UK - Sat-navs 'harm railway bridges'

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UK - Sat-navs 'harm railway bridges'

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Sat-navs 'harm railway bridges'

Millions of pounds worth of damage is being caused to Britain's railway infrastructure by lorry drivers following satellite navigation devices.

Network Rail says 2,000 bridges are hit every year by lorries travelling on inappropriate roads.

The resulting disruption is said to cost the rail industry £10m a year and causes 5,000 hours of delays.

Network Rail is appealing to drivers to pay attention to road signs warning them of hazards ahead.

Bridge map

PJ Taylor, from Network Rail, said in the last few years the number of vehicles hitting bridges had increased sharply.

"Sat-navs are a great tool but they are not an alternative for keeping your wits about you and obeying the rules of the road," he told BBC Radio Five Live.

Talks were under way with satellite navigation companies about how the problem could be resolved, he said.

In the meantime, Network Rail said it was working on a project to map the UK's low bridges and level crossings so that information could be fed into sat-nav software.

The shortcomings of sat-nav systems have been widely reported, from lorries getting stuck in narrow country lanes, to out-of-date sat-nav systems directing fans and players to Swansea's old football ground, and even a coachload of shoppers ending up in the wrong country.

Car drivers have also landed themselves in difficulties for slavishly following their in-car technology.

Paula Ceely narrowly escaped injury last May when she followed her sat-nav system onto a railway track at Ffynongain in south Wales.

The 20-year-old student was on her way to see her boyfriend when she tried to cross the line in the dark.

She heard a train horn and realised the vehicle was on the track moments before the train smashed into her car.

And last month in Suffolk a takeaway delivery driver, who had misunderstood his sat-nav directions, drove onto a railway line.

Instead of turning into a small road, the foreign student drove onto the line and became stuck between a cattle grid and the track.

Trains were held up for an hour as he and his passenger tried to push the car off the line.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/u ... 236181.stm
Published: 2008/02/09 08:37:42 GMT

© BBC MMVIII
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Re: UK - Sat-navs 'harm railway bridges'

Post by John Ashworth »

Comments on uk.railway include:
All of these strikes appear to have been due to driver stupidity rather than because drivers have used sat-nav.

If you get to a bridge and the sign says 10ft high, you don't go under it if your lorry's 11ft high.

If you turn towards a road that's got sleepers and railway lines on it, then it ain't a road, it's a railway line.
The big increase in strikes is due to stupid drivers using satnav.
It's not because they use satnav. It's because they don't know how to use satnav
Sat-navs are merely the current excuse for stupidity.
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