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As I approach a speed camera I get one warning (Bong-Bong) at a distance defined by me.
Red Banner shows camera type and Speed (EG GATSO XXXX 30) until camera is passed
Map shows Camera Icon continually until camera is passed.
Thats it, I don't want any second warning, or continuios bongs due overspeed etc, just initial bong and warning banner until passed.
This is something that I've been considering - dragging a slider fully to the left switches that option off (instead of being 10s).
That way users can choose between approach warning (which you want), overspeed warning, both together, or neither (ie: disable this particular camera type).
As I approach a speed camera I get one warning (Bong-Bong) at a distance defined by me.
Red Banner shows camera type and Speed (EG GATSO XXXX 30) until camera is passed
Map shows Camera Icon continually until camera is passed.
Thats it, I don't want any second warning, or continuios bongs due overspeed etc, just initial bong and warning banner until passed.
This is something that I've been considering - dragging a slider fully to the left switches that option off (instead of being 10s).
That way users can choose between approach warning (which you want), overspeed warning, both together, or neither (ie: disable this particular camera type).
Just downloaded this application - looks quite neat. All the camera warning times appear to be initially set at 60 seconds. Are there any default values for 1st / 2nd warnings - what are other people using?
I don't know enough about the effective range of various cameras to be confident in selecting values.
Joined: Jan 04, 2006 Posts: 9323 Location: Durham, UK
Posted: Thu Apr 20, 2006 2:17 pm Post subject:
Quote:
I don't know enough about the effective range of various cameras to be confident in selecting values.
The range of the camera doesn't matter. What does is how long it takes for you to adjust your driving to suit the road as you've just had a warning that there is an accident cash, sorry, black spot ahead.
I don't know enough about the effective range of various cameras to be confident in selecting values.
The range of the camera doesn't matter.
You do realise that this kinda contradicts what you just wrote in your previous reply. ;-) Is somebody else posting with your ID? ;-)
And the range of the camera can matter for mobile locations, as you hinted in your other reply. It's because laser traps have such a range, that it can and often does matter, if you want your sat nav to give you adequate warning - the proximity, may matter for scrubbing off speed on faster roads / limits, but with laser cameras the range of the camera matters.
PaulB2005 wrote:
What does is how long it takes for you to adjust your driving to suit the road as you've just had a warning that there is an accident cash, sorry, black spot ahead.
Which is no good, though, if you're already within the active range of the camera - which you quite well could be, in the case of mobile, laser traps.
Joined: Jan 04, 2006 Posts: 9323 Location: Durham, UK
Posted: Thu Apr 20, 2006 3:38 pm Post subject:
Quote:
You do realise that this kinda contradicts what you just wrote in your previous reply.
Yeah, kinda, but i think it more a poor description of what i mean than a direct contradiction.
What i was trying to say in both is this.
Mobile cameras (as you pointed out) have a huge range. However even at say 70 mph 60 seconds should give you amble warning of a Mobile site. Even at 30mph you still get amble warning.
Most other fixed position cameras only monitor a small section of the road so you only need enough time to be warned and allow you to slow down and maybe change lane if required hence i suggested 15 - 20 seconds. In effect everyone will have different ideal settings. Someone who travels regularly well over the time needs more time than someone who may only occasionally drifts a few mph over the limit.
You do realise that this kinda contradicts what you just wrote in your previous reply.
Yeah, kinda, but i think it more a poor description of what i mean than a direct contradiction.
What i was trying to say in both is this.
Mobile cameras (as you pointed out) have a huge range. However even at say 70 mph 60 seconds should give you amble warning of a Mobile site. Even at 30mph you still get amble warning.
Well there's two things to consider, isn't there? Newton's speed / distance / time relationship - so for fixed sites, there's merely reaction time, and time necessary to "sanitise" your speed.
And for mobile sites, there's rather more of that range to worry about.
PaulB2005 wrote:
Most other fixed position cameras only monitor a small section of the road so you only need enough time to be warned and allow you to slow down and maybe change lane if required hence i suggested 15 - 20 seconds. In effect everyone will have different ideal settings. Someone who travels regularly well over the time needs more time than someone who may only occasionally drifts a few mph over the limit.
Indeed - but as you point out - fixed position cameras (including SPECS, given they "average") have a fairly small detection area. And I suspect those people, who mommentarily drift marginally over the speed limit ;-), only need sufficient warning that they can react and manage to get their speed more appropriate. In this scenario, the range of the camera isn't truly that poignant. Moreover, it's reaction time, and the ability to get your speed where it should be.
But with mobile laser sites, the range of the camera IS an issue, given it will heavily outweigh (I would hope!) reaction time, plus any time required to (hypothetically!) slow down sufficiently. With those type of cameras, it's more about distance, than it is time - since distance is the more critical factor.
I have used Ash10's software to upgrade my Garmin I3 and everything seems to be OK. I have noticed that this doubles the amount of POI's you have in the machine.
The Garmin does not seem to allow you to access it as a removable drive from windows and manually delete old and out of date POI information - is this the case?
The main question I have, when you update the database using the Ash10 program again, will all of the old POI's be overwritten or will some remain? I know that when you use the conventional database (i.e. without using Ash10's program) it automatically deleted / overwrites the old data. I just want to make sure the same will happen when using Ash10's excellent application.
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