which essentially constitutes unpaid labour, since it's the bosses benefiting, not the worker.
-
- Posts: 970
- Joined: Sun Jun 24, 2018 5:45 pm
Re: War on cars
Postby opik_bidin » Fri Apr 26, 2019 4:26 pm
https://twitter.com/tonybmorton/status/ ... 5149756416
On @abcmelbourne, @GrahamCurrie1 talks about wrongheadedmess of building 24 lane spaghetti junctions, while Jon Faine suggests it’s impossible to do without freeways. #Vancouver has largely done so: unlike Melb their planning put cars last, and actually reduced travel times.
Is it really impossible to double public transport capacity in Melb? It’s the wrong question. Our City Loop doubled capacity in the 1970s, yet we didn’t use any of that extra capacity until 2009. In fact, you only need 2 extra trains per hour to match one full freeway lane.
Melbourne’s present-day traffic problems are the result of trying to ‘fix’ smaller traffic problems in the past. #nelink & co will just give us bigger traffic problems to ‘fix’ in the future. Stop trying to ‘fix’ this and fix it.
-
- Posts: 970
- Joined: Sun Jun 24, 2018 5:45 pm
Re: War on cars
Postby opik_bidin » Fri Apr 26, 2019 4:34 pm
Using the most dangerous one (wet roads), as it simulates no looking while on the phone and distractedopik_bidin wrote:Ok, let's move to another topic : speed
10 km can have
1. 40 km/h -> 333 cars
2. 50 km/h -> 244 cars
3. 60 km/h -> 185 cars
4. 70 km/h -> 145 cars
5. 80 km/h -> 118 cars
6. 90 km/h -> 97 cars
7. 100 km/h -> 81 cars
8. 110 km/h -> 70 cars
based on safe braking distance
So at higher speeds, the road capacity is reduced.
-
- Posts: 6331
- Joined: Sat Aug 30, 2014 12:06 pm
- Location: Mill Park
Re: War on cars
Postby fat and old » Fri Apr 26, 2019 6:10 pm
You don’t live in Melbourne aye? I can’t think of anyone outside of various twitterati who thinks NE Link is a bad thing. Even the homeowners affected have given support . Not the business affected in Bulleen, but everyone else.opik_bidin wrote:Always a good reminder
https://twitter.com/tonybmorton/status/ ... 5149756416
On @abcmelbourne, @GrahamCurrie1 talks about wrongheadedmess of building 24 lane spaghetti junctions, while Jon Faine suggests it’s impossible to do without freeways. #Vancouver has largely done so: unlike Melb their planning put cars last, and actually reduced travel times.
Is it really impossible to double public transport capacity in Melb? It’s the wrong question. Our City Loop doubled capacity in the 1970s, yet we didn’t use any of that extra capacity until 2009. In fact, you only need 2 extra trains per hour to match one full freeway lane.
Melbourne’s present-day traffic problems are the result of trying to ‘fix’ smaller traffic problems in the past. #nelink & co will just give us bigger traffic problems to ‘fix’ in the future. Stop trying to ‘fix’ this and fix it.
Not to mention the usual A+ cycling paths that will be built alongside.
-
- Posts: 15537
- Joined: Wed Jul 25, 2012 4:40 pm
- Location: Bendigo
Re: War on cars
Postby warthog1 » Fri Apr 26, 2019 10:48 pm
opik_bidin wrote:Using the most dangerous one (wet roads), as it simulates no looking while on the phone and distractedopik_bidin wrote:Ok, let's move to another topic : speed
10 km can have
1. 40 km/h -> 333 cars
2. 50 km/h -> 244 cars
3. 60 km/h -> 185 cars
4. 70 km/h -> 145 cars
5. 80 km/h -> 118 cars
6. 90 km/h -> 97 cars
7. 100 km/h -> 81 cars
8. 110 km/h -> 70 cars
based on safe braking distance
So at higher speeds, the road capacity is reduced.
So at 100km/h you are saying ~120m between each car in the same lane,?
I think not even in heavy rain.
100m in the dry?
Have you seen that sort of a gap left on any freeway anywhere?
-
- Posts: 970
- Joined: Sun Jun 24, 2018 5:45 pm
Re: War on cars
Postby opik_bidin » Sat Apr 27, 2019 4:54 am
Which is why it's becoming dangerous if there is a mishap. High speed with unsafe gap is a recipe for disaster. I'm following Live Traffic NSW feed and their are news of crashes almost everyday.warthog1 wrote:opik_bidin wrote:Using the most dangerous one (wet roads), as it simulates no looking while on the phone and distractedopik_bidin wrote:Ok, let's move to another topic : speed
10 km can have
1. 40 km/h -> 333 cars
2. 50 km/h -> 244 cars
3. 60 km/h -> 185 cars
4. 70 km/h -> 145 cars
5. 80 km/h -> 118 cars
6. 90 km/h -> 97 cars
7. 100 km/h -> 81 cars
8. 110 km/h -> 70 cars
based on safe braking distance
So at higher speeds, the road capacity is reduced.
So at 100km/h you are saying ~120m between each car in the same lane,?
I think not even in heavy rain.
100m in the dry?
Have you seen that sort of a gap left on any freeway anywhere?
Add not your average vehicle to the mix like trucks and SUVs, adding more risk.
Many People assume the safe gap is similar between high and low speeds, but even a 10 km/h difference in the speed is big.
This Capacity related to speed also raises a question on adding more roads and lanes to speed up, as probably the capacity will remain the similar, we just get further and further away from each other and consuming environment in the process
-
- Posts: 9811
- Joined: Tue Dec 01, 2009 11:48 am
Re: War on cars
Postby human909 » Sat Apr 27, 2019 7:56 am
You don't need to leave a full braking distance between cars travelling in a flow! Traffic flux (vehicles/hour) is largely not depended on speed in the simplified model and in free flow. Your own calculation should show that if you assumed reaction distance rather than braking distance between vehicles.opik_bidin wrote:Using the most dangerous one (wet roads), as it simulates no looking while on the phone and distractedopik_bidin wrote:Ok, let's move to another topic : speed
10 km can have
1. 40 km/h -> 333 cars
2. 50 km/h -> 244 cars
3. 60 km/h -> 185 cars
4. 70 km/h -> 145 cars
5. 80 km/h -> 118 cars
6. 90 km/h -> 97 cars
7. 100 km/h -> 81 cars
8. 110 km/h -> 70 cars
based on safe braking distance
So at higher speeds, the road capacity is reduced.
I could go on but there is plenty of other rigorous studies into traffic flow. A quick google will find them.
-
- Posts: 6331
- Joined: Sat Aug 30, 2014 12:06 pm
- Location: Mill Park
Re: War on cars
Postby fat and old » Sat Apr 27, 2019 12:23 pm
In what way does an SUV present greater risk in a braking situation? Or a truck for that matter?opik_bidin wrote:
Add not your average vehicle to the mix like trucks and SUVs, adding more risk.
-
- Posts: 970
- Joined: Sun Jun 24, 2018 5:45 pm
Re: War on cars
Postby opik_bidin » Sat Apr 27, 2019 2:40 pm
The key is flow. Thing is, we have bottlenecks and "disruptions":human909 wrote: You don't need to leave a full braking distance between cars travelling in a flow! Traffic flux (vehicles/hour) is largely not depended on speed in the simplified model and in free flow. Your own calculation should show that if you assumed reaction distance rather than braking distance between vehicles.
I could go on but there is plenty of other rigorous studies into traffic flow. A quick google will find them.
1. Traffic lights
2. Crosswalks
3. Intersections
4. Mix of vehicles with their own speed, weight, space, and braking.
5. People crossing the road
Which brings to the ultimate index used by traffic and transport engineers: LOS " Level of service". Which justifies every widening and disruption eraseure to ensure the speed and flow is constant.
Problem is, they don't think.
1. They erase the crosswalks, forcing pedestrians to travel longer, which then forces the pedestrians into cars.
2. They fence the footpath to discourage crossing the road, again forcing pedestrians to travel longer, which then forces the pedestrians into cars.
3. They widen almost every road even when money isn't enough, but then those wide roads meet at an intersection, which erases all the time savings, as intersections of roads with multiple lanes
4. They then propose these sphagetti junctions, diamonds, and roundabouts, taking valuable environment
And worryingly, these are the future Australia is going, all in the name of speed, while the time isn't going any shorter and making it a nightmare for other transport modes
-
- Posts: 6331
- Joined: Sat Aug 30, 2014 12:06 pm
- Location: Mill Park
Re: War on cars
Postby fat and old » Sat Apr 27, 2019 3:11 pm
Edit: cool, can see it now
-
- Posts: 970
- Joined: Sun Jun 24, 2018 5:45 pm
Re: War on cars
Postby opik_bidin » Sat Apr 27, 2019 3:42 pm
Probably OK if road with high speeds are going through uninhabited land (that is still debatable, as we have many animal death on roads), but when it goes through busy areas, like schools-unis, residential and commercial areas, that becomes a problem.
People crossing the road naturally, children playing in the streets, social meetings at the street, those will be lost, and the social ties keepig people together will disappear, resulting in more social and mental problems as a result of living in a bubble of isolation
an times are changing too.
Previously, a car will stop and ask politely for people on the streets to give way, nowadays they just honk angrily and in some cases threaten to crush,
- Thoglette
- Posts: 6729
- Joined: Thu Feb 19, 2009 1:01 pm
Re: War on cars
Postby Thoglette » Sat Apr 27, 2019 6:45 pm
For those who think we can "fix the roads" by building more, this is the future (or actually, present)opik_bidin wrote:And worryingly, these are the future Australia is going, all in the name of speed, while the time isn't going any shorter and making it a nightmare for other transport modes
By the way, the road above (Katy Freeway) Is still just as congested after they spend US2.8B on it.
"People are worthy of respect, ideas are not." Peter Ellerton, UQ
-
- Posts: 970
- Joined: Sun Jun 24, 2018 5:45 pm
Re: War on cars
Postby opik_bidin » Thu May 02, 2019 2:05 pm
https://www.fastcompany.com/90342223/th ... rking-spot
The newest hot coworking space costs just $2.25 an hour, because it is a parking spot
On Monday, April 29, San Francisco workers from various industries–tech, investing, design, activism–gathered near Civic Center to work for the day. This is not unusual: Of any city in the U.S., San Francisco has the highest proportion of coworking spaces relative to its population, and it’s pretty common for freelancers and remote employees to find themselves working in close proximity to each other, but not exactly together.
But the gathering on Monday was different. For one thing, it happened outside: Workers congregated around tables set up for the day in an empty parking space. And while all the participants were working on their own projects, together, they were collectively and concertedly proving two points: one about the high cost of coworking spaces in an already unaffordable city, and another about how the space currently dedicated to on-street parking in cramped cities like San Francisco could be put to better and more human-centric use.
-
- Posts: 970
- Joined: Sun Jun 24, 2018 5:45 pm
Re: War on cars
Postby opik_bidin » Thu May 02, 2019 2:52 pm
- mikesbytes
- Super Mod
- Posts: 22405
- Joined: Thu Dec 01, 2005 11:42 pm
- Location: Tempe, Sydney
- Contact:
Re: War on cars
Postby mikesbytes » Thu May 02, 2019 5:47 pm
https://www.news.com.au/national/nsw-ac ... c13f4973cd
- Thoglette
- Posts: 6729
- Joined: Thu Feb 19, 2009 1:01 pm
Re: War on cars
Postby Thoglette » Thu May 02, 2019 7:11 pm
mikesbytes wrote:Unfortunately this happens almost every day. Only reported when its a bit different to the other tragedies
https://www.news.com.au/national/nsw-ac ... c13f4973cd
As someone who knows the area (in passing), it's a typical north shore through road where not only is 50kph way too fast but is treated as a minimum by most motorists. The section north of the M1 is even more of a freewayWitnesses claimed the driver didn’t seem to have realised he had hit anyone, 9 News reported.
"People are worthy of respect, ideas are not." Peter Ellerton, UQ
- queequeg
- Posts: 6511
- Joined: Thu Dec 17, 2009 10:09 am
Re: War on cars
Postby queequeg » Thu May 02, 2019 8:00 pm
The intersection is also one of those ones that gives pedestrians and motorists a green light at the same time. There is no arrow for turning. It reminds of an almost identical fatality at Beecroft a number of years ago where a bus returning from a school trip made a left hand turn and ran over a mother, who was going to the school to meet her daughter, who was actually on the bus that ran her over. There was no turn arrow at that intersection either, and the turning driver also claimed not to have seen the pedestrian crossing the road.Thoglette wrote:mikesbytes wrote:Unfortunately this happens almost every day. Only reported when its a bit different to the other tragedies
https://www.news.com.au/national/nsw-ac ... c13f4973cdAs someone who knows the area (in passing), it's a typical north shore through road where not only is 50kph way too fast but is treated as a minimum by most motorists. The section north of the M1 is even more of a freewayWitnesses claimed the driver didn’t seem to have realised he had hit anyone, 9 News reported.
Thinking about it too, on my daily commute, I have to cross 6 lanes of pennant hills road at a four way intersection, and motorists rarely give way to me. We both get the green light at the same time, and I barely get half way across before I have cars making left hand turns across the crossing I am using. I end up having to weave between cars to get around them as they end up blocking the crossing.
Return to “Cycling Safety and Advocacy”
- General Australian Cycling Topics
- Info / announcements
- Buying a bike / parts
- General Cycling Discussion
- The Bike Shed
- Cycling Health
- Cycling Safety and Advocacy
- Women's Cycling
- Bike & Gear Reviews
- Cycling Trade
- Stolen Bikes
- Bicycle FAQs
- The Market Place
- Member to Member Bike and Gear Sales
- Want to Buy, Group Buy, Swap
- My Bikes or Gear Elsewhere
- Serious Biking
- Audax / Randonneuring
- Retro biking
- Commuting
- MTB
- Recumbents
- Fixed Gear/ Single Speed
- Track
- Electric Bicycles
- Cyclocross and Gravel Grinding
- Dragsters / Lowriders / Cruisers
- Children's Bikes
- Cargo Bikes and Utility Cycling
- Road Racing
- Road Biking
- Training
- Triathlon
- International and National Tours and Events
- Cycle Touring
- Touring Australia
- Touring Overseas
- Touring Bikes and Equipment
- Australia
- Western Australia
- New South Wales
- Queensland
- South Australia
- Victoria
- ACT
- Tasmania
- Northern Territory
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users
- All times are UTC+11:00
- Top
- Delete cookies
About the Australian Cycling Forums
The Australian Cycling Forums is a welcoming community where you can ask questions and talk about the type of bikes and cycling topics you like.
Bicycles Network Australia
Forum Information
Connect with BNA
This website uses affiliate links to retail platforms including ebay, amazon, proviz and ribble.