this post was submitted on 28 Apr 2024
169 points (98.3% liked)
What is this thing?
5540 readers
1 users here now
Let us help you identify that mysterious object you’ve found.
Currently in CHALLENGE mode: If you've got something obscure knocking about, post a picture, and let's see how we do. Please prefix such posts with "CHALLENGE:" so we know we've got a fighting chance.
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
It's for traffic count. IIRC the double track to is differentiate the count between passenger cars and semi-trucks (aka tractor trailers, 18 wheelers). The double track can differentiate when there are multiple axles like you see on semi-trucks. Sometimes you want separate counts.
You could calculate speed for shits and giggles but it's not enforceable obviously.
It's not for enforcement...this will tell them if they can 'make profit' by putting up auto ticketing systems that fine you when speeding.
Yes it's not for enforcement, that's why I said it's not enforceable. And that it's for traffic counts.
They generally only use a single one for counts. You use the double setup here for speed tracking.
What I'm saying is they use a double to differentiate counts between passenger cars and semi-trucks (aka tractor trailers, 18 wheelers). Sometimes you want a count of 1) passenger cars and 2) semi-trucks. That's what I remember learning it was for. I'll edit my previous reply in case people are misreading it.
You can do that with a single line. It's a closed, flexible tube with a pressure sensor. Effectively a crude scale. It measures the weight on the axle. Semi trucks weigh a LOT more than passenger vehicles, even ridiculous pickups.