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Rotating Beacons


Mark

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Yes I was just about to ask the same. I was thinking with the Hornet towing the Cipher trailer crawling along to Great Dorset Steam Fair.

 

I can never get much speed up on those small roads & hills. Although what scares me more is travelling on the motorway where you have to stay on the motorway by moving into the middle lane when a particular junction comes up. The M27 by Rownhams Services is a pain as it is uphill as well. If you move over in good time you will be hooted & cut up, if you leave it to the last practical moment nobody will let you in. I have often thought an orange light might be a useful indicator that something odd was up ahead. BTW is there a minimum motorway speed?

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Found this..

 

http://www.ukemergency.co.uk/information/bluelightuse.htm

 

You can only have a steady white light to the front and a steady red light showing to the rear of your vehicle. The exceptions to this are:

 

BLUE

 

flashing from an emergency vehicle

 

flashing or constant from a police vehicle

 

GREEN

 

on a doctor’s car

 

WHITE

 

reversing lights

 

work lamps

 

AMBER

 

any vehicle’s indicators

 

amber pedal reflectors or pedal lights

 

reflected from a registration plate

 

reflected from a road clearance vehicle

 

reflected from a vehicle carrying dangerous substances

 

reflected on some old or heavy vehicles

 

flashing amber lights on

 

a road clearance vehicle

 

a bin lorry

 

a breakdown vehicle

 

a vehicle with a 25 mph top speed

 

a vehicle wider than 2.9 metres

 

a roadworks vehicle

 

an escort vehicle

 

a Revenue and Customs vehicle

 

a surveying vehicle

 

a clamping or tow truck vehicle

 

airport vehicles

 

any other specially authorised vehicle

 

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we only use 1 on a motorway but more to warn others that there is something up ahead that may be slower/bigger than the norm.

we don't use 1 on day to day A/B roads.

i think other road users appreciate it because they tend to move lanes far earlier than they may usually have done.

i feel safer knowing we have warned the general public to be a little weary as so often a modern vehicle has come racing up behind us & had to slam their foot on the brakes as they haven't realised we are going so slow compared to them.

Berni

 

 

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I use one on my Spartan when I take it out on the roads, I only drive on A & B roads and I think it is only fair to warn other road users that I am there! I always enjoy the look on some drivers faces when they come flying round a corner taking the racing line and see the Spartan is coming the other way!

 

Chris

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To add a bit more detail to that list above, I believe the permission for breakdown trucks to use an amber beacon only covers them in the immediate area of the breakdown. So that would be slowing down to attend a roadside incident, while dealing with it and while accelerating away afterwards. It does not cover the whole journey to and from the incident.

I travel at about 42mph on motorways in the Militant, although some hills can get me down to about 20mph.

On twisty and hilly A roads I can be down to 7mph at times.

I generally use the beacons any time I think there is a risk of cars coming up fast behind me, motorways, dual carriageways and clear single carriageways. If the traffic is moving at my speed anyway, there's not much point.

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FWIW to anyone i asked this question of a traffic policemen friend - this is his reply:

 

Neil.

 

The regs say.

 

Reg 11 Road vehicle Lighting Regulations 1989.

 

No vehicle shall be fitted with a lamp or retro reflective material capable of showing any light to the rear other than a red light except

Ignoring all the bollocks about indicators etc

 

Amber from Warning beacon.

 

Road clearance vehicle.

Refuse collection vehicle

Breakdown vehicle

Vehicle with maximum speed not exceeding 25 mph or from it's trailer.

Vehicle with width (including load) exceeding 2.9m.

road testing, cleaning, maintainance vehicles.

Road apparatus testing, cleansing maintainance and inspection vehicle.

Special types sec 44 vehicles - abnormal loads.

Vehicle used for escort purposes at speeds not exceeding 25mph.

Customs and Excise road fuel testing vehicles.

Vehicle used for surveying.

Vehicle used for statutory removals or immobilisation.

 

Looking at the above, it would seem to agree with your point, "only if the speed drops below 25mph"

 

Now for a bit of reality. You asked me regarding licences prior to buying Maude, and I told you that it would be most unlikely, a) to get stopped driving it, and b) even less likely to get someone like myself who was taught the old fashioned way, IE Actually had some traffic law training!! now apply this to the flashing lights, abnd deduce what you will, but I think it would be most unlikely that you would get stopped and bollocked for having the light flashing when it shouldn't be. IMHO you are better off having it on on the type of vehicle you would be driving, rather than not. It might just attract the attention of some myopic idiot and avoid them running into the back of it, I would also add, if it's dark, PUT IT ON

 

 

Hope this is of use................... god my brain hurts!!

 

All the best

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