- Source: Yellow trap
- Yellow Claw (DJ)
- Yellow Punch
- Cardi B
- Cakram padat
- Jim Taihuttu
- Daftar film Walt Disney Pictures
- Mark Fenton
- Richard Widmark
- Daftar karakter One Piece
- Nepenthes campanulata
- Yellow trap
- Traffic light
- Trap music
- Variations in traffic light operation
- EDM trap music
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- Yellow Claw (DJs)
- The Yellow Wallpaper
- The Trap Door
- Night Trap
The yellow trap is a type of road traffic situation that may arise at certain signalized intersections, involving straight-moving traffic conflicting with turning, crossing traffic, that has made an erroneous assumption that the conflict has been resolved, based on their received traffic signal.
The name yellow trap originates from the fact that drivers who receive a yellow (also known as "amber") permissive turn signal, may erroneously believe that the conflicting, straight-moving traffic has also received a yellow cue, when in fact, the straight-moving signal is still green.
It can present a potentially dangerous scenario relating to turns at a traffic light-controlled intersection across oncoming traffic without a protective turn signal; for right-hand traffic, this refers to a vehicle attempting to make a left turn without a permissive/protective left-turn signal.
The yellow trap occurs when the timing of the amber lights (also known as "yellow" lights in the USA) is asymmetric for two-way traffic on a single road: when a vehicle is waiting to turn across oncoming traffic and receives an amber light from the traffic signal, the driver may assume that oncoming traffic also has received an amber light and proceeds with the turn, believing that oncoming traffic will yield the right-of-way on an assumed amber. If oncoming traffic has an extended green light instead, this could lead to a crash.
Sequence
When a vehicle traveling on a road with two-way traffic is preparing to turn at an intersection and the intersection does not have a protected turn across oncoming traffic, the yellow trap may occur when the vehicle preparing to turn is given an amber light, while at the same time, traffic on the same road moving in the opposite direction still has a green light. The driver who is intending to turn, facing the amber (then red) light, could assume that the traffic going in the opposite direction on the same road also has an amber or red light, and that oncoming traffic will stop or yield the right-of-way. This could potentially lead to a crash if the turning driver attempts to proceed with the turn across traffic, assuming mistakenly they can take the right-of-way, but it is not safe to do so. The turning driver may legally be at fault, for failure to yield, but the understandable mistake stems from the reasonable assumption that both lights were turning amber simultaneously.
The Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices (MUTCD) allows this asymmetric light timing only if the intersection has signs posted stating that Oncoming Traffic Has Extended Green or Oncoming Traffic May Have Extended Green. However, many agencies in North America routinely allow the yellow trap, especially during emergency vehicle preemption, despite clear prohibition from the MUTCD. Some of this stems from difficulties programming older traffic signal control software to prevent the yellow trap, but much stems from traffic engineers or technicians not understanding the yellow trap hazard, or believing it is not a serious problem.
In left-hand traffic, the same scenario is applicable for drivers turning right.
= Solutions
=Solutions to the yellow trap include the flashing amber arrow, Dallas phasing, Arlington phasing, simultaneously ending both through movements (circular green lights change to amber, then red) before serving both left-turn movements (green arrows), or prohibiting one of the two left-turn movements.
References
External links
Fixing the Yellow Trap, Kittelson & Associates.
Interim Approval for Optional Use of Flashing Yellow Arrow for Permissive Left Turns (IA-10) from the Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices.
Yellow Trap Index Page, midimagic.sgc-hosting.com