[SDCBC] Fixing a traffic signal (long)
John Eldon
j.eldon at sbcglobal.net
Sun Nov 11 10:55:21 EST 2007
Thanks for the note, Michael. I work in the Carlsbad Airport Centre business park and live near the southern boundary of the Leucadia district of Encinitas.Regarding traffic signal response to bicycles, my dealings with the City of Carlsbad have generally been excellent, whereas Encinitas rates merely as good, which evidently still puts it far ahead of many other cities.
John E.
----- Original Message ----
From: Michael Elliott <camping.elliott at gmail.com>
To: Sdcbc <sdcbc at bikesandiego.org>
Sent: Sunday, November 11, 2007 7:32:16 AM
Subject: [SDCBC] Fixing a traffic signal (long)
The intersection of Carlsbad Village Drive and Monroe (in Carlsbad,
natch)
has been part of my daily ride for several years. The southbound Monroe
portion wasn't well-planned for cyclists, though. It has a posted and
striped bike lane but at the top of the hill, where Monroe intersects
with
CVD the lane vanishes, leaving cyclists no clear place to go to get out
of
the right turn only lane.
In addition, the buried signal loops never detected bikes (as per
pretty
normal) who wish to go straight or turn left. There is no pedestrian
crosswalk across CVD at that side, either, so no button to press,
either.
Cyclists had to cross the right turn lane -- the busiest -- and plant
themselves in the straight or left turn lane, often for some time
before a
car triggered the signal to give a green. Crossing CVD against the red
is
very dangerous due to very short sightlines which prevent a cyclist
from
seeing crossing traffic in enough time to safely get across the
intersection -- it's uphill and the crossing cars go very fast through
that portion of CVD.
So I contacted the city street department about this mess. SDCBC's
Kathy
Keehan also wrote a nice letter to them at my request (thank you,
Kathy!).
After a couple of follow up letters the city agreed to restripe the
lanes
and put in video detection for the signal.
The bike lane was realigned at the top to put it between the straight
lane
and the curb on the right side of the right turn only lane. And with
the
video detection working for bicycles, a cyclist had a fighting chance
to
get across CVD alive.
But after a couple of months, the lights no longer detected bicycles in
the left turn or straight lanes. I contacted the city about it two or
three times, and they responded after sending crews out, but the
signals
continued to be unresponsive. All a cyclist could do is either wait for
someone to come into the lane behind them, or run the red -- uphill
across
four lanes of hurrying vehicles with sightlines of less than 100
meters.
I'm too cowardly to try that one, though I confess I do run reds when
it's
safe to do so.
I wrote the city again week before last and they said that they'd send
someone out to fix the problem. On the following morning I tried it
again
and didn't find any improvement. I wrote again, and this time I
volunteered my services as the Test Cyclist. They said that they'd have
the contractor contact me directly. Last Wednesday the field technician
from Republic ITS (http://www.republicelectric.com/home/) called and we
discussed the situation. He said he had personally adjusted and tested
the
system the week before and near as he could tell, it had to "see" a
cyclist, yet my experience was that it didn't. We made an appointment
to
meet Friday morning.
So at the intersection, he opened up the signal box and showed me how
the
detection system works. A small black and white Grundig video monitor*
in
the box displays the lanes where they meet the limit line as seen by
the
camera atop the signal across the intersection. He showed how each of
the
four lanes (right lane, bike lane, the straight lane, and the left turn
lane) is "outlined" onscreen into detection zones. The detection system
is
designed to notice contrast and complexity in those zones, he said.
"Watch," he said, "while I cross the street, you'll see the system
detect
me and each box will light up." He walked across the street in the
crosswalk, and as he did so the right turn lane lit up, followed by the
the bike lane. But the straight and left turn boxes didn't notice him.
Of
course they "saw" cars, but without an assistant to cross the lanes
while
he was watching, he'd never have seen the controller miss a smaller
target.
He said he knew what the problem was: that the signal from the camera
was
degraded -- too weak -- due to the connector on the camera not being of
a
type that is suitable for outdoor use (BNC connectors which are
commonly
found on test equipment used indoors). A common problem, and like a
proper
technician he griped about the idiocy of using parts like that, about
the
lowest bidder process, and the nitwits that install these systems which
he
later has to clean up.
He told me he'd fix it up and that it should work peachy the next time
I
tried it.
I thanked him for his time and willingness to help, and rode into the
intersection to go home. He watched the monitor. I normally sit on the
right edge of a left turn lane when turning left so I can easily swing
wide when making the turn. This apparently put me between the two
detection boxes so he asked me to lean to the left. The camera detected
me. But as soon as I stopped moving, it "lost" me. Like with the
dinosaurs
in Jurassic Park, if you stop moving they decide you don't exist.
He said that in addition to getting a stronger signal to the computer,
he'd set the zones to "lockout" so that once they detect something in
the
lane, they will change the signals even if they lose that motion.
Default
behavior is for the controller to assume that a small object that is
seen
then lost is some unimportant signal, like a leaf or dog or something,
I
guess.
I tested the adjusted signal yesterday morning on my ride and it worked
perfectly.
To summarize, the city of Carlsbad was very cool about the whole thing,
Kathy was a great help in coaching me on how to approach the city, I
enjoyed participating in the troubleshooting process, and (being a
nerd) I
got a kick out of seeing and understanding what goes on in those signal
boxes.
======
*Who buys Grundig television monitors, anyway?
--
Mike "Rocket J Squirrel" Elliott
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