Czy wolisz polską wersję strony elektroda?
Nie, dziękuję Przekieruj mnie tamGienek wrote:This can be explained like this so that, if there was a four-way junction, vehicle C has the right free and drives first up to a certain point. #Gienek has already described it furtherVehicle C has priority over all and it starts the "crossover" of the intersection. Continue as I wrote
xury wrote:It often happens that everyone stands for a long time until one brave is found and the sequence starts.
MARCIN.SLASK wrote:Okay, you write that there is a STOP sign, probably it is not only valid selectively for trams? If this is probably true for all traffic?A very similar intersection here, but also a tram ride. The signs are just a note tram and STOP.
wojtek1234321 wrote:MARCIN.SLASK wrote:Okay, you write that there is a STOP sign, probably it is not only valid selectively for trams? If this is probably true for all traffic?A very similar intersection here, but also a tram ride. The signs are just a note tram and STOP.
Enter the exact address and I will check what it looks like in street wiew.
Gienek wrote:You are terribly "up to this". The intersection is shown by the author. Vehicle C is approaching and there is nothing on the right, so it has the right of way and enters the intersection and stops in front of A because it is on the right. A lets B pass because B is on the right, enters the intersection, but stops past C. Car A now has nothing to the right, so leaves the intersection. Then C leaves the intersection, and only at the end of the intersection does B. Ot and the whole "philosophy".
wojtek1234321 wrote:
Goro wrote:Answer First A, Second C, Third B
Oh, because it's going straight,
Vehicle B has vehicle C on the right, both vehicles turn left and must cross the center of the road (they cannot block traffic)
andexp wrote:In this situation, one of the drivers must relinquish his right of way. The rest is regulated by law.
atom1477 wrote:andexp wrote:
In this situation, one of the drivers must relinquish his right of way. The rest is regulated by law.
How? Since everyone is still standing at the beginning?
Secondly, to give up, you have to have something. So someone has priority here? Or even a few? Who are they?
andexp wrote:
This is a peer intersection.
A gives way to B but takes precedence over C.
B gives way to C but takes precedence over A.
C gives way to A, but takes precedence over B.
The law does not regulate this situation, so I will repeat it. One of the drivers waives his priority. For example: A waives priority by giving a C sign to drive. So C pass first, then B pass, finally A.
Goro wrote:So, in this situation, giving my solution is the most effective, the simplest, and in practice, the most dynamic.
... and that's what solving various problems is all about.