Off Topic The roadworks thread here!

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Just did over 4500 klms in the past week and a half ........................ I'm over driving.

Some signs on the road ............ Have some REP

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Thought they could of polished or clean it a bit.
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Yep, ain’t that true.
You get Kev Caravan going real slow on a single lane road, the minute it goes to duel lanes, he and the friggin trucks all speed up.

Then, you have the freakin coppers waiting at the end of the overtaking lanes, waiting to book you for speeding.

If there is no copper there, it’s because there is a fcukin speed camera!

It can only happen here in Oz.
 
Yep, ain’t that true.
You get Kev Caravan going real slow on a single lane road, the minute it goes to duel lanes, he and the friggin trucks all speed up.

Then, you have the freakin coppers waiting at the end of the overtaking lanes, waiting to book you for speeding.

If there is no copper there, it’s because there is a fcukin speed camera!

It can only happen here in Oz.
got them here too
should be called passing if you are lucky lanes
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It has to be seen to be believed - but it might still leave a driver scratching his or her head.
A sign along a highway in the Canadian province of Nova Scotia looks like an indecipherable patchwork of various other road signs, mainly because it is.
It has been posted along a provincial highway since late August, when a hotel chain removed its billboard and uncovered the sign beneath.
Locals residents worry it could cause collisions.
Beverly Burlock is a resident of Port Mouton, a small fishing village about 160 km (100 miles) from Halifax, the provincial capital.
She spotted the confusing road sign over the weekend near the highway exit to Port Mouton.
"My first thought was: 'Oh my God, what will tourists think?'" she told the BBC on Tuesday.
Her second thought was concern that the sign was so incomprehensible that it could cause an accident as drivers slowed to decipher it, especially since it is located on at a "serious" curve on provincial Highway 103.
She took a picture of the sign - a puzzle of French and English route numbers and town names, some upside down - and sent a complaint to the province's transportation department.
In her complaint, she said "it's a wonder cars haven't gone off the road in droves".
Ms Burlock also sent copies to the office of the provincial premier and her local member of the Legislative Assembly.
The transportation department said in a statement that it had contacted the hotel and the sign will now either be covered or removed by the end of the week "to eliminate any potential confusion to road users".
In 2009, Highway 103, which runs from Halifax to Yarmouth, was ranked among the most dangerous in Canada. A safety review of the road was launched by the province in 2014.
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